Researchers are struggling to understand a rare
medical condition where sufferers
unknowingly demand, or actually have, sex
while asleep, New Scientist magazine reported on
Wednesday.[Reuters]
LONDON - Researchers are struggling to understand
a rare medical condition where sufferers unknowingly demand, or actually have,
sex while asleep, New Scientist magazine reported on October 25.
Research into sexsomnia -- making sexual advances toward another person while
asleep -- has been hampered as sufferers are so embarrassed by the problem they
tend not to own up to it, while doctors do not ask about it.
As yet there is no cure for the condition, which often leads to difficulties
in relationships.
"It really bothers me that I can't control it," Lisa Mahoney told the
magazine. "It scares me because I don't think it has anything to do with the
partner. I don't want this foolish condition to hurt us in the long run."
Most researchers view sexsomnia as a variant of sleepwalking, where sufferers
are stuck between sleep and wakefulness, though sexsomniacs tend to stay in bed
rather than get up and walk about.
While sleepwalking affects two to four percent of adults, sexsomnia is not
thought to be as common a problem, according to Nik Trajanovic, a researcher at
the sleep and alertness clinic at Canada's Toronto Western Hospital.
But an Internet survey of sexsomniacs carried out in 2005 that drew 219
reliable respondents concluded it was more prevalent than medical case reports
alone might suggest.
"Most of the time sleep sex occurs between people who are already partners,"
Mark Pressman, a sleep specialist at Lankenan Hospital in Wynnewood,
Pennsylvania, told the New Scientist.
"Sometimes they hate it," added Pressman of the reactions of sexsomniacs'
partners. "Sometimes they tolerate it. On rare occasions you have stories of
people liking it better than waking sex."
With no cure, addressing triggering factors -- stress or sleep deprivation --
can help, while Michael Mangan, a psychologist at the University of New
Hampshire in the U.S. has set up a Web site, www.sleepsex.org, to help
sufferers.
Meanwhile Trajanovic is devising a procedure for diagnosing sexsomnia in
legal cases where sufferers have been accused of sexual
assault.