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         Night Terrors:     more books (100)
  1. NIGHT CRY: THE MAGAZINE OF TERROR SPRING 1986 VOL. 1 NUMBER 5 by J. N. Williamson, Anit (Night Cry) [introduction by Alan Rodgers] [Robert Bloch, 1986
  2. Night Terrors
  3. "Night of Terror" by Jean Rusin, 2008-02-04
  4. Surviving Fears In Health And Social Care: The Terrors Of Night And The Arrows Of Day by Martin Smith, 2004-12-30
  5. Reading the Early Modern Dream: The Terrors of the Night (Routledge Studies in Renaissance Literature and Culture)
  6. One Night of Terror by Marjorie Carleton, 1960
  7. The Prince still smiled: Amazing love breaks through a Cambodian family's night of terror : a true story by Carl Lawrence, 1979
  8. Triumph of the Night: Tales of Terror and the Supernatural by 20th Century Masters
  9. Kolchak The Night Stalker: Terror Within (Kolchak the Nightstalker) by Stefan Pertucha, C. J. Henderson, et all 2006-04-05
  10. STRANGE TALES - Volume 3, number 1 - January Jan 1933: The Second Interment; The Thing That Walked on the Wind; The Terror By Night; White Lady; Murgunstreumm; The Napier Limousine; The Cairn on the Headland by Harry (editor) (Clark Ashton Smith; August W. Derleth; Charles Willard Di Bates, 2002
  11. Terror by Night by Michael Renaut, 1982-10
  12. Terror in the Night by Bea Carlton, 2003-11
  13. Terror By Night by Lee Crosby, 1942-01-01
  14. Terror in the Night by Sebastian Blayne, 1953

41. Night Terror
night terrors are a sleep disorder involving abrupt awakening from sleep in a terrified state.
http://www.healthcentral.com/ency/408/000809.html
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Night terror
Definition: Night terrors are a sleep disorder involving abrupt awakening from sleep in a terrified state.

42. Nightmares And Night Terrors - Lucile Packard Children's Hospital
night terrors usually occur within two hours of the time a child goes to sleep. Try to prevent night terrors. A night terror can be triggered if your
http://www.lpch.org/DiseaseHealthInfo/HealthLibrary/growth/ntmares.html
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Nightmares and Night Terrors
What are night terrors?
A night terror is a partial waking from sleep with behaviors such as screaming, kicking, panic, sleep walking, thrashing, or mumbling. Night terrors usually occur within two hours of the time a child goes to sleep. They are harmless and each episode will end in deep sleep. They are considered normal until age 6.
The following are common characteristics of a night terror:
  • Your child is frightened but cannot be awakened or comforted. Your child's eyes are wide open but he/she does not know that you are there. Your child may think objects or persons in the room are scary. The episode lasts from 10 to 30 minutes. Your child often does not remember the episode in the morning.
How to help a child during a night terrors:
  • Try to help your child return to normal sleep. You will not be able to awaken your child, so do not try. Turn on the lights so that your child is less confused by shadows. Make soothing comments. Hold your child if it seems to help him/her feel better. Shaking or shouting at your child may cause the child to become more upset.
    Protect your child against injury. During a night terror, a child can fall down a stairway, run into a wall, or break a window. Try to gently direct your child back to bed.

43. Night Terrors
When children have night terrors, they usually scream or cry out and appear to be frightened, Children having night terrors may appear very frightened.
http://www.parenting-ed.org/handout3/Specific Concerns and Problems/night terror

