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Non-REM Parasomnias

VERSION: 1.0 CREATED: February 7, 2026 STATUS: Draft


DIAGNOSIS: Non-REM Parasomnias (Disorders of Arousal)

ICD-10: F51.3 (Sleepwalking [somnambulism]), F51.4 (Sleep terrors [night terrors]), G47.50 (Parasomnia, unspecified), G47.51 (Confusional arousals)

Coding Note: Use F51.3 for confirmed sleepwalking and F51.4 for confirmed sleep terrors. G47.50 is appropriate when the specific parasomnia subtype is not yet determined. G47.52 (REM sleep behavior disorder) is a separate entity — see RBD plan.

CPT CODES: 95810 (Video-polysomnography (PSG)), 95717 (Extended EEG monitoring), 95816 (Routine EEG), 70553 (MRI brain with and without contrast), 85025 (CBC), 80053 (CMP), 84443 (TSH), 80307 (Urine drug screen), 82728 (Serum ferritin)

SYNONYMS: NREM parasomnias, disorders of arousal, sleepwalking, somnambulism, sleep terrors, night terrors, pavor nocturnus, confusional arousals, sleep drunkenness, sexsomnia, sleep-related eating disorder, overlap parasomnia

SCOPE: Diagnosis and management of non-REM parasomnias (disorders of arousal) in adults. Covers sleepwalking (somnambulism), sleep terrors (pavor nocturnus), confusional arousals, and related variants including sleep-related eating disorder and sexsomnia. Critical focus on differentiating from nocturnal frontal lobe epilepsy. Includes diagnostic workup, safety interventions, trigger management, and pharmacotherapy. Excludes REM sleep behavior disorder (separate plan), nightmare disorder, and pediatric-specific management.


DEFINITIONS: - Non-REM Parasomnia (Disorder of Arousal): A group of parasomnias arising from incomplete arousals out of NREM (typically N3/slow-wave) sleep, characterized by complex behaviors with impaired consciousness and subsequent amnesia - Sleepwalking (Somnambulism): Complex ambulatory behaviors initiated during arousals from NREM sleep, ranging from sitting up in bed to walking, running, eating, or leaving the house - Sleep Terrors (Pavor Nocturnus): Episodes of abrupt terror arousal from NREM sleep, typically with a piercing scream, intense fear, and autonomic activation (tachycardia, diaphoresis, mydriasis) - Confusional Arousals (Sleep Drunkenness): Episodes of mental confusion during arousal from NREM (typically slow-wave) sleep; may include inappropriate behavior, slow speech, and reduced alertness without prominent ambulation or terror - Sexsomnia: A variant of confusional arousal characterized by sexual behaviors during NREM sleep, with complete amnesia for the event - Sleep-Related Eating Disorder (SRED): Recurrent episodes of involuntary eating during arousals from NREM sleep, often with consumption of unusual or inedible substances - Overlap Parasomnia: Co-occurrence of NREM parasomnia features with REM sleep behavior disorder in the same patient - Slow-Wave Sleep (N3): The deepest stage of NREM sleep, characterized by high-amplitude delta waves on EEG; predominates in the first third of the night


DIAGNOSTIC CRITERIA (ICSD-3-TR):

Disorders of Arousal — General Criteria (All of the following):

  1. Recurrent episodes of incomplete awakening from sleep
  2. Inappropriate or absent responsiveness to efforts of others to intervene or redirect the person during the episode
  3. Limited (e.g., a single visual scene) or no associated cognition or dream imagery
  4. Partial or complete amnesia for the episode
  5. The disturbance is not better explained by another sleep disorder, mental disorder, medical condition, medication, or substance use

Sleepwalking — Additional Criteria: - Complex behaviors arising from arousals during NREM sleep, typically from slow-wave sleep - Behaviors may include sitting up, walking, running, eating, leaving the house, or driving - Eyes are typically open with a glassy stare; individual is difficult to awaken

Sleep Terrors — Additional Criteria: - Episodes of abrupt terror arousal from NREM sleep, usually initiated by a piercing scream or cry - Intense fear and signs of autonomic arousal including tachycardia, tachypnea, diaphoresis, and mydriasis - Relative unresponsiveness to efforts of others to comfort the individual during the episode

Confusional Arousals — Additional Criteria: - Episodes of mental confusion or confusional behavior during arousal from NREM sleep (typically slow-wave sleep) - May include slow speech, confused thinking, inappropriate behavior, or poor reactivity to external stimuli - Absence of prominent ambulation (distinguishes from sleepwalking) or prominent terror/autonomic activation (distinguishes from sleep terrors)

