Violent Dreams May Precede Brain Disease

Violent dreams may be warning signs of brain disorders, study finds.

ByABC News
August 4, 2010, 5:36 PM

Aug. 5, 2010— -- Vivid, violent dreams can portend brain disorders by half a century, a new study finds. The result, reported in the August 10 Neurology, highlights how some neurological diseases may take hold decades before a person is diagnosed.

Spotting early warning signs of the disease may allow clinicians to monitor and treat patients long before the brain deteriorates.

People with a mysterious sleep disturbance called REM sleep behavior disorder, or RBD, experience a sudden change in the nature of dreams. Dreams increasingly become more violent and frequently involve episodes in which an attacker must be fought off.

The normal muscle paralysis that accompanies dreams is gone, leaving the dreamer, who is most often male, to act out the dream's punches, twists and yells. In many cases, a person sharing the dreamer's bed can be injured.

Doctors used to think of RBD as an isolated disorder. But follow-up studies revealed that a striking number of these patients later develop neurodegenerative diseases, including Parkinson's disease and Lewy body dementia.

The exact figures vary, but some studies find that anywhere from 80 to 100 percent eventually get a neurodegenerative disorder.

"The consensus among all RBD researchers is that it's not a matter of if, but when," says sleep expert Carlos Schenck of the Minnesota Regional Sleep Disorders Center in Minneapolis, who was one of the first researchers to describe RBD. "Basically, the longer you follow these men, the more they will convert to a neurodegenerative disorder."

In the new study, neurologist Bradley Boeve of the Mayo Clinic in Rochester, Minnesota, and his colleagues wanted to know just how long the interval between RBD and a neurodegenerative disorder can be. "Everybody who sees patients with this knew it could go on for a long time," Boeve says, but nobody knew just how long.

Boeve and his team examined medical records of patients from the Mayo Clinic to identify people diagnosed first with RBD and then with a neurodegenerative disorder at least 15 years later.