Close X
Tuesday, December 3, 2024
ADVT 
Health

Have A History Of Sleepwalking? If So, Your Kids Are More Likely To Do It Too

Darpan News Desk The Canadian Press, 04 May, 2015 12:16 PM
    TORONTO — Did you sleepwalk when you were a kid? Still do it occasionally? If so, chances are your children will do it too.
     
    A new study adds support to the growing belief that behaviours like sleepwalking and sleep terrors run in families.
     
    Researchers at Montreal's Centre for Advanced Research in Sleep Medicine report that the offspring of parents with a history of sleepwalking are between three and seven times more likely to sleepwalk than other children.
     
    The likelihood rises if both parents are or were sleepwalkers.
     
    The work also draws a link between sleep terrors and sleepwalking, suggesting as many as one-third of children who had night terrors when they were very young will have sleepwalking incidences later.
     
    The findings are published in the journal JAMA Pediatrics. 

    MORE Health ARTICLES

    E-cigarettes Sales Will Suffer If Regulated Like Tobacco By Health Canada

    E-cigarettes Sales Will Suffer If Regulated Like Tobacco By Health Canada
    Designed to simulate smoking, electronic cigarettes continue to grow in popularity but uncertainty over possible Health Canada regulations and restrictions by other regulators are raising concerns for the industry in Canada.

    E-cigarettes Sales Will Suffer If Regulated Like Tobacco By Health Canada

    Your face can reveal your heart condition

    Your face can reveal your heart condition
    The facial features of an individual can reflect whether or not a person is experiencing atrial fibrillation - a treatable but potentially dangerous heart condition....

    Your face can reveal your heart condition

    Junk blood tests may reveal resistant skin bacteria

    Junk blood tests may reveal resistant skin bacteria
    Instead of trashing contaminated positive blood samples in hospitals, these can be used for studying the presence of skin germs, a study suggests....

    Junk blood tests may reveal resistant skin bacteria

    Experimental Ebola drug cures infected monkeys

    Experimental Ebola drug cures infected monkeys
    In what appears to provide new hope for people infected with the deadly Ebola virus, scientists have successfully treated all the Ebola infected monkeys...

    Experimental Ebola drug cures infected monkeys

    Beware! Cigarette substitutes bad for bones

    Beware! Cigarette substitutes bad for bones
    Are you trying e-cigarettes or other nicotine replacement therapies to overcome addiction to cigarette smoking? Be warned, as they are not...

    Beware! Cigarette substitutes bad for bones

    Electric currents may boost memory

    Electric currents may boost memory
    Electric currents could be the key to treating memory impairments caused by conditions such as stroke, early-stage Alzheimer's disease...

    Electric currents may boost memory