PREVALENCE AND GENETICS OF SLEEPWALKING - A POPULATION-BASED TWIN STUDY

Citation
C. Hublin et al., PREVALENCE AND GENETICS OF SLEEPWALKING - A POPULATION-BASED TWIN STUDY, Neurology, 48(1), 1997, pp. 177-181
Citations number
27
Categorie Soggetti
Clinical Neurology
Journal title
ISSN journal
00283878
Volume
48
Issue
1
Year of publication
1997
Pages
177 - 181
Database
ISI
SICI code
0028-3878(1997)48:1<177:PAGOS->2.0.ZU;2-D
Abstract
We investigated the prevalence of sleepwalking using a well defined po pulation previously used for epidemiologic investigations: the Finnish Twin Cohort. The study population consisted of 11,220 subjects aged 3 3 to 60 years, and it included 1,045 monozygotic and 1,899 dizygotic t win pairs. Questions on the frequency of sleepwalking were asked separ ately for occurrence in childhood and adulthood. Childhood sleepwalkin g was significantly more frequent in women (''often'' in 2.8% of women and 2.0% of men and ''sometimes'' in 6.9% of women and 5.7% of men). As adults, sleepwalking had occurred in 3.9% of men and in 3.1% of wom en, and it was reported ''weekly'' in 0.4% for both genders. There was no significant difference in frequency between monozygotic and dizygo tic twin individuals, either in childhood or adulthood. For sleepwalki ng in childhood the probandwise concordance rate was 0.55 for monozygo tic and 0.35 for dizygotic pairs, and for adults, 0.32 for monozygotic , and 0.06 for dizygotic pairs. Those who reported never having walked in their sleep in childhood did so as adults rarely (0.6%), both men and women. Those who reported walking in their sleep often or sometime s in childhood did so as adults for 24.6% of men and for 18.3% of wome n. Of adult men sleepwalkers 88.9% had a positive history of sleepwalk ing in childhood, and in women, 84.5%. The proportion of total phenoty pic variance attributed to genetic influences was 66% in men and 57% i n women in childhood sleepwalking, and 80% in men and 36% in women in adult sleepwalking. Our results show that there are substantial geneti c effects in sleepwalking in both childhood and adulthood.