Sleep terrors (night terrors) - Diagnosis and treatment (2024)

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Diagnosis

To diagnose sleep terrors, your doctor or other healthcare professional may:

  • Talk about your medical history. Your healthcare professional will likely discuss your medical history. You may have a physical exam to identify any conditions that may be part of the reason for your sleep terrors. You may be asked about your family history of sleep problems.
  • Talk about your symptoms. Sleep terrors are usually diagnosed based on your description of the events. The health professional also may ask you or your bed partner some questions about your sleep behaviors. A video of a sleep terror episode can be helpful.
  • Recommend an overnight sleep study. In some cases, your health professional may recommend an overnight study in a sleep lab. Sensors placed on your body record and monitor brain waves, the oxygen level in your blood, heart rate and breathing during sleep. The sensors also record eye and leg movements while you sleep. You may be videotaped to document your behavior during sleep cycles.

More Information

  • Polysomnography (sleep study)

Treatment

Treatment usually isn't needed for sleep terrors that happen rarely. Children typically outgrow sleep terrors.

Treatment may be needed if the sleep terrors cause a safety risk, interfere with sleep, don't go away with time or happen more often. Being embarrassed or disrupting the sleep of others may lead some people to seek treatment.

Treatment generally focuses on plans for safety and getting rid of causes or triggers for sleep terrors.

Treatment options may include:

  • Treating any underlying condition. If the sleep terrors are linked with a medical or mental health condition or another sleep disorder, such as obstructive sleep apnea, treatment is aimed at the underlying problem.
  • Addressing stress. If stress or anxiety seems to be part of the cause of the sleep terrors, your healthcare professional may suggest meeting with a sleep specialist. Cognitive behavioral therapy, hypnosis or relaxation therapy may help.
  • Anticipatory awakening. This involves waking the person who has sleep terrors about 15 minutes before the person usually has the event. Then the person stays awake for a few minutes before falling asleep again.
  • Medicine. Medicine is rarely used to treat sleep terrors, especially for children. But if needed, the healthcare professional may prescribe medicines that help with sleep, such as benzodiazepines or certain antidepressants.

More Information

  • Biofeedback
  • Cognitive behavioral therapy
  • Hypnosis

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Lifestyle and home remedies

If sleep terrors are a problem for you or your child, here are some tips:

  • Get enough sleep. Extreme tiredness can contribute to sleep terrors. If you're not getting enough sleep, try an earlier bedtime and a more regular sleep schedule. Sometimes a short nap may help. If possible, avoid noises or other stimuli that could interrupt sleep.
  • Establish a regular, relaxing routine before bedtime. Do quiet, calming activities before bed. Read books, do puzzles or soak in a warm bath. Meditation or relaxation exercises may help too. Make the bedroom comfortable and quiet for sleep. Avoid caffeine close to bedtime.
  • Make the area safe. To help prevent injury, close and lock all windows and outside doors at night. You might even lock inside doors or put alarms or bells on them. Block doorways or stairways with a gate. Move electrical cords or other objects that might be a tripping hazard. Don't use bunk beds, if possible. Place any sharp or fragile objects out of reach. Also, lock up all weapons.
  • Put stress in its place. Identify the things that cause stress. Think of ways to handle the stress. If your child seems anxious or stressed, talk about what's bothering your child. A mental health professional can help.
  • Offer comfort. If your child has a sleep terror, consider simply waiting it out. It may be upsetting to watch, but it won't harm your child. You might cuddle and gently soothe your child. Then try to get your child back into bed. Speak softly and calmly. Don't shout. Trying to wake your child or keep your child from moving may make things worse. Usually the event will shortly stop on its own.
  • Look for a pattern. If your child has sleep terrors, keep a sleep diary. For a few weeks, note how many minutes after bedtime a sleep terror occurs. If the timing is fairly consistent, anticipatory awakenings may help.