NIGHT TERRORS
A night terror is a sleep disturbance that can be very upsetting to parents. When children have night terrors, they usually scream or cry out and appear to be frightened, as if they're reacting to a nightmare. Children having night terrors may appear very frightened. They may sit up in bed, thrash their arms and legs, and seem terrified. Night terrors are often more upsetting to parents than they are to the children who have them. When parents try to calm their children during night terrors, they often find that their children do not seem to recognize them and do not respond to them. This is because children having night terrors are still asleep. Their eyes may be wide open, but in fact they are asleep. Parents often confuse night terrors with nightmares, when in fact they are very different. Night terrors are less common than nightmares. Unlike nightmares, night terrors take place during very deep sleep and generally occur during the first four hours of sleep. Though they are rare, they most often occur around the ages of four and five, and they usually stop around eight years of age. Night terrors are not usually considered to be dangerous or to be a cause for concern. It is not presently known why children have night terrors, but they do tend to run in families. They are not believed to be related to stresses or problems in everyday life that children may have. They are usually not upsetting to children, because they don't remember the night terror the next day, and do not wake up while they are having them. Most often the children having night terrors return to quiet sleep within a short period of time.

44. InteliHealth:
Sleep terrors (also called night terrors or pavor nocturnus) are a related For children with frequent sleepwalking or night terrors, a technique called
http://www.intelihealth.com/IH/ihtIH/WSIHW000/9339/25931.html
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Sleepwalking And Sleep Terrors
  • What Is It? Symptoms Diagnosis Expected Duration ... Additional Info
  • What Is It? A person who is sleepwalking does seemingly purposeful movements, such as walking, in a state of partial wakefulness from deep sleep. Contrary to popular belief, sleepwalkers don't act out their dreams; sleepwalking doesn't take place during the dreaming stage of sleep.

    45. InteliHealth: Night Terrors
    Nightmares and night terrorsJo Douglas, author of Toddler Troubles, on what you can do when your child is plagued by nightmares and night terrors.
    http://www.intelihealth.com/IH/ihtIH?t=7053

    46. Night Terrors
    night terrors are differentiated from nightmares in that they have been shown to occur during Stage 4 of sleep, or in REM sleep, while nightmares can occur
    http://www.healthatoz.com/healthatoz/Atoz/ency/night_terrors.jsp

    47. Nightmares And Night Terrors - Preschool Sleep Article
    Is your child having frequent nightmares? It may have more to do with where your child is at developmentally than anything else.
    http://www.theparentreport.com/resources/ages/preschool/sleep/121.html
    September 9, 2005
    Resources
    Preschool Sleep Nightmares and Night Terrors
    Nightmares and Night Terrors
    Is your child having frequent nightmares? It may have more to do with where your child is at developmentally than anything else.
    Sleep researchers have discovered that children dream far more than adults. For example, studies indicate that a child under a year dreams for about five and a half hours a night, while a twenty year old adult will dream for only one and a half hours. Unfortunately dreams sometimes turn into nightmares, especially common among preschool and preteen children. Sleep specialist, Dr. Shelly Weiss explains that the reason children suffer from nightmares most at these ages is because this is "when there are more conflicts in a child's life. In the young child these may be around separation and starting school, and in the older child they may be around preteen issues. So during those periods, the infrequent nightmare isn't a concern."
    Children are often frightened by their nightmares and may require a little extra assurance when they wake from one. But not so for night terrors. Dr. Weiss says children don't even remember having them. "A night terror usually occurs in a preschool child. It's a partial awakening so the child is half awake, half asleep. When you see the child it may be quite scary because your child may have a glazed look, be thrashing and screaming, yet in the morning will have no memory of that event."
    As alarming as night terrors are for the parent observing them, they are in fact completely harmless. Dr. Jonathan Flemming of the UBC Hospital's Sleep Clinic explains that "a night terror is a physiological state of hyper-arousal and what happens in that state is people have rapid heartbeat, are panting and breathing much more rapidly than usual, and they appear terrified."