Key Epidemiologic Features: - Sleepwalking: prevalence ~1-4% in adults; ~17% in children - Sleep terrors: prevalence ~2% in adults; ~3-6% in children - Confusional arousals: prevalence ~4% in adults - All disorders of arousal are more common in childhood and typically decrease with age - Strong genetic predisposition: prevalence increases to ~45% if one parent affected, ~60% if both parents affected

Predisposing and Precipitating Factors: - Sleep deprivation — strongest documented trigger (increases slow-wave sleep pressure) - Alcohol — fragmentary arousals from NREM sleep - Febrile illness — especially in children - Medications — zolpidem, SSRIs, lithium, quetiapine, sodium oxybate - Comorbid sleep disorders — OSA, restless legs syndrome, periodic limb movements (increase arousal frequency) - Stress and anxiety — increase NREM instability - Noise or environmental disruption — forced arousals from N3


PRIORITY KEY: STAT = Immediate | URGENT = Within hours | ROUTINE = Standard | EXT = Extended/atypical cases | - = Not applicable to this setting


1. LABORATORY WORKUP

1A. Essential/Core Labs (All Patients)

Test Rationale Target Finding ED HOSP OPD ICU
CBC (CPT 85025) Exclude anemia or infection contributing to sleep fragmentation Normal ROUTINE ROUTINE ROUTINE -
CMP (CPT 80053) Electrolytes, renal/hepatic function; pre-treatment baseline; exclude metabolic causes Normal ROUTINE ROUTINE ROUTINE -
TSH (CPT 84443) Hypothyroidism increases slow-wave sleep and may precipitate NREM parasomnias Normal ROUTINE ROUTINE ROUTINE -
Serum ferritin (CPT 82728) Iron deficiency contributes to RLS/PLMD which increases NREM arousals and triggers parasomnias >30 ng/mL (>75 ng/mL optimal for RLS) - ROUTINE ROUTINE -
Urine drug screen (CPT 80307) Exclude substance use contributing to parasomnias; identify medication triggers (zolpidem, sedative-hypnotics) Negative or documented prescribed medications only URGENT ROUTINE ROUTINE -
Blood alcohol level Alcohol is a potent trigger for NREM parasomnias; document if acute presentation Negative STAT - - -

1B. Extended Workup (Second-line)

Test Rationale Target Finding ED HOSP OPD ICU
Vitamin B12 (CPT 82607) Deficiency can cause neuropsychiatric symptoms and sleep disruption >400 pg/mL - ROUTINE ROUTINE -
AM cortisol Adrenal insufficiency or Cushing syndrome can alter sleep architecture Normal (6-18 mcg/dL at 8 AM) - - EXT -
Blood glucose log / HbA1c Nocturnal hypoglycemia can mimic or trigger parasomnia episodes Fasting glucose 70-100 mg/dL; HbA1c <5.7% - ROUTINE ROUTINE -
Medication review for parasomnia triggers Zolpidem, SSRIs, lithium, quetiapine, sodium oxybate, beta-blockers — all documented parasomnia triggers Identify and modify culprit agents ROUTINE ROUTINE ROUTINE -
Urine pregnancy test Reproductive-age females before initiating benzodiazepines or other teratogenic medications Negative prior to pharmacotherapy - ROUTINE ROUTINE -

1C. Rare/Specialized

Test Rationale Target Finding ED HOSP OPD ICU
Anti-IgLON5 antibodies Autoimmune disorder associated with NREM parasomnia, sleep-disordered breathing, and neurodegeneration Negative; if positive, confirms anti-IgLON5 disease - - EXT -
Paraneoplastic antibody panel If subacute onset with other neurological symptoms suggesting autoimmune/paraneoplastic etiology Negative - - EXT -
HLA typing (research) HLA-DQB1*05:01 association with sleepwalking under investigation; not yet clinically actionable Document for research - - EXT -

