“I hit him when he won’t remember”: a sleep disorder that concerns
Sexsomnia is a form of sleepwalking, defined by abnormal sexual behaviors during the night. A sleep disorder that questions and worries health professionals as well as the justice system.
Sexsomnia is a recognized sleep disorder, which affects more young adult males. When an episode of sexsomnia occurs, the subject becomes confused, and may have partial or complete amnesia. The sexsomniac has sexual urges during the night which, as Dr. Tuong Bao Truong explains, can range from caressing to sexual intercourse without consent. The behaviors can be "self-centered, with masturbation and sexual vocalizations or involve a bed partner with caresses, rubbing and more rarely, sexual acts, with or without orgasms or even sexual assaults," details the Doctor in her medical thesis on the subject.
The testimony of a young woman on Vice, quoted by RTBF, demonstrates the helplessness and worry of those close to her in the face of deviant behavior from a sexsomniac: “It goes from a simple, somewhat assertive hug where I only need to nudge him, to having to really hit him. It’s also really hard because I feel it as gratuitous violence. I hit him when he won't remember it."
In the columns of TF1info, neurologist Isabelle Arnulf doesn't hesitate to recommend that patients go see their doctor, to entrust their problem to a competent health service. "The first reflex to adopt is to consult a specialized center, in a sleep disorders department likely to treat narcolepsy, hypersomnia and Kleine-Levin syndrome, and which will then offer behavioral therapy, and sometimes treatment with antidepressants."
And for justice, it's clear, no confusion should be made between a sexsomniac and an individual guilty of sexual assault. A rapist could pretend to be sick and use this disorder to victimize himself and justify his act. A defense that is too easy, which should be verified by a series of medical examinations.
(MH with AsD - Source: RTBF - Illustration: Unsplash)