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When Counting Sheep Doesn’t Help: The Effects of Cocaine on Sleep

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Sleep Disorders in Selected Psychiatric Settings
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Abstract

Cocaine addiction is a fairly prevalent disorder. Cocaine is a stimulant that affects monoamine neurotransmitters. Substance-induced sleep disorders are diagnosed when sleep is significantly impaired following substance use and in the absence of other potentially causative factors. Substance-induced sleep disorders are further specified into insomnia type, daytime sleepiness type, parasomnia type, and mixed type. Sleep disturbances may be associated with poorer cognitive function and increased cravings for the drug and hence risk for relapse. In the case of cocaine, the most common sleep disturbances include acute insomnia and decreased sleep during intoxication, hypersomnia during cocaine withdrawal, and a phenomenon known as occult insomnia, associated with a subjective improvement in sleep without concomitant improvement in cognitive function. No approved treatment for cocaine-induced insomnia exists yet though several agents, discussed in this chapter, have promising effects.

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Correspondence to Nidal Moukaddam .

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Moukaddam, N., Shah, A.A. (2021). When Counting Sheep Doesn’t Help: The Effects of Cocaine on Sleep. In: Khawaja, I.S., Hurwitz, T.D. (eds) Sleep Disorders in Selected Psychiatric Settings. Springer, Cham. https://doi.org/10.1007/978-3-030-59309-4_5

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  • DOI: https://doi.org/10.1007/978-3-030-59309-4_5

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  • Print ISBN: 978-3-030-59308-7

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