Preparing for your appointment

Sleep terrors in children tend to go away by the time they're teenagers. But if you have concerns about safety or underlying conditions for you or your child, talk to your healthcare professional. Your health professional may refer you to a sleep specialist.

Keep a sleep diary for two weeks before the appointment. A sleep diary can help the healthcare professional understand more about the sleep schedule, issues that affect sleep and when sleep terrors happen. In the morning, record bedtime rituals, quality of sleep, and anything else you think is important. At the end of the day, record behaviors that may affect sleep, such as sleep schedule changes and any medicine taken.

You may want to take a family member or friend along, if possible, to provide more information.

What you can do

Before your appointment, make a list of:

  • Any symptoms, including any that may not seem related to the reason for the appointment. Bring a sleep diary to the appointment, if possible. A video recording of the sleep terror can be helpful.
  • Key personal information, including any major stresses or recent life changes.
  • All medicines, vitamins, herbs or other supplements being taken, and the doses.
  • Questions to ask the healthcare professional to help make the most of your time together.

Some questions to ask include:

  • What is likely causing these symptoms?
  • What are other possible causes?
  • What kinds of tests are needed?
  • Is the condition likely to last a short time or a long time?
  • What's the best course of action?
  • What are other options to the primary actions you're suggesting?
  • Do you recommend seeing a specialist?
  • Are there any brochures or other printed material that I can have? What websites do you recommend?

Don't hesitate to ask other questions during your appointment.

What to expect from your doctor

Your doctor or other healthcare professional is likely to ask several questions, for example:

  • When did the sleep terrors begin?
  • How often do the sleep terrors occur?
  • When during the night do the episodes occur?
  • Can you describe a typical episode?
  • Have there been sleep problems in the past?
  • Does anyone else in your family have sleep problems?
  • Have the episodes resulted in any injuries.

Be ready to answer questions so you have time to go over information you want to spend more time on.

By Mayo Clinic Staff

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Jan. 13, 2024

Print

  1. Sateia M. Sleep terrors. In: International Classification of Sleep Disorders. 3rd ed. American Academy of Sleep Medicine; 2014. https://learn.aasm.org/Listing/a1341000002XmRvAAK. Accessed March 1, 2023.
  2. Kryger M, et al., eds. Disorders of arousal. In: Principles and Practice of Sleep Medicine. 7th ed. Elsevier; 2022. https://www.clinicalkey.com. Accessed March 1, 2023.
  3. Parasomnias. Merck Manual Professional Version. https://www.merckmanuals.com/professional/neurologic-disorders/sleep-and-wakefulness-disorders/parasomnias. March 3, 2023.
  4. Sleep-wake disorders. In: Diagnostic and Statistical Manual of Mental Disorders DSM-5-TR. 5th ed. American Psychiatric Association; 2022. https://dsm.psychiatryonline.org. Accessed. March 2, 2023.
  5. Leung AKC, et al. Sleep terrors: An updated review. Current Pediatric Reviews. 2020; doi:10.2174/1573396315666191014152136.
  6. Bruni O, et al. The parasomnias. Child and Adolescent Psychiatric Clinics of North America. 2021; doi:10.1016/j.chc.2020.08.007.
  7. Olson EJ (expert opinion). Mayo Clinic. March 10, 2023.

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Associated Procedures

  • Biofeedback
  • Cognitive behavioral therapy
  • Hypnosis
  • Polysomnography (sleep study)

Sleep terrors (night terrors)

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Sleep terrors (night terrors) - Diagnosis and treatment (2024)

FAQs

How are night terrors diagnosed? ›

Doctors usually diagnose night terrors by asking about what happened and doing an exam. Medical tests usually aren't needed.