    48. Nightmares And Night Terrors - Toddler Sleep Article
    Is your child having frequent nightmares? It may have more to do with where your child is at developmentally than anything else.
    http://www.theparentreport.com/resources/ages/toddler/sleep/121.html
    September 9, 2005
    Resources
    Toddler Sleep Nightmares and Night Terrors
    Nightmares and Night Terrors
    Is your child having frequent nightmares? It may have more to do with where your child is at developmentally than anything else.
    Sleep researchers have discovered that children dream far more than adults. For example, studies indicate that a child under a year dreams for about five and a half hours a night, while a twenty year old adult will dream for only one and a half hours. Unfortunately dreams sometimes turn into nightmares, especially common among preschool and preteen children. Sleep specialist, Dr. Shelly Weiss explains that the reason children suffer from nightmares most at these ages is because this is "when there are more conflicts in a child's life. In the young child these may be around separation and starting school, and in the older child they may be around preteen issues. So during those periods, the infrequent nightmare isn't a concern."
    Children are often frightened by their nightmares and may require a little extra assurance when they wake from one. But not so for night terrors. Dr. Weiss says children don't even remember having them. "A night terror usually occurs in a preschool child. It's a partial awakening so the child is half awake, half asleep. When you see the child it may be quite scary because your child may have a glazed look, be thrashing and screaming, yet in the morning will have no memory of that event."
    As alarming as night terrors are for the parent observing them, they are in fact completely harmless. Dr. Jonathan Flemming of the UBC Hospital's Sleep Clinic explains that "a night terror is a physiological state of hyper-arousal and what happens in that state is people have rapid heartbeat, are panting and breathing much more rapidly than usual, and they appear terrified."

    49. Preschooler Articles: Night Terrors - Sleep Disorders In Children
    Preschooler Articles for moms and parents about milestones, markers for behaviour, and general overview of children ages three, four and five.
    http://www.allaboutmoms.com/nightterrors.htm
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    50. The Children's Hospital At Westmead - Parents - Nightmares And Night Terrors
    What s the difference between Nightmares and night terrors? night terrors occur when children are partially aroused from deep (Stage 4) sleep.
    http://www.chw.edu.au/parents/factsheets/nightmares_and_night_terrors.htm
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    Nightmares and night terrors
    What is a Nightmare?
    Nightmares occur when your child is woken while having a bad dream. It is sometimes not easy to comfort your child because he or she might recall the content of the nightmare and be afraid to go back to sleep. Give your child a reassuring hug and then settling back to sleep is usually quick. Nightmares can occur in children of any age and are most likely to happen during the later part of the sleep such as in the early morning. This is when Rapid Eye Movement (REM) or Dream Sleep usually occurs. Nightmares can reflect worries that your child might be having during the day and it might be useful to talk to about this with them.
    What's the difference between Nightmares and Night Terrors?
    What to do?
    Nightmares
    With Nightmares, it is usually enough to reassure your child and stay with them until they are comfortably off to sleep again. The next day, it usually helps to talk about the dream and ask about any worries or fears they may be experiencing.
    Night Terrors
    With Night Terrors, your child will appear to be confused and not fully awake so keeping them out of harm's way is important. Make sure the home environment is safe as they may sometimes run around (see

    51. Nightmares And Night Terrors In Children
    night terrors occur less commonly and are different from nightmares. Although the exact cause of night terrors, nightmares and other sleep disturbances,
    http://www.drpaul.com/library/19NOV1999.html
    Home Meet Dr. Paul Tip of The Day Ask A Question ... Childhood Illnesses
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    : Nightmares and night terrors in children
    DEAR DR.PAUL:
    We have a 29-month-old daughter who has been having night terrors lately. She often wakes up in the middle of the night screaming. Needless to say, my wife and I haven't been getting much sleep and we're going into work exhausted. Please, can you provide some answers? PEDIATRICIAN DR.PAUL Answers: One of the most common concerns of parents is sleep disturbances, including nightmares and night terrors. Let's discuss nightmares first.
    Nightmares occur quite commonly in young children. Typically, a child with a nightmare wakes up completely, is very anxious, and usually remembers the content of the dream vividly. Childhood nightmares require no specific treatment, except for reassuring the frightened child.

