Sleep Science (Sep 2022)

Sleepwalking, sleep-related eating disorder and sleep-related smoking successfully treated with topiramate: a case report

  • Sana Elham Kazi,
  • Jamal Mujaddid M. Mohammed,
  • Carlos H. Schenck

DOI
https://doi.org/10.5935/1984-0063.20220065
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 15, no. 03
pp. 370 – 373

Abstract

Read online

We describe a 45-year-old married woman with sleepwalking, sleep-related eating disorder, and sleep-related smoking behavior, but without restless legs syndrome. The patient had a history of mild obstructive sleep apnea with an AHI of 12.6/hour with an oxygen saturation nadir of 95%, which resolved after bariatric surgery. Treatment with topiramate 100mg at bedtime controlled all three parasomnias for ten months at the latest follow-up, with relapse occurring whenever topiramate was stopped. To our knowledge, this is the first reported successful treatment of sleep-related smoking. Clinicians are encouraged to inquire about other types of parasomnias, and other sleep disorders such as narcolepsy, in patients presenting with a complaint of one parasomnia.

Keywords