How to fix night terrors in adults? ›

Treatment options may include:
  1. Treating any underlying condition. If the sleep terrors are linked with a medical or mental health condition or another sleep disorder, such as obstructive sleep apnea, treatment is aimed at the underlying problem.
  2. Addressing stress. ...
  3. Anticipatory awakening. ...
  4. Medicine.
Jan 13, 2024

What kind of trauma causes night terrors? ›

PTSD often causes night terrors, a sleep disruption they may not even remember the next morning.

What medication is used for night terrors in adults? ›

Some studies suggest that long-term management with low dose clonazepam is effective for adults with severe sleep terrors involving violence or self-injurious behaviors.

What vitamin deficiency causes night terrors? ›

Night terrors can be caused by deficiencies in certain vitamins or minerals, such as magnesium, calcium, iron, zinc and Vitamin B6. Deficiencies in these vitamins and minerals can lead to low levels of serotonin in the brain. Serotonin is a chemical that helps regulate sleep and calming responses.

What can be mistaken for night terrors? ›

The seizures can look like a simple arousal from sleep, at times confused as a nightmare or night terror. They can also be more involved movements like twisting, turning, pelvic thrusting, pedaling, grimacing, wandering, startling, and vocalizations like screaming, moaning or crying.

Are night terrors linked to anxiety? ›

These include obstructive sleep apnea and periodic limb movement disorder, a condition that may be correlated with restless legs syndrome. Anxiety: Although night terrors are common among children, they've been linked to separation anxiety in some children.

What causes violent night terrors in adults? ›

Adults may be more injury-prone than children, as many people suddenly get out of bed when one happens. Night terrors in adults usually point to an underlying mental health condition, like post-traumatic stress disorder or anxiety disorder.

What makes night terrors worse? ›

Night terrors may become worse with illness and fevers, or if your child becomes very worried about something. Night terrors are different to nightmares. Nightmares are scary dreams that usually happen in the second half of the night, during dream sleep.

Are night terrors a form of psychosis? ›

Other common parasomnias such as nightmares and night terrors have often been associated with psychopathology. Cross-sectional studies have also suggested that nightmares are related to psychosis proneness or schizotypy.

What is the neurological disorder night terrors? ›

Night terrors are a common sleep disorder in young children and describe a condition in which a child wakes up from sleep in a terrified state. For the majority of these episodes, the child will not have any recollection of this event ever happening.

Why shouldn't you wake up someone having a night terror? ›

The main concern is that waking someone up during a night terror could prolong the episode, because the person may believe in their half-asleep state that people or things in the room are dangerous, Singh says. It's also possible that someone experiencing night terrors will harm you out of fear.

What supplements help night terrors? ›

A number of simple at home remedies may also help relieve night terrors such as melatonin. Melatonin is a naturally produced hormone that regulates the sleep-wake cycle, but it is also a dietary supplement that can be used in the short term treatment of sleep disorders.

What is a temporary solution to night terrors? ›

Keep a sleep diary, and note how often the terrors occur and what time they begin. If the night terrors are bothersome, and they come at a regular time, one suggestion is to wake your child 15 minutes before they are likely to occur, keep them awake for 5 minutes and then let them go back to sleep.

Does melatonin stop night terrors? ›

“Sometimes, melatonin can cause night terrors, nightmares or other parasomnias, but for other children it could help to reduce those disruptions in a child's sleep.”

Do I need to see a doctor for night terrors? ›

See a GP if:

your child has night terrors several times a night or has them most nights. your child has lots of nightmares about the same thing. you're having regular nightmares that are affecting your sleep and everyday life.

What are the criteria for sleep terrors? ›

According to the Diagnostic and Statistical Manual of Mental Disorders, 5th edition (DSM-5), sleep terrors are recurrent episodes of partial, abrupt awakening from deep (NREM) sleep, usually during the first third of the major sleep episode, accompanied by panicky/inconsolable screaming, intense fear, relative ...

Who is prone to night terrors? ›

Night terrors are most common in children ages 3 through 7, and much less common after that. Night terrors may run in families. They can occur in adults, especially when there is emotional tension or alcohol use.

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