2. DIAGNOSTIC IMAGING & STUDIES

2A. Essential/First-line

Study Timing Target Finding Contraindications ED HOSP OPD ICU
Video-polysomnography (PSG) with extended EEG montage (CPT 95810) ROUTINE; schedule when events occurring at least monthly Capture NREM arousals from N3 sleep; exclude seizure activity; exclude OSA/PLMD as arousal triggers; extended EEG montage critical to distinguish from nocturnal seizures None absolute - ROUTINE ROUTINE -
Sleep diary / sleep log (2+ weeks) Before PSG; ongoing for monitoring Document sleep-wake patterns, sleep deprivation, event timing (first third of night typical), event frequency, potential triggers None ROUTINE ROUTINE ROUTINE -
Epworth Sleepiness Scale (ESS) Initial evaluation Identify comorbid excessive sleepiness suggesting additional sleep disorder (OSA, narcolepsy) None - ROUTINE ROUTINE -
Bed partner / witness interview Initial evaluation; critical for characterization Detailed description of events: timing, duration, behaviors, responsiveness, stereotypy, recall; video recordings of events (smartphone) highly valuable None ROUTINE ROUTINE ROUTINE -

2B. Extended

Study Timing Target Finding Contraindications ED HOSP OPD ICU
Routine EEG (CPT 95816) If nocturnal epilepsy concern; interictal evaluation Interictal epileptiform discharges (spikes, sharp waves) suggesting epilepsy; normal interictal EEG does not exclude nocturnal seizures None ROUTINE ROUTINE ROUTINE -
MRI brain without contrast (CPT 70553) If frontal lobe epilepsy suspected; focal neurological signs; atypical features Exclude frontal lobe structural lesion (tumor, cortical dysplasia, gliosis) Per standard MRI contraindications (pacemaker, metallic implants) - ROUTINE ROUTINE -
Extended video-EEG monitoring (CPT 95717) If events frequent and PSG non-diagnostic; strong suspicion for epilepsy Capture ictal events to definitively classify as epileptic vs. non-epileptic None - ROUTINE EXT -

2C. Rare/Specialized

Study Timing Target Finding Contraindications ED HOSP OPD ICU
Stereo-EEG / invasive monitoring Refractory presumed epilepsy not captured on scalp EEG Identify epileptogenic focus for surgical planning Coagulopathy; active infection - EXT - -
Ambulatory EEG (home monitoring) Events too infrequent for inpatient capture Document interictal or ictal findings in natural sleep environment None - - EXT -
SPECT / PET during events Research setting only; rarely clinically indicated Focal perfusion changes during events Radiation exposure; pregnancy - - EXT -

3. TREATMENT

3A. Safety and Environmental Interventions (First Priority — All Patients)

Treatment Route Indication Dosing Contraindications Monitoring ED HOSP OPD ICU
Bedroom safety modifications - Injury prevention during sleepwalking/sleep terror episodes N/A :: - :: ongoing :: Lock windows and exterior doors; install door alarms or motion-sensor alarms; remove sharp objects and breakable items from bedroom; place mattress on floor or use bed rails; lock away weapons and car keys; install gates on stairways; secure glass doors and windows None Compliance; injury log ROUTINE ROUTINE ROUTINE -
Sleep partner safety plan - Prevent injury to bed partner during violent episodes N/A :: - :: ongoing :: Consider separate sleeping arrangements if episodes involve violent or sexual behaviors; educate partner not to forcefully restrain (may worsen agitation); gently redirect patient back to bed without attempting to wake None Partner injury assessment ROUTINE ROUTINE ROUTINE -
Floor-level sleeping arrangement - Reduce fall risk during ambulatory parasomnias N/A :: - :: ongoing :: Place mattress directly on floor; remove bedframe; clear area around bed of obstacles and hard furniture None Adherence; fall history - ROUTINE ROUTINE -
Home video monitoring - Capture events for diagnostic characterization; assess safety of environment N/A :: - :: ongoing :: Infrared/night-vision camera in bedroom; record events for clinical review; assists in differentiating from seizures (stereotypy vs. variable behavior) None Video review at follow-up - - ROUTINE -

3B. Trigger Management — Non-Pharmacologic (All Patients)