    52. BBC - Health - Conditions - Nightmares And Night Terrors
    Exactly how or why nightmares and night terrors occur is not known. Nightmares and night terrors can easily be diagnosed by parents based on the
    http://www.bbc.co.uk/health/conditions/nightmare2.shtml
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    Nightmares and night terrors
    Dr Trisha Macnair Nightmares and terrors are sudden disruptions of sleep, during which the child becomes (or appears to become) partly awake. Episodes can occur at any time of night but terrors usually occur during the first hour or two of sleep while nightmares occur later.
    In this article
    What causes them? Who is affected? What are the symptoms? How is it diagnosed and treated?
    What causes them?
    Exactly how or why nightmares and night terrors occur is not known. However, excessive tiredness, lack of sleep, an irregular routine for sleep and stress or anxiety may all increase the risk. Night terrors appear to be a disorder of arousal - if the child is disturbed during certain phases of sleep they enter a state of confusion and disorientation rather than becoming fully awake.
    Who is affected?
    Nightmares are common and can occur at any age. Night terrors are more common in children than adults, tend to run in families and usually start before the age of 10 (most common age two to six).
    What are the symptoms?

    53. BBC - Health - Ask The Doctor - Night Terrors
    The cause of night terrors, which affect three per cent of children.
    http://www.bbc.co.uk/health/ask_the_doctor/nightterrors.shtml
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    Night terrors
    Several times a week (sometimes several times a night) my four-year-old son wakes up with what his sister calls a 'crazy'. This has been going on ever since he started school last year. He wakes up really upset and seems very frightened of something, but we can't get any sense out of him. I'm worried these bad nightmares have something to do with school. What can we do to stop them? Sam
    Dr Trisha Macnair responds
    Your son isn't having nightmares, but another common sleep problem among children called night terrors. Link to stress or tiredness Night terrors occur in about three per cent of children. They're more common in boys and tend to run in families. Like most sleep problems, the cause of night terrors isn't completely understood but they seem to be linked with stress and over-tiredness. It may well have something to do with the fact that your son is now at school. However, it's probably more to do with him being very tired (as most children are when they first start full-time) rather than something worrying him. Still asleep Night terrors occur while a child is in deep sleep. They seem to wake up distressed, terrified and thrashing around - just as you describe - but in fact they're not awake. Instead they're trapped in some strange sleepy state. It isn't possible to speak to them, make yourself understood or understand them as they can't usually speak any sense. And although they seem very upset, they can't remember what happened in the morning (unlike nightmares and dreams, which small children can sometimes recall).

    54. Nightmares And Night Terrors, Cincinnati Children's Hospital Medical Center
    Nightmares and night terrors Cincinnati Children s Hospital Medical Center discuss the definitions, causes and treatments.
    http://www.cincinnatichildrens.org/health/info/growth/diagnose/nightmares.htm
    Home Contact Us Site Map Go to Advanced Search ... Narcolepsy Nightmares and Night Terrors Obesity Parasomnias Snoring and Obstructive Sleep Apnea Vomiting / El Vómito ... Wellness
    Conditions and Diagnoses
    Nightmares and Night Terrors
    Related Services General and Community Pediatrics
    What are night terrors?
    A night terror is a partial waking from sleep with behaviors such as screaming, kicking, panic, sleep walking, thrashing, or mumbling. Night terrors usually occur within two hours of the time a child goes to sleep. They are harmless and each episode will end in deep sleep. Night terrors usually disappear by age 12 or sooner.
    Common Characteristics of a Night Terror
    • Your child is frightened but cannot be awakened or comforted
    • Your child's eyes are wide open but he/she does not know that you are there
    • Your child may think objects or persons in the room are scary
    • The episode lasts from 10 to 30 minutes
    • Your child often does not remember the episode in the morning
    How to Help a Child During a Night Terror
    • Try to help your child return to normal sleep. You will not be able to awaken your child, so do not try. Turn on the lights so that your child is less confused by shadows. Make soothing comments. Hold your child if it seems to help him/her feel better. Shaking or shouting at your child may cause the child to become more upset.
    • Protect your child against injury. During a night terror, a child can fall down a stairway, run into a wall, or break a window. Try to gently direct your child back to bed.

