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Night Terrors in Children

atacj05 by atacj05 Speaking(March 2007) (rank 248th)
What is a night terror?

A night terror is when your child suddenly becomes very agitated while in a state of deep sleep. She may sit or stand up, shake, move about, and cry or scream loudly. Your child may look like she is in extreme panic.

During a

night terror, your child’s eyes may be open – but despite all the activity and movement, she is in fact still in a state of deep sleep. A child having a night terror is inconsolable and will not respond to attempts to soothe or comfort her. A night terror can last from a few minutes up to 40 minutes.

Night terrors are less common than nightmares – only around 1-6% of children will experience night terrors. Generally they are seen in children more than 18 months old and should disappear by six years of age. Night terrors can run in families, suggesting that there is a genetic component to whether children will experience them.

Night terrors seem scary to you but they don’t hurt or scare your child. Children do not remember the event in the morning, and are not conscious of having had a bad dream or a fright. If wakened during a night terror, they will typically be confused and disorientated.

You do not need to be concerned about night terrors. They do not mean there is anything wrong with your child. Night terrors are natural events associated with the normal development of sleep in children. They disappear as children develop more mature forms of deep sleep.

Night terrors are different from nightmares. Night terrors happen during the first few hours of sleep when your child is sleeping very deeply (nightmares tend to happen in the second half of the night during phases of REM sleep). Managing nightmares is quite different because children have woken and might remember and feel upset by the dream.

What to do

The good news is that night terrors will not harm your child.

Avoid waking her during a night terror. She will only be confused and disorientated, and may take longer to settle.

Instead, wait for her thrashing around to subside. Guide her back to bed, and tuck her back in. She will settle back to sleep quickly. If you think she might hurt herself, stay close to guide her away from hitting or bumping into the sides of her cot or other obstacles.

When to get help

If you remain concerned, or the night terrors seem prolonged or violent, seek professional advice. If night terrors are occurring along with other sleeping difficulties, or breathing problems such as snoring, your child may also benefit from an ear, nose and throat assessment.

I WANTED TO POST THIS IT IS VERY GOOD ADVICE. MY SON SUFFERES FROM NIGHT TERRORS AND IT CAN BE SCARY. HE DOSN'T REMEBR OR KNOW ANYTHIGN ABOUT THEM ITHE NEXT MORNING. BUT THEY LEAVE HIM FEELIN TIRED. HE IS 12 YRS OLD BY THE WAY

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raidel
August 2007 | raidel
Re: Night Terrors in Children
un not dieas i ment ideas


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raidel
August 2007 | raidel
Re: Night Terrors in Children
IM not sure if wat i have is night terror im 12 and 3 courters im not really concernd but i remember what i was scared of  i was for no reason  scared of this string i saw and when i walked i remember it im a lil terified of it... i just dont get scared when im awake i had a night terror i think 2 days ago i woke up the longer i moved the farther i moved the bigger the string and i saw this rock and a voice was like ITS U or something  i remember but not to clearly i would just get scared and id just sit on my bed and calm down i dont know wat it is i remember walking and all of it i.. i dont know wat it is im preaty amazed..i dont know how else to explain it thats how it went it hapend twice with the same thing a string the farther i moved the string became longer snd i hvad to run to my bed then i cooled down any dieas


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lexiw
5.00 (Excellent) | August 2007 | lexiw
Re: Night Terrors in Children

Zack had one of these and it frightened the hell out of me Tell C he shouldn't play the XBox so damned much PMSL

 Lexi xxx



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      atacj05
5.00 (Excellent) | August 2007 | atacj05
Re: Night Terrors in Children
PMSL lexi i will tell C exactly that hun PMSL hehe


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Roama
5.00 (Excellent) | March 2007 | Roama
Night Terrors

Great info! My dughter went through this when she was nearly 2 (she's now 6). It was terrifying for me to start with coz I had no idea what it was.  She would be inconsolable, which as a mum is heartbreaking to see. I did heaps of research til I found out what was going on. & then heaps more to get info on what to do about it! (i'm a bit compulsive that way lol)

Anyway there were 2 main things we did & the terrors stopped shortly afterwards.
1. I made sure I gave her a massage every night after her bath making sure I used very relaxing essential oils in the mix (I'm an aromatherapist by profession)  I had used to do that more when she was a baby, but once she was on the move I'd stopped doing it so often. I was hoping to help her be more relaxed when she went to sleep.
2. We put a small nightlight in her room - I had read that some children are worse because they get disoriented & a light can help. We had not had a nightlight before coz my daughter had never been afraid of the dark.

I don't know which one worked, but the terrors stopped within weeks and (touch wood) they haven't come back.

 



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natansey
5.00 (Excellent) | March 2007 | natansey
night terrors
my son had his first last week, he has been sleep walking for about 2 weeks. When it happened my hasband and i  were watching TV, he let out this horrific screem, we went to see what the scream was about and he was sitting up in bed and all of a sudden he fell down(from sitting) and went on sleeping. i looked at my husband and said it must have been a bad dream but it sounds like a night terror from what you have said in your artical.


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