Treatment Route Indication Dosing Contraindications Monitoring ED HOSP OPD ICU
Treat obstructive sleep apnea (CPAP) Device OSA-triggered arousals precipitate parasomnia episodes; treating OSA reduces NREM arousal frequency N/A :: - :: nightly :: Initiate CPAP per titration study; compliance target >=4 hours/night; resolution of arousal-triggered parasomnias documented in literature CPAP intolerance (consider alternatives) CPAP compliance; AHI on therapy; parasomnia frequency - ROUTINE ROUTINE -
Treat restless legs syndrome / PLMD PO/device RLS/PLMD increases NREM arousals which trigger parasomnia episodes N/A :: - :: per RLS protocol :: Iron supplementation if ferritin <75; dopamine agonists or alpha-2-delta ligands per RLS guidelines Per individual RLS treatments Ferritin; PLMS index; parasomnia frequency - ROUTINE ROUTINE -
Sleep hygiene optimization - Sleep deprivation is the single strongest trigger for NREM parasomnias N/A :: - :: daily :: Regular sleep-wake schedule 7 days/week; target 7-9 hours nightly; avoid sleep deprivation; cool, dark, quiet sleeping environment; limit screen time 1 hour before bed; avoid shift work if possible None Sleep diary; adherence ROUTINE ROUTINE ROUTINE -
Scheduled awakenings - Preemptive disruption of N3 sleep before typical event timing N/A :: - :: nightly :: Wake patient 15-30 minutes before typical event time; maintain wakefulness for 5 minutes; most effective when events are predictable in timing; typically used for 4-6 weeks None; may cause sleep deprivation if overused Event log; timing adjustment - - ROUTINE -
Stress management / CBT - Psychological stress increases NREM sleep instability and arousal frequency N/A :: - :: per therapy schedule :: Cognitive behavioral therapy; relaxation training; mindfulness; progressive muscle relaxation; address underlying anxiety or trauma None Symptom response; stress inventory - - ROUTINE -
Alcohol avoidance - Alcohol is a potent trigger that fragments NREM sleep and increases arousals N/A :: - :: daily :: Avoid all alcohol within 3 hours of bedtime; counsel regarding complete avoidance if events correlate with alcohol use None Adherence; event correlation ROUTINE ROUTINE ROUTINE -

3C. First-Line Pharmacotherapy

Treatment Route Indication Dosing Contraindications Monitoring ED HOSP OPD ICU
Clonazepam PO First-line when parasomnia episodes pose safety risk; suppresses arousals from slow-wave sleep; most evidence for NREM parasomnias 0.25 mg qHS; 0.5 mg qHS; 1 mg qHS; 2 mg qHS :: PO :: qHS :: Start 0.25 mg at bedtime; titrate by 0.25 mg every 1-2 weeks based on response; effective range 0.25-2 mg; max 2 mg qHS; taper slowly to discontinue (rebound parasomnias possible) Severe hepatic impairment; untreated OSA (respiratory depression risk); pregnancy (teratogenic); concurrent opioids or heavy alcohol use; myasthenia gravis Sedation; tolerance; daytime somnolence; falls risk (especially elderly); respiratory function; rebound parasomnias on discontinuation; abuse potential - ROUTINE ROUTINE -
Melatonin PO Safe first-line option; consolidates NREM sleep architecture; preferred in elderly or when benzodiazepines contraindicated 3 mg qHS; 6 mg qHS; 9 mg qHS :: PO :: qHS :: Start 3 mg 30 minutes before bedtime; may increase by 3 mg every 1-2 weeks; max 9 mg; extended-release formulation may be more effective for maintaining consolidated sleep Autoimmune conditions (theoretical); may exacerbate depression (rare) Daytime sedation; headache; vivid dreams; next-day grogginess at higher doses - ROUTINE ROUTINE -