    55. Growth And Development - Nightmares And Night Terrors
    During a night terror, a child can fall down a stairway, run into a wall, A night terror can be triggered if your child becomes overlytired.
    http://www.schneiderchildrenshospital.org/peds_html_fixed/peds/growth/ntmares.ht
    Growth and Development
    Nightmares and Night Terrors
    What are night terrors?
    A night terror is a partial waking from sleep with behaviors such as screaming, kicking, panic, sleep walking, thrashing, or mumbling. Night terrors usually occur within two hours of the time a child goes to sleep. They are harmless and each episode will end in deep sleep. They are considered normal until age 6. The following are common characteristics of a night terror:
    • Your child is frightened but cannot be awakened or comforted.
    • Your child's eyes are wide open but he/she does not know that you are there.
    • Your child may think objects or persons in the room are scary.
    • The episode lasts from 10 to 30 minutes.
    • Your child often does not remember the episode in the morning.
    How to help a child during a night terrors:
    • Try to help your child return to normal sleep. You will not be able to awaken your child, so do not try. Turn on the lights so that your child is less confused by shadows. Make soothing comments. Hold your child if it seems to help him/her feel better. Shaking or shouting at your child may cause the child to become more upset.
    • Protect your child against injury. During a night terror, a child can fall down a stairway, run into a wall, or break a window. Try to gently direct your child back to bed.

    56. Night Terrors (Sleep Disorders)
    Coping With night terrors Things That Go Bump in the Night night terrors AKA Pavor Nocturnus Nightmares and night terrors The Horror Movies of the
    http://www.ability.org.uk/Night_Terrors.html
    "see the ability, not the disability" You to can help support the Ability Project by: Our Aims ... Z Night Terrors (Sleep Disorders) Article on Night terrors - In the New Scientist. Article on night terrors - Parentsoup Coping With Night Terrors: Things That Go Bump in the Night Night Terrors AKA Pavor Nocturnus Nightmares and Night Terrors: The Horror Movies of the Mind Thread: Night Terrors - Massachusetts General Hospital UCB Parents Advice: Night Terrors - Advice on Children's Night Terrors Webmaster . Site Design by Ability "see the ability, not the disability" Acknowledgments

    57. Hostlocation Hospedagem De Sites E Servidores Dedicados
    It is called night terrors or Pavor Nocturnus and it is a severe sleep The following are still images of a man filmed during a night terrors atack
    http://www.cerebromente.org.br/n06/doencas/terror/terror1_i.htm
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    58. Night Terror Medical Information
    Night terror Information from Drugs.com. Definition. night terrors are a sleep disorder involving abrupt awakening from sleep in a terrified state.
    http://www.drugs.com/enc/night_terror.html

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    Night terror
    Definition
    Night terrors are a sleep disorder involving abrupt awakening from sleep in a terrified state.
    Alternative Names
    Pavor nocturnus; Sleep terror disorder
    Causes
    The normal sleep cycle involves distinct stages from light drowsiness to deep sleep. During REM (rapid eye movement) sleep, the eyes move rapidly and vivid dreaming is most common. Each night there are several cycles of non-REM and REM sleep. Night terror (sleep terror) occurs during Stage 3 and Stage 4 sleep (deep sleep). The cause is unknown but night terrors are commonly associated with periods of emotional tension stress , or conflict.

    59. Night Terrors
    Sleep terror disorder or night terrors is a condition that occurs during night terrors usually occur 1/2 hour to 3 1/2 hours after falling asleep.
    http://ww2.krem.com/Global/story.asp?S=1230348

    60. Nightmares And Night Terrors
    Detailed information on nightmares and night terrors and what you can do as a parent to prevent them.
    http://www.healthsystem.virginia.edu/uvahealth/peds_growth/ntmares.cfm
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          Nightmares and Night Terrors
          What are night terrors?
          A night terror is a partial waking from sleep with behaviors such as screaming, kicking, panic, sleep walking, thrashing, or mumbling. Night terrors usually occur within two hours of the time a child goes to sleep. They are harmless and each episode will end in deep sleep. They are considered normal until age 6. The following are common characteristics of a night terror:
          • Your child is frightened but cannot be awakened or comforted.

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