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Home > Lifestyle News > Health And Fitness News > Article > Increase in nightmares hallucinations during the day may signal onset of lupus Study

Increase in nightmares, hallucinations during the day may signal onset of lupus: Study

Updated on: 21 May,2024 01:51 PM IST  |  New Delhi
IANS |

These mental health and neurological symptoms, such as depression, hallucinations, and loss of balance, can act as an early warning sign that an individual is approaching a "flare," where their disease worsens for a period

Increase in nightmares, hallucinations during the day may signal onset of lupus: Study

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An increase in nightmares and hallucinations-- or 'daymares' -- may signal the onset of autoimmune disease such as lupus, according to an international research team on Tuesday.


Lupus is an autoimmune inflammatory disease known for its effect on many organs, including the brain.


These mental health and neurological symptoms, such as depression, hallucinations, and loss of balance, can act as an early warning sign that an individual is approaching a "flare," where their disease worsens for a period, said the team led by researchers at the University of Cambridge and King's College London in the UK.


For the study, they surveyed 676 people living with lupus and 400 clinicians, as well as carried out detailed interviews with 69 people living with systemic autoimmune rheumatic diseases (including lupus) and 50 clinicians.

The results, published in the journal eClinicalMedicine, showed that disrupted dream sleep was the most common symptom experienced by three in five patients. Of these, a third went on to develop lupus disease a year later.

Just under one in four patients reported hallucinations, seen in 85 per cent of people with lupus.

Further, three in five lupus patients and one in three with other rheumatology-related conditions also reported increasingly disrupted dreaming sleep -- usually vivid and distressing nightmares -- just before their hallucinations. The patients reported that the nightmares were often vivid and distressing, involving being attacked, trapped, crushed, or falling.

Melanie Sloan from Cambridge University called on doctors to speak to their patients about these types of symptoms and write down each patient's progression.

"Patients often know which symptoms are a bad sign that their disease is about to flare, but both patients and doctors can be reluctant to discuss mental health and neurological symptoms, particularly if they don't realise that these can be a part of autoimmune diseases," said Melanie, the lead author from the varsity's Department of Public Health and Primary Care.

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