3D. Second-Line Pharmacotherapy

Treatment Route Indication Dosing Contraindications Monitoring ED HOSP OPD ICU
Paroxetine PO Sleep terrors specifically; SSRI may reduce NREM parasomnia frequency; limited evidence 10 mg qHS; 20 mg qHS :: PO :: qHS :: Start 10 mg at bedtime; may increase to 20 mg after 2 weeks; evidence primarily for sleep terrors Concurrent MAOIs; concurrent pimozide or thioridazine; first trimester pregnancy Serotonin syndrome; sexual dysfunction; weight gain; discontinuation symptoms if stopped abruptly; suicidality monitoring in young adults; paradoxical worsening of parasomnias (rare) - - EXT -
Trazodone PO Concurrent insomnia with parasomnia; reduces NREM arousals; sedating antidepressant 25 mg qHS; 50 mg qHS; 100 mg qHS :: PO :: qHS :: Start 25 mg at bedtime; titrate by 25 mg every 1-2 weeks; max 100 mg qHS for parasomnia indication Concurrent MAOIs; severe hepatic impairment; concurrent QT-prolonging drugs Priapism (rare but serious); orthostatic hypotension; next-day sedation; cardiac arrhythmia at higher doses - ROUTINE ROUTINE -
Imipramine PO Refractory sleep terrors; tricyclic antidepressant with evidence for sleep terrors 10 mg qHS; 25 mg qHS; 50 mg qHS :: PO :: qHS :: Start 10 mg at bedtime; titrate by 10-25 mg every 1-2 weeks; max 50 mg qHS; avoid in elderly (anticholinergic burden, falls risk) Recent MI; concurrent MAOIs; cardiac conduction disease; narrow-angle glaucoma; urinary retention; elderly (relative) ECG before starting and with dose increases; anticholinergic effects (dry mouth, constipation, urinary retention); orthostatic hypotension; weight gain; QTc prolongation - - EXT -
Topiramate PO Sleep-related eating disorder variant of NREM parasomnia; dual benefit if comorbid migraine 25 mg qHS; 50 mg qHS; 100 mg qHS :: PO :: qHS :: Start 25 mg at bedtime; titrate by 25 mg every 1-2 weeks; target 50-100 mg; max 100 mg qHS for SRED Metabolic acidosis; nephrolithiasis; pregnancy (teratogenic — cleft palate); hepatic failure Metabolic acidosis (serum bicarbonate); kidney stones; cognitive effects (word-finding difficulty); weight loss; paresthesias; glaucoma symptoms - - EXT -
Gabapentin PO Increases slow-wave sleep stability; useful if concurrent neuropathic pain or RLS; reduces NREM arousal frequency 300 mg qHS; 600 mg qHS; 900 mg qHS :: PO :: qHS :: Start 300 mg at bedtime; titrate by 300 mg every 3-5 days; max 900 mg qHS; renal dose adjustment required Severe renal impairment (dose adjust); hypersensitivity Sedation; dizziness; peripheral edema; weight gain; respiratory depression if combined with CNS depressants; renal function - ROUTINE ROUTINE -

4. OTHER RECOMMENDATIONS

4A. Referrals & Consults

Recommendation ED HOSP OPD ICU
Sleep medicine specialist for video-PSG scheduling, diagnosis confirmation, identification of comorbid sleep disorders (OSA, RLS/PLMD), and long-term pharmacotherapy management - ROUTINE ROUTINE -
Neurology / epilepsy specialist to differentiate from nocturnal frontal lobe epilepsy (sleep-related hypermotor epilepsy) when events are stereotyped, brief, frequent, or occur multiple times per night ROUTINE ROUTINE ROUTINE -
Psychiatry referral if significant psychological stress, trauma, anxiety, or comorbid mood disorder is contributing to parasomnia frequency or severity - ROUTINE ROUTINE -
Forensic sleep medicine evaluation if parasomnia events have medicolegal implications (violence during sleep, sexsomnia, injury to others, sleep-driving) - - EXT -
ENT / pulmonology if obstructive sleep apnea identified as arousal trigger requiring CPAP titration or surgical evaluation - ROUTINE ROUTINE -

4B. Patient/Family Instructions

Recommendation ED HOSP OPD ICU
NREM parasomnias are a neurological condition caused by incomplete arousals from deep sleep; they are not a psychiatric disorder or sign of emotional disturbance ROUTINE ROUTINE ROUTINE -
Safety-proof the sleeping environment immediately: lock doors and windows, install alarms, remove sharp objects, place mattress on floor, secure weapons and car keys ROUTINE ROUTINE ROUTINE -
Do NOT forcefully restrain or attempt to aggressively wake someone during an episode; this may worsen agitation and risk injury; instead, gently guide the person back to bed and speak calmly ROUTINE ROUTINE ROUTINE -
Report any injuries to self or others occurring during episodes; escalating frequency, increasing violence, or new behaviors require urgent medical reassessment ROUTINE ROUTINE ROUTINE -
Avoid sleep deprivation — this is the single strongest trigger; maintain a consistent sleep schedule even on weekends and holidays ROUTINE ROUTINE ROUTINE -
Avoid alcohol within 3 hours of bedtime; alcohol is a potent trigger for NREM parasomnias ROUTINE ROUTINE ROUTINE -
Bed partners should sleep in a separate room if episodes involve violent or sexual behaviors until treatment is effective - ROUTINE ROUTINE -
Record events on video (smartphone with night vision or infrared camera) whenever safely possible; video recordings are extremely valuable for diagnosis - - ROUTINE -

