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Journal Article

Citation

Arnulf I, Zhang B, Uguccioni G, Flamand M, Noël de Fontréaux A, Leu-Semenescu S, Brion A. Sleep 2014; 37(1): 127-136.

Affiliation

Sleep Disorder Unit, Pitié-Salpêtrière Hospital, Centre de Recherche de l'Institut du Cerveau et de la Moëlle épinière - Pierre and Marie Curie University; Inserm UMR_S 975; CNRS UMR 7225, Paris, France.

Copyright

(Copyright © 2014, American Academy of Sleep Medicine, Publisher Associated Professional Sleep Societies)

DOI

10.5665/sleep.3322

PMID

24470702

Abstract

BACKGROUND: Arousal disorders may have serious health consequences. OBJECTIVE: To develop a scale assessing the severity of arousal disorders (Paris Arousal Disorders Severity Scale, PADSS). SETTING: University hospital. DESIGN: Controlled study. PARTICIPANTS: Consecutive patients (older than 15 y), with sleepwalking (SW) and/or sleep terrors (ST), subjects with previous SW/ST, normal controls and patients with rapid eye movement sleep behavior disorder. INTERVENTION: The self-rated scale listed 17 parasomniac behaviors (PADSS-A), assessed their frequency from never to twice or more per night (PADSS-B) and evaluated the consequences (PADSS-C: disturbed sleep, injuries, fatigue, and psychological consequences). The clinimetric properties and face validity of the scale were tested. RESULTS: Half of the 73 patients with SW/ST (more men than women) had injured themselves or others, whereas 15% had concomitant sexsomnia and 23% had amnestic eating behaviors. The total PADSS score (range: 0-50) was 19.4 ± 6.3 (range: 8-36) in this group, 11.7 ± 5.9 in 26 subjects with previous SW/ST, 8.8 ± 3.2 in 26 patients with RBD, and 2.0 ± 3.5 in 53 normal controls (P < 0.05). The PADSS demonstrated high sensitivity (83.6%), specificity (87.8%), internal consistency, and test-retest reliability (0.79). The best cutoff for the total score was at 13/14. Exploratory factor analysis revealed two components: wandering and violence/handling. The complexity of behaviors emerging from N3 sleep (scored on videopolysomnography) positively correlated with scores for the PADSS-total, PADSS-A, PADSS-C, and the "violence/handling" factor. CONCLUSION: This scale had reasonable psychometric properties and could be used for screening and stratifying patients and for evaluating the effects of treatments. CITATION: Arnulf I; Zhang B; Uguccioni G; Flamand M; Noël de Fontréaux A; Leu-Semenescu S; Brion A. A scale for assessing the severity of arousal disorders. SLEEP 2014;37(1):127-136.


Language: en

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