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Nightmares

Alternative Names

Dreams - bad; Bad dreams

Home Care

If you are under severe stress, you should ask for support from friends and relatives. Talking about what is on your mind can really help. Also, follow a regular fitness routine, with aerobic exercise if possible. You will find that you will be able to fall asleep faster, sleep more deeply, and wake up feeling more refreshed. Learn techniques to reduce muscle tension (relaxation therapy), which also will help reduce your anxiety.

Practice good sleep hygiene. Go to bed at the same time each night, and wake up at the same time each morning. Avoid long-term use of tranquilizers, as well as caffeine and other stimulants.

If you noticed that your nightmares started shortly after you began taking a new medication, contact your health care provider. He or she will let you know how to stop taking that medication if necessary, and recommend an alternative.

For nightmares caused by the effects of "street drugs" or regular alcohol use, ask for advice on the best ways to quit. An Alcoholics Anonymous group, for example, might suggest a safe way for you to stop drinking without putting your health at risk. You can also attend their regularly scheduled meetings. See also: Alcoholism - support group.

Also, look at your lifestyle -- friends, work, family -- to find and change factors that encourage substance abuse.

When to Contact a Medical Professional

Contact your health care provider if:

  • You have nightmares more often than on a weekly basis
  • Nightmares stop you from getting a good night's rest and keeping up with your daily activities for a prolonged period of time

The doctor will examine you. The physical exam may include physical, neurological, and psychological tests. You may be asked any of the following questions:

  • Time pattern
    • Do you have nightmares often (recurrent)?
    • Do they occur in the second half of the night?
  • Quality
    • Do you wake up suddenly from sleep?
  • Other issues
    • Do the nightmares cause you intense fear and anxiety?
    • Do you remember a frightening dream (one with vivid images and a story-like plot)?
  • Aggravating factors
    • Have you had a recent illness?
    • Did you have a fever?
    • Were you in a stressful situation recently?
  • Other
    • Do you use alcohol? How much?
    • What medications do you take?
    • Do you take "street drugs?" If so, which ones?
    • Do you take natural supplements or alternative remedies?
    • What other symptoms do you have?

Tests that may be done include:

If therapies for stress and anxiety, medication side effects, and substance use do not treat the problem, your health care provider may want to send you to a sleep medicine specialist for a sleep study (polysomnography). In very rare cases, patients need to take special medications that suppress or reduce REM sleep to prevent nightmares.

Review Date: 7/27/2007
Reviewed By: Benjamin W. Van Voorhees, MD, MPH, Assistant Professor of Medicine, Pediatrics and Psychiatry, The University of Chicago, Chicago, IL. Review provided by VeriMed Healthcare Network.

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