4C. Lifestyle & Prevention

Recommendation ED HOSP OPD ICU
Maintain strict consistent sleep-wake schedule 7 days per week; sleep deprivation is the most potent and modifiable trigger for NREM parasomnias - ROUTINE ROUTINE -
Stress reduction techniques including mindfulness, progressive muscle relaxation, or cognitive behavioral therapy; psychological stress increases NREM sleep instability - - ROUTINE -
Avoid alcohol within 3 hours of bedtime; alcohol fragments NREM sleep and lowers the arousal threshold - ROUTINE ROUTINE -
Regular moderate exercise (30 minutes daily) promotes consolidated sleep; avoid vigorous exercise within 2 hours of bedtime - - ROUTINE -
Avoid heavy meals within 2 hours of bedtime; large meals may disrupt sleep architecture and increase arousals - ROUTINE ROUTINE -
Review all medications with provider; common triggers include zolpidem, SSRIs, lithium, quetiapine, sodium oxybate, and beta-blockers - ROUTINE ROUTINE -
Avoid shift work when possible; irregular sleep schedules are a significant trigger for disorders of arousal - - ROUTINE -
Treat comorbid sleep disorders (OSA with CPAP, RLS with appropriate therapy) as these increase the arousal burden that triggers parasomnia events - ROUTINE ROUTINE -

5. DIFFERENTIAL DIAGNOSIS

Alternative Diagnosis Key Distinguishing Features Tests to Differentiate
Nocturnal frontal lobe epilepsy (NFLE) / Sleep-related hypermotor epilepsy (SHE) KEY DIFFERENTIAL: highly stereotyped events; brief duration (typically <2 min); multiple events per night possible; hypermotor semiology (kicking, pedaling, thrashing); may retain awareness; can occur at any time of night; events cluster in NREM stage 2 Video-PSG with extended EEG montage; routine EEG (may show frontal spikes/sharp waves); MRI brain (frontal cortical dysplasia); trial of carbamazepine (positive response supports epilepsy)
REM sleep behavior disorder (RBD) Occurs during REM sleep (second half of night); dream enactment with recall of vivid/violent dreams; typically older males >50; REM without atonia on PSG; associated with alpha-synucleinopathies (Parkinson, DLB, MSA) Video-PSG showing REM without atonia; clinical history of dream recall and REM-timing events
Obstructive sleep apnea with confusional arousals Pseudo-parasomnia triggered by respiratory arousals; snoring, witnessed apneas, obesity; events resolve with CPAP treatment PSG with respiratory scoring (AHI >5); trial of CPAP with resolution of events
Nocturnal panic attacks Full awakening with complete recall; subjective terror with palpitations, dyspnea, chest pain; daytime panic attacks also present; occurs from NREM stage 2-3 but patient is fully alert after Psychiatric evaluation; presence of daytime panic disorder; full recall of event (vs. amnesia in parasomnias)
PTSD nightmares Dream recall present; REM-associated; history of trauma; nightmares with thematic content related to traumatic experiences; full arousal with emotional recall Psychiatric evaluation; trauma history; PSG shows events arise from REM; dream content recall
Dissociative disorder (nocturnal dissociative episodes) Events arise from established wakefulness (not from sleep); normal EEG during events; prolonged episodes; history of trauma/abuse; events may occur with eyes open during wakefulness in bed Video-PSG showing events arise from documented wakefulness (alpha EEG rhythm); psychiatric evaluation
Medication-induced parasomnia Temporal relationship to medication initiation or dose change; common culprits: zolpidem (sleepwalking, sleep-driving), SSRIs, lithium, quetiapine, sodium oxybate Medication review; temporal correlation; resolution with dose reduction or discontinuation
Nocturnal hypoglycemia Diaphoresis, confusion, tremor; occurs in diabetic patients on insulin or sulfonylureas; blood glucose <70 mg/dL during events Continuous glucose monitoring; fingerstick glucose during or immediately after event
Epileptic wandering (nonconvulsive status) Prolonged confusional wandering; may have subtle ictal features (automatisms, lip smacking); postictal confusion EEG during event showing seizure activity; response to antiseizure medications

Key Distinguishing Features: NREM Parasomnia vs. Nocturnal Frontal Lobe Epilepsy

Feature NREM Parasomnia Nocturnal Frontal Lobe Epilepsy (SHE)
Timing in sleep cycle First third of night (N3/slow-wave sleep predominance) Any time of night; often second half; NREM stage 2
Episode duration 1-30 minutes (often prolonged) Usually <2 minutes (brief)
Frequency Weekly to monthly; sporadic Multiple episodes per night possible; often nightly
Stereotypy Variable behavior episode to episode Highly stereotyped (same movements each event)
Semiology Complex behaviors: walking, talking, eating, exploring Hypermotor: kicking, pedaling, thrashing, dystonic posturing
Amnesia Yes — complete or near-complete Variable; may retain some awareness
Responsiveness during event Unresponsive; difficult to arouse May be partially responsive
Interictal EEG Normal May show frontal epileptiform discharges (often normal)
Family history Strong genetic predisposition (~45-60%) May have family history of epilepsy
Provocation by sleep deprivation Yes — strongest trigger Yes — but events occur regardless
Response to carbamazepine No Yes — often excellent
Age of onset Childhood (may persist into adulthood) Any age; adolescence to adulthood

