Showing posts with label night terrors. Show all posts
Showing posts with label night terrors. Show all posts

Friday, July 11, 2025

The Death-a-lo…. A Tale of Terror

 


This post is about a very unusual experience that occurs to a lot of kids.  I thought I would write about it from that perspective.  Consider the young boy in the photo at the top of this post from the mid-1950s. He would be the oldest of 5 children born to a working-class couple and this was their first home.  For 2 years around the time of this photo very unusual events would occur frequently at night. 

On a regular basis – he would wake his parents up - screaming.  What he could not articulate very well at the time was that he would see an old woman entering his room at night.  She walked through a narrow door from an adjacent room rather than a large door connecting the main rooms. She had either very long hair or headwear that accentuated her pale complexion.  She had a threatening facial expression.  She did not say anything or make any noise – but walked silently closer to the boy.  With each step he got more anxious and scared.  At some point he started screaming and did not stop until his mother or father came into the room to see what was the matter. Even then he was unconsolable.  He could only piece together that sequence of events after it had happened many (tens) of times.

His parents typically found him flushed, sweating, with his heart pounding.  It took him about 10 minutes to recover and no matter what they did – they could not speed the recovery process along.  They also could never figure out what was bothering him.  He could never make a clear description even after the recovery period.

Over repeated incidents, and being asked the same questions the apparition became known as the Death-a-lo. It was a name that came naturally to him, but his parents did not know what to make of it.  They did not understand what he was seeing.  They knew there was nothing in the room. They were also concerned that he was making so much noise at night that he may be waking the neighbors.  One day they were walking with him in a public area and 3 Catholic nuns walked by and he pointed to them and shouted: “Death-a-los”.  It was not clear if he was communicating a fear of nuns or a resemblance to the hallucination. When the boy was older – he noticed a chalk drawing of a woman at his grandmother’s house that also resembled the hallucination.  In the small town where the family lived – problems like this never really came to the attention of physicians.  There were no pediatricians or psychiatrists.  All medical care was done by primary care physicians.

Eventually those nocturnal hallucinations and hyperarousal resolved.  This boy went on to become a neurotic child preoccupied with somatic concerns and premature death. For several years, he was concerned that he had a fatal illness – typically cancer or a lethal infection – usually rabies. He was anxious about doing something wrong and making sure that he did things right.  Even though the hallucinations and night terrors were gone – he had lifelong insomnia and would lay awake late into the night. He constantly thought about things – thoughts of the past, things that had happened, what the future might be like, important things he learned in school, potential catastrophic events, and illnesses.  He was eventually able to put the insomnia to good use.  He could study all night long and was able to think creatively rather than just worry. 

This vignette is a description of sleep terrors or night terrors.  In the current psychiatric and sleep nomenclature (1,2), it is classified under the Non-Rapid Eye Movement (NREM) Sleep Arousal Disorders of the Parasomnias.  The characteristic feature of NREM Sleep Arousal Disorders is abnormal events occurring during incomplete arousals during the first third of the sleep cycle (slow wave sleep).  The main disorders are sleep walking and sleep terrors. About 1/3 of children have had at least 1 episode of sleep walking and roughly the same for sleep terror episodes at 18 months of age.  Sleep terror episodes diminish with age to only about 2.2% of adults. The prevalence of sleep terror disorder (recurrent episodes leading to distress and impairment) in adults and children (1-14%) varies widely depending on the methodology used for estimates (3).

There are potentially many etiologies of NREM sleep arousal disorders in prepubertal children, but it is probably best conceptualized as a developmental phase that will resolve with little to no intervention.  Some research papers will list algorithms to capture rare etiologies, but expert guidelines (4) suggest a detailed history to determine the features of the episode with a medical and full neurological examination.  More extensive testing is indicated only if there are abnormal findings or further differentiation is needed from sleep associated epilepsy or other parasomnias.  Differentiation from nightmares is not difficult based on timing, more clear recall of the nightmare event, and the lack of marked autonomic arousal.

Like most disorders of consciousness, there is no clear mechanism.  At the level of clinical neurophysiology – sleep EEGs will clearly show a transition from stage 3 and 4 slow wave sleep (N3) to a period of hyperarousal with increased muscle tone/movements, tachycardia, and hyperventilation.  I currently have permissions to display 2 EEGs of sleep terrors pending and will post them if I get those permissions.  

At the pathophysiological level, these arousals are like sleep inertia or incomplete arousals from slow wave sleep.  They can be induced by forced awakening of people in slow wave sleep.  Sleep disorders, sleep deprivation, circadian rhythm disturbances, physical illnesses, physical stimuli (excessive environmental noise, bladder distention, sleep disordered breathing), and prescription or non-prescription drugs that affect sleep states can all precipitate these episodes.  The developmental form is more likely to persist and no specific etiology is typically determined.

