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Published online by Cambridge University Press: 16 April 2020
The purpose of the study was to investigate the sleep habits and sleep disorders in children and adolescents with headache.
Three hundred children and adolescents with headache and 284 children without headache were investigated using a questionnaires developed by the authors.
In Our study we observed difference is all the more important as some phenomena like bed co-sleeping (27.7%) and watching TV (20.3%) during falling asleep and sleep disorders awakenings from night sleep (43.7%), sleep talking (48.3%), snoring (27.3%), bruxizm (23.3%), nightmares (16.7%), sleep terror (9.0%) are observed statistically more frequently in children with headache.
Sleep habits described by parents in the children with headache are significantly different than those in healthy. Sleep disorders are very common in the group of children with headache. There is a need of additional research to find correlation between the different types, frequency of headache and sleep habits and disorders.
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