6. MONITORING PARAMETERS

Parameter Frequency Target/Threshold Action if Abnormal ED HOSP OPD ICU
Episode frequency (sleep diary) Each visit; ongoing patient tracking Reduction >=50% from baseline; goal of no injurious events Optimize trigger management; adjust pharmacotherapy; reassess diagnosis if events change character - ROUTINE ROUTINE -
Safety incident / injury log Each visit Zero injuries to self or bed partner Escalate environmental safety measures; consider separate sleeping; increase medication dose; reassess ROUTINE ROUTINE ROUTINE -
Trigger identification log Each visit Document and eliminate modifiable triggers (sleep deprivation, alcohol, medications, stress) Targeted intervention for identified triggers - ROUTINE ROUTINE -
Medication response and side effects Each visit during titration; every 3-6 months when stable Symptom control without intolerable side effects Dose adjustment; switch therapy; address specific adverse effects - ROUTINE ROUTINE -
Bed partner assessment Each visit No partner injuries; acceptable quality of life for bed partner Separate sleeping; increase treatment intensity; partner counseling - ROUTINE ROUTINE -
Clonazepam-specific: sedation and falls Each visit if on clonazepam No daytime sedation; no falls; no respiratory events Reduce dose; switch to melatonin; evaluate respiratory function (especially if comorbid OSA) - ROUTINE ROUTINE -
Clonazepam-specific: tolerance assessment Every 3-6 months Continued efficacy at stable dose Gradual dose increase (max 2 mg); consider drug holiday with safety precautions; switch to alternative - - ROUTINE -
Sleep study follow-up 6-12 months after initial PSG if comorbid sleep disorders treated AHI <5 on CPAP; PLMS index <15; no persistent NREM arousals Adjust CPAP; treat persistent PLMD; reassess parasomnia diagnosis - - ROUTINE -
Annual diagnostic reassessment Annually Confirm events remain consistent with NREM parasomnia; no evolution in event character If events become stereotyped, occur in REM, or include new features: repeat video-PSG; consider RBD (may evolve) or epilepsy (may unmask) - - ROUTINE -

7. DISPOSITION CRITERIA

Disposition Criteria
Discharge home with safety plan Majority of patients; established parasomnia with no acute injury; safety modifications and trigger counseling provided; outpatient sleep medicine follow-up arranged
Outpatient management Newly suspected or established NREM parasomnia for diagnostic workup, trigger management, and chronic medication management
Admit for diagnostic video-PSG/EEG Patients requiring in-lab video-polysomnography with extended EEG montage to differentiate parasomnia from nocturnal seizures; frequent events amenable to capture
Admit to floor Serious injury sustained during parasomnia episode (falls, lacerations, fractures); unclear diagnosis requiring extended video-EEG monitoring; initiation of treatment requiring observation
Admit for extended video-EEG monitoring Diagnostic uncertainty between parasomnia and epilepsy; events not captured on initial PSG; stereotyped events raising epilepsy concern
ICU admission Not typically applicable for parasomnias; consider only if significant trauma-related injury (head injury, internal injury from falls or sleepwalking through windows)
Sleep medicine referral All patients with suspected NREM parasomnia for diagnostic confirmation, comorbid sleep disorder identification, and treatment optimization
Neurology / epilepsy referral Any patient with stereotyped events, events multiple times per night, brief duration events, retained awareness during events, or failure to respond to standard parasomnia treatment
Follow-up frequency Every 2-4 weeks during initial treatment titration; every 3-6 months once stable; sooner if new safety concerns arise

