Medicolegal Pitfalls
- Use sedative hypnotics with caution in patients with a prior history of drug or alcohol abuse.
- Sedative hypnotics should also be used with caution in patients with a history of insufficient sleep syndrome, particularly in patients prone to alcohol use since this group can be predisposed to the development of parasomnias (eg, sleep-walking or sleep-related eating disorder).
- Counsel patients to allow for at least 8 hours of sleep and avoid concomitant alcohol use when using sedative hypnotic medications.
- Use sleep restriction therapy with caution in commercial truck drivers, those that operate heavy machinery, pilots, and those in occupations where sleep deprivation can have devastating consequences.
Special Concerns
Insomnia in the elderly
- The satisfaction of sleep declines with age. This probably is related to changes in sleep associated with age, such as a decrease in slow-wave sleep, increased time awake after sleep onset, and a tendency to go to bed early and rise early.
- However, aging should not be assumed to be the explanation for insomnia. Multiple factors affect sleep in the elderly, including nocturia, pain syndromes, and many medical disorders (eg, heart failure, COPD, Parkinson disease). Other factors include restless legs syndrome, periodic leg movement disorder, sleep apnea (all of which have increased frequency in the elderly), dementia, and, frequently, changing situational factors such as retirement, bereavement, or financial difficulties, which lead to anxiety and depression.
- As in younger patients, nonpharmacologic treatment should take precedence over pharmacologic treatment.
- Hypnotics should be prescribed cautiously and in lower doses than for younger patients. Drugs tend to have longer duration of effect due to changes in metabolism and elimination. This can lead to increased incidence of falls and bone fractures at night (if the patient gets up to use the bathroom not fully awake or ataxic) and decrements in daytime alertness and performance (including increased incidence of motor vehicle accidents).