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  2. Hypersomnia - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Hypersomnia

    Behaviorally induced insufficient sleep syndrome must be considered in the differential diagnosis of secondary hypersomnia. This disorder occurs in individuals who fail to get sufficient sleep for at least three months. In this case, the patient has chronic sleep deprivation, although they may not necessarily be aware of it. This situation is ...

  3. Sleep deprivation - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Sleep_deprivation

    In the study, 70.6% of students reported obtaining less than 8 hours of sleep, and up to 27% of students may be at risk for at least one sleep disorder. [142] Sleep deprivation is common in first-year college students as they adjust to the stress and social activities of college life.

  4. Oneirophrenia - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Oneirophrenia

    Oneirophrenia can result from long periods of sleep deprivation or extreme sensory deprivation. The hallucinations in oneirophrenia are increased or derive under decreased sensory input. Psychoanalysts , such as Claudio Naranjo , in the sixties have described the value of ibogaine -induced oneirophrenia for inducing and manipulating free ...

  5. Sleep disorder - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Sleep_disorder

    The most common sleep-related symptom of bipolar disorder is insomnia, in addition to hypersomnia, nightmares, poor sleep quality, OSA, extreme daytime sleepiness, etc. [27] Moreover, animal models have shown that sleep debt can induce episodes of bipolar mania in laboratory mice, but these models are still limited in their potential to explain ...

  6. Dyssomnia - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Dyssomnia

    Dyssomnias are primary disorders of initiating or maintaining sleep or of excessive sleepiness and are characterized by a disturbance in the amount, quality, or timing of sleep. Patients may complain of difficulty getting to sleep or staying asleep, intermittent wakefulness during the night, early morning awakening, or combinations of any of these.

  7. Somnolence - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Somnolence

    In individuals deprived of sleep, somnolence may spontaneously dissipate for short periods of time; this phenomenon is the second wind, and results from the normal cycling of the circadian rhythm interfering with the processes the body carries out to prepare itself to rest. The word "somnolence" is derived from the Latin "somnus" meaning "sleep".

  8. Insomnia - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Insomnia

    It can be caused by another disorder, by changes in the sleep environment, by the timing of sleep, severe depression, or by stress. Its consequences – sleepiness and impaired psychomotor performance – are similar to those of sleep deprivation. [102] Acute insomnia is the inability to consistently sleep well for a period of less than a month ...

  9. Depersonalization - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Depersonalization

    [16] [17] It can also accompany sleep deprivation (often occurring when experiencing jet lag), migraine, epilepsy (especially temporal lobe epilepsy, [18] complex-partial seizure, both as part of the aura and during the seizure [19]), obsessive-compulsive disorder, severe stress or trauma, anxiety, the use of recreational drugs [20 ...