Pose your questions on Ask, Answer, Learn to Dr. Greene and the DrGreene.com community.
What's going down your drain?
Set your TiVo to see Dr. Greene on the Dr. Oz Show. Tuesday, March 23rd. Check your local listing for show times in your area.
Dr. Greene will be chatting live for one hour on Thursday, March 25th at 10:00 a.m. PT (Noon CT) (1:00 p.m. ET). Click Here to chat with Dr. Greene
Sleep terrors, sleepwalking, and bedwetting all fit into the category of “partial-arousal parasomnias”. Although there is a genetic predisposition to each of these conditions, a report at the 2001 annual meeting of the Associated Professional Sleep Societies suggests that some children with these conditions respond dramatically to a small increase in total sleep time --sometimes as little as 1/2 an hour a day. Children with sleep terrors and sleepwalking experienced rapid and impressive improvement after adding a short daily nap, moving bedtime ahead, or delaying wake-up time in the morning. The average increase in total sleep was 1 hour, 25 minutes. With this change even children who had needed medicines to control these conditions were able to sleep without disturbance. I suspect that children who are bedwetting would have similar experiences, and have seen evidence of this again and again in children I know.
I am so tickled by everyone's comments to my posts this week. Thank you all...
My daughter has them, and they've never shown up during any of the 3 EEG's...
I have her. She's 6. Only difference is her behavior is worse away from home...
Try giving him bananas to eat throughout the day. Two or three a day would...