
Sleep-related Violence, Dissociative Experiences, and Childhood Traumatic Events
Mehmet Yucel Agargun, Hayrettin Kara, Ömer Akil Özer, Ümit Kıran, Yavuz Selvi, Songül Kıran
Sleep and Hypnosis: A Journal of Clinical Neuroscience and Psychopathology 2002;4(2):52-57
The aim of the present study was to test whether a relationship between dissociative experiences and violent behavior during sleep (VBS). The group was composed of 253 male and 129 female undergraduate students. The subjects were interviewed for parasomnias and sleep-related violence by using International Classification of Sleep Disorders (ICSD)-revised criteria. Dissociative Experiences Scale (DES) was also administered to the subjects. The subjects with sleep-related violence had higher mean DES score than those never reported VBS. The subjects with sleep-related violence had higher rates of history of physical abuse than the others. Suicidal attempts and self-mutilating behaviors were also more common among these subjects than the others. There is an association between sleep-related violence, childhood abuse, and dissociative experiences. Dissociative experiences may relate not only to daytime symptoms but also symptoms during sleep.
Keywords:
sleep-related violence, dissociative experiences, parasomnias, childhood
traumatic events
sleep-related violence, dissociative experiences, parasomnias, childhood
traumatic events
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