Sleep problems are very common in populations with psychiatric disorders.  That insomnia and some of the medications prescribed for primary psychiatric disorders can trigger NREM arousals and that should be part of the ongoing dialogue with any patients who are being treated.  Some studies indicate that these sleep problems are more likely in family members who have first degree relatives with psychiatric disorders, sleep disorders, and sleep disordered breathing.  In the care of the patient discussed above – his father probably died from sleep apnea and he was eventually diagnosed with severe sleep apnea at age 55 and has been using CPAP ever since.

There has not been a lot of extensive work done looking at subsequent psychopathology and NREM arousal disorders. A study from 1980 (8) is still quoted suggesting that the sleep terror group is more likely to experience anxiety, depression, obsessive-compulsive tendencies and inhibit outward expressions of aggressions. There has been very little work done on the phenomenology of sleep terror episodes – most likely since episodes are associated with amnesia. The Death-a-lo descriptions was possible only after many episodes over a period of at least one year.

Like most disorders, there is a wide range of severity with both sleep walking and sleep terrors.  Consultants will typically ask about the safety of the sleep environment and make suggestion where necessary.  All the previously mentioned factors that can lead to the arousal can be modified. There are environmental, behavioral, and pharmacological interventions (benzodiazepines, antidepressants, melatonergic agents).  The impression I get from reading the current literature is that the need for pharmacological intervention is rare.  That is probably expected when the disorder is time limited, environmentally sensitive, and can be treated with anticipatory or scheduled awakenings.  After the usual time of the disturbance has been determined – the parents wake the child up about 30 minutes before the event.  That is described as being as effective as medications – but whether a non-treatment comparison was done is unknown.

In the case of the boy in the vignette,  he is now in his 70s.  He has had no parasomnias since this pre-pubertal episode.  A few years later he did have an episode of severe visual hallucinations that occurred due to a febrile illness, but he has not been diagnosed or treated for psychiatric problems – apart from the lifelong insomnia and obstructive sleep apnea.

I basically did OK!

 

George Dawson, MD, DFAPA

 

References:

1:  Diagnostic and Statistical Manual of Mental Disorders: DSM-5. 5th ed., American Psychiatric Association, 2013. DSM-V, doi-org.db29.linccweb.org/10.1176/ appi.

2:  American Academy of Sleep Medicine. International classification of sleep disorders, revised: Diagnostic and coding manual. Chicago, Illinois: American Academy of Sleep Medicine, 2001.

3:  Leung AKC, Leung AAM, Wong AHC, Hon KL. Sleep Terrors: An Updated Review. Curr Pediatr Rev. 2020;16(3):176-182. doi: 10.2174/1573396315666191014152136. PMID: 31612833; PMCID: PMC8193803.

Sleep terrors typically occur in children between 4 and 12 years of age, with a peak between 5 and 7 years of age. It is estimated that sleep terrors occur in 1 to 6.5% of children 1 to 12 years of age, although a prevalence of 14% or higher has also been reported. The wide variation in prevalence can be attributed to differences in definitions of a sleep terror, methodology, and studied population. The lifetime prevalence of sleep terrors has been estimated to be approximately 10%. The condition is uncommon after puberty. In the pediatric aged group, the condition is more common in boys than in girls. In the adult population, both sexes are equally affected.”

4:  Avidan AY.  Disorders of arousal.  In:  Kryger M, Roth T, Goldstein CA, Dement WC.  Principles and Practice of Sleep Medicine. 7th ed. Philadelphia, PA:  Elsevier, Inc, 2017:  1071-1086.

5:  Guilleminault C, Palombini L, Pelayo R, Chervin RD. Sleepwalking and sleep terrors in prepubertal children: what triggers them? Pediatrics. 2003 Jan;111(1):e17-25. doi: 10.1542/peds.111.1.e17. PMID: 12509590.

6:  Loddo, G., Lopez, R., Cilea, R. et al. Disorders of Arousal in adults: new diagnostic tools for clinical practice. Sleep Science Practice 3, 5 (2019). https://doi.org/10.1186/s41606-019-0037-3

7:  DiMario FJ Jr, Emery ES 3rd. The natural history of night terrors. Clin Pediatr (Phila). 1987 Oct;26(10):505-11. doi: 10.1177/000992288702601002. PMID: 3652596.

8:  Kales JD, Kales A, Soldatos CR, Caldwell AB, Charney DS, Martin ED. Night terrors. Clinical characteristics and personality patterns. Arch Gen Psychiatry. 1980 Dec;37(12):1413-7. doi: 10.1001/archpsyc.1980.01780250099012. PMID: 7447622.

“Both groups had high levels of psychopathology, with higher values for the night terror group. These sleepwalkers showed active, outwardly directed behavioral patterns, whereas the night terror patients showed an inhibition of outward expressions of aggression and a predominance of anxiety, depression, tendencies obsessive-compulsive/, and phobicness. Although night terrors and sleepwalking in childhood seem to be related primarily to genetic and developmental factors, their persistence and especially their onset in adulthood are found to be related more to psychological factors.”