8. EVIDENCE & REFERENCES

Recommendation Evidence Level Source
ICSD-3 diagnostic criteria for disorders of arousal (sleepwalking, sleep terrors, confusional arousals) Consensus guidelines American Academy of Sleep Medicine. ICSD-3-TR 2023
NREM parasomnias pathophysiology: local slow-wave dissociation during arousals from N3 sleep Class II Castelnovo et al. Sleep Med Rev 2018
Comprehensive review of NREM parasomnias: epidemiology, genetics, clinical features, and management Expert review Arnulf et al. Sleep Med Rev 2012
Distinguishing nocturnal frontal lobe epilepsy from NREM parasomnias: clinical and video-PSG features Class II, Level B Derry et al. Brain 2006
Nocturnal frontal lobe epilepsy: clinical and polysomnographic features distinguishing from parasomnias Class II Provini et al. Brain 1999
Treatment of parasomnias: pharmacologic and non-pharmacologic approaches including clonazepam and scheduled awakenings Expert review Attarian & Zhu. Curr Treat Options Neurol 2013
Parasomnias clinical guidelines: diagnosis, safety management, and evidence-based treatment Clinical guidelines Fleetham & Fleming. CMAJ 2014
Clonazepam efficacy for NREM parasomnias; suppression of slow-wave sleep arousals Class III, Level C Schenck & Mahowald. Sleep 1996
OSA as trigger for NREM parasomnias: resolution of sleepwalking and sleep terrors with CPAP Class III, Level C Guilleminault et al. Neurology 2005
Sleep deprivation as primary trigger for disorders of arousal; experimental provocation studies Class II Zadra et al. Ann Neurol 2008
Anti-IgLON5 disease: autoimmune disorder with prominent NREM parasomnia features Class III Sabater et al. Lancet Neurol 2014
Genetic predisposition to sleepwalking: family and twin studies showing strong heritability Class II Licis et al. Neurology 2011
Melatonin for NREM parasomnias: consolidation of sleep architecture and reduction of arousals Class III, Level C Expert consensus; case series
Topiramate for sleep-related eating disorder Class III, Level C Winkelman. Sleep Med 2003
European Sleep Research Society guideline on parasomnias Guideline, expert consensus Galbiati et al. J Sleep Res 2019

NOTES

  • NREM parasomnias arise from incomplete arousals out of slow-wave (N3) sleep, resulting in a dissociated state with motor activation but impaired consciousness and subsequent amnesia
  • Events characteristically occur in the first third of the night when slow-wave sleep predominates
  • Sleep deprivation is the single most potent and well-documented trigger — any factor that increases slow-wave sleep rebound (sleep deprivation, prior sleep disruption, recovery sleep) increases risk
  • The critical clinical distinction is between NREM parasomnia and nocturnal frontal lobe epilepsy (sleep-related hypermotor epilepsy); stereotyped brief events occurring multiple times per night strongly favor epilepsy
  • Video-PSG with extended EEG montage is the diagnostic gold standard; capturing an event during the study provides definitive classification
  • Normal interictal EEG does NOT exclude nocturnal frontal lobe epilepsy; scalp EEG may miss deep frontal epileptiform activity in up to 40% of cases
  • OSA is an underrecognized trigger: respiratory arousal events can trigger parasomnia episodes, and treating OSA with CPAP may completely resolve the parasomnia
  • Restless legs syndrome and periodic limb movement disorder similarly increase NREM arousal frequency and should be aggressively treated
  • Clonazepam has the longest track record for NREM parasomnias but carries risks of tolerance, daytime sedation, and respiratory depression (particularly concerning if comorbid OSA)
  • Melatonin is increasingly used as a safer first-line option, particularly in elderly patients or those with OSA, though evidence remains limited to case series
  • Anti-IgLON5 disease is a rare autoimmune condition that should be considered in patients with NREM parasomnia plus additional neurological features (gait instability, bulbar dysfunction, cognitive decline)
  • Sexsomnia and sleep-related violence carry significant medicolegal implications; forensic sleep medicine evaluation is indicated when events have legal consequences
  • Overlap parasomnia (coexistence of NREM parasomnia with RBD) may suggest underlying neurodegenerative pathology and warrants longitudinal monitoring
  • Medication-induced parasomnia is common and reversible: zolpidem is the most frequently implicated agent, but SSRIs, lithium, quetiapine, and sodium oxybate are also documented triggers

CHANGE LOG

v1.0 (February 7, 2026) - Initial template creation - ICSD-3-TR diagnostic criteria for disorders of arousal (sleepwalking, sleep terrors, confusional arousals) - Comprehensive differential diagnosis with detailed parasomnia vs. epilepsy differentiation table - Safety and environmental interventions as first-priority treatment - Trigger management including OSA treatment, sleep hygiene, and scheduled awakenings - First-line pharmacotherapy (clonazepam, melatonin) and second-line options (paroxetine, trazodone, imipramine, topiramate, gabapentin) - PubMed citations for all major evidence sources - Structured dosing format with :: delimiters for all medications