Article ID Journal Published Year Pages File Type
3837517 Sleep Medicine Clinics 2009 12 Pages PDF
Abstract
The need to evaluate nocturnal movements is a common clinical problem in the practice of sleep medicine. Because reports of the movements occurring during sleep typically cannot be relayed by the patients themselves, the event descriptions often become second hand during evaluation by a sleep medicine clinician. Use of polysomnography, at times with use of specialized techniques, becomes an integral part of the diagnosis of these movements. This article describes the clinical steps involved in the diagnostic plan and reviews the most common sleep-related movements and their polysomnographic findings.
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