Patient: Description of the condition (onset time, main symptoms, hospital visited, etc.): The patient is male, 40 years old, and was in good health until he was 33 years old. In recent years, he has had frequent episodes of the following conditions: at night when he is sleeping, he sometimes suddenly sits up, sweating, his eyes are straight, his eyes are red, he shouts, he talks nonsense, and sometimes he hits people and presses them into bed with the light on, and he goes back to sleep. The next day, when he was asked what happened at night, he didn’t know anything. During the day, nothing happened, just like a normal person, this problem has been seven or eight years. The family was very scared. In the local hospital, they have done head CT, head MRI, ECG, and brain ultrasound, but no abnormality was found, and sedative drugs were taken, but nothing worked. 1: What kind of disease is this, what should I do and can I see you? 2: Can you give me some advice about this condition: 1. 2, sleep terror (sleep terror), also known as night terrors, is a common sleep disorder in young children, mainly for sleep suddenly do up screaming, crying, accompanied by panic expressions and movements, as well as increased heart rate, shortness of breath, sweating, pupil dilation and other symptoms of autonomic excitement. It usually occurs in the first half of the night, 1-2 hours after falling asleep in slow-wave sleep, usually lasts 1-10 minutes before lying down and going back to sleep, and cannot be remembered after waking up. They usually occur at the age of 4-12 years, and about 50% have a family history. Sleep terrors in adults are relatively uncommon, and adult sleep terrors are usually associated with psychopathology. 3. Sleep terrors must be differentiated from epilepsy and dream anxiety attacks. Reason: No abnormalities in the patient’s head CT and head MRI can exclude the cause of intracranial tumor; no abnormalities in EEG examination, and no enuresis and no tonic spasm seizure can basically exclude epilepsy, but need to check the pupil-to-light reflex during seizure; seizure is not easy to wake up, and can not clearly remember the dream after waking up, can exclude nightmare (dream anxiety attack) 4, suggestions: ① do polysomnography to understand the sleep situation; ② Detailed psychiatric examination for trauma or other mental disorders.