Louisville Medicine Volume 64, Issue 7 | Page 28

DOCTORS’ LOUNGE Like my sister, I learned the hard way as a child that I cannot watch any show or movie where a person is in danger. I have had the same two nightmares since childhood (one involving Zulus, from the Michael Caine film, and one involving Nazis, all of whom are murderously closing in). Being hunted to the death is in fact the most common theme of nightmares. Being unprepared, being late, being exposed, being unable to move or speak: these too are common, and researchers believe have to do with REM activity in the amygdala, a very “old” part of our brains, sending signals to the pons that render us (helpless in the grip of sleep) paralyzed. But why the moon? In fact, why would the full moon unleash these nocturnal demons? There are various theories. A Swiss researcher Dr. Christian Cajochen and his Basel group, who said they got the idea for the study while having a nice pint in the pub, proved in repeated monthly monitoring that the full moon shortens deep sleep by 30 percent, reduces melatonin and caused their subjects to report uneasy as opposed to restful sleep. He postulated that we evolved with an inner sense of the lunar cycle, what he called “the lunar hand on the body’s clock.” Other scientists have blamed shifts in Earth’s magnetic field, which is constantly bombarded by solar winds (pulses of highly charged particles). The magnetic field protects us from these massive particle bursts. Every 27.3 days the moon completes her orbit, moving through Earth’s “magnetic tail” during the full moon. The moon has no magnetic field to protect her from the solar winds. Thus, her surface that faces the Earth during the full moon phase is bombarded by the Earth’s deflection of these solar forces. That deflection in turn “rebounds” onto our magnetic tail, and some people theorize that these forces affect the pineal glands of rats. Rats stand in for people in nearly all preclinical drug trials. We may be, in this instance, as one with the rat kingdom, since al l our pineal glands secrete melatonin. Preventing nightmares – other than not eating chili at midnight, or taking certain meds – has been studied extensively also, primarily in the service of helping those who suffer from PTSD. A type of cognitive therapy called Imagery Rehearsal has been validated in multiple settings. One is taught to rewrite the script of the inciting trauma while still awake, to re-imagine a whole different ending, to retrain one’s way of thinking about that specific trauma. Pa- STAY Connected WITH GLMS BETWEEN PUBLICATIONS Contact McKenna. [email protected] for more information 26 LOUISVILLE MEDICINE tients report improved sleep once they have practiced this for several months. Prazosin, an old alpha blocker drug (there are many alpha-1 receptors in both the vascular smooth muscle and the CNS) has been found to prevent nightmares rather well in many studies funded by the VA. It has also been useful as preventive treatment for substance abuse. Young vets with combat PTSD take large doses, and those avoiding alcohol or other substances start at much lower doses, since it can drop blood pressure and cause significant orthostasis. The efficacy is high and the dose remains stable over years without need for escalation. Finally, what dreams mean has been debated for as long as humans have lived on Earth. I do not pretend to interpret. Yet I can identify with James Joyce in this matter: “History,” Stephen said, “is a nightmare from which I am trying to awake.” Dr. Barry practices Internal Medicine with Norton Community Medical Associates-Barret. She is a clinical associate professor at the University of Louisville School of Medicine, Department of Medicine. facebook.com/Greater-Louisville-Medical-Society @LouMedSociety linkedin.com/company/Greater-Louisville-Medical-Society