Stay up to date with notifications from The Independent

Notifications can be managed in browser preferences.

Relief in sight for sleep-sex sufferers

Roger Dobson
Sunday 31 March 2002 02:00 BST
Comments

Scientists have found what they believe is a cure for a little-known but highly disturbing condition known as sleep sex. According to doctors from Stanford University in the US, it can range from loud disruptive moaning to having sex with bed partners.

However, just like sleepwalkers, sleep-sex sufferers have no recollection of their behaviour when they wake up. Often it is only when they are slapped across the face, or worse, that they realise what has happened.

According to researchers, whose study appears in the journal Psychosomatic Medi- cine, the disorder has three degrees of severity. The least damaging involves nightly disturbances which are mildly annoying. Then there are cases in which people are left with bruises. Finally, a few men and women make unwanted sexual advances on their partners.

Researchers believe the condition stems from glitches in brainwaves. Rather than passing through the five phases of sleep, sufferers have interrupted periods of sleep.

But now doctors believe the condition can be eased by sufferers taking the same type of drug used to treat chronic sleepwalking – Valium, for example, and those used to combat breathing problems.

It's not known, however, how widespread the condition actually is. It is thought that known cases may be just the tip of the iceberg because people are reluctant to talk about it. "What was surprising was the duration of the abnormal behaviour and the fact that people weren't reporting it," said Professor Christian Guilleminault of Stanford University. "The aggressor and the victim are often both in difficult situations and don't know how to express the problem."

Join our commenting forum

Join thought-provoking conversations, follow other Independent readers and see their replies

Comments

Thank you for registering

Please refresh the page or navigate to another page on the site to be automatically logged inPlease refresh your browser to be logged in