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General Parenting
can night terrors be driven by anxiety?
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<blockquote data-quote="skeeter" data-source="post: 244717" data-attributes="member: 439"><p>NF had some bad night terrors until about age 5. Usually after an extremely busy or exciting day, but we also began to equate them with his food allergy issues. After we got those under control, they seemed to lessen a lot.</p><p></p><p>He also would grind his teeth horrible. He eventually had to have some major orthodontia work done which pretty much cleared that up - but he actually ground all the chewing surfaces off his molars and the early ones need to be capped.</p><p></p><p>Both he and his brother talk in their sleep, to the point that when they shared a bedroom they would have full fledged conversations, but both be completely asleep and not have the slightest idea the next day that they were talking.</p></blockquote><p></p>
[QUOTE="skeeter, post: 244717, member: 439"] NF had some bad night terrors until about age 5. Usually after an extremely busy or exciting day, but we also began to equate them with his food allergy issues. After we got those under control, they seemed to lessen a lot. He also would grind his teeth horrible. He eventually had to have some major orthodontia work done which pretty much cleared that up - but he actually ground all the chewing surfaces off his molars and the early ones need to be capped. Both he and his brother talk in their sleep, to the point that when they shared a bedroom they would have full fledged conversations, but both be completely asleep and not have the slightest idea the next day that they were talking. [/QUOTE]
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can night terrors be driven by anxiety?
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