Psychiatry and
Behavioral Sciences

Christian Guilleminault

Publication Details

  • Sleep disorders in children with blindness.

    Leger D, Prevot E, Philip P, Yence C, Labaye N, Paillard M, Guilleminault C. Ann Neurol. 1999; 46 (4): 648-51

    To evaluate the frequency and type of sleep disorders seen in blind children compared with matched controls, a 42-item questionnaire was used on 156 children (77 blind children) ranging from 3 to 18 years of age. A total of 17.4% of blind children reported sleeping less than 7 hours per night on weekdays compared with 2.6% of controls, with blind children awakening much earlier. Blind children had more sleep complaints, and 13.4% of blind subjects had daily episodes of involuntary sleepiness compared with 1.3% of controls. Blindness has an impact on sleep and alertness that adds to the primary disability.

    PubMedID: 10514103

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