Resolution of Persistent Sleepwalking with ChiropracticOn October 1, 2025, the Asian-Pacific Chiropractic Journal published the results of a case study showing chiropractic care helping a patient resolve the issues of sleepwalking and headaches. The medical term for sleepwalking is somnambulism. The Sleep Foundation describes this condition by saying, "Sleepwalking is a sleep disorder involving walking or other behaviors during sleep. Sleepwalking can affect both children and adults, but is more common during childhood."
The study begins by noting how important good sleep is to overall health, and how detrimental poor sleep can be. "Insufficient sleep is associated with adverse health outcomes, both in the short- and long-term. In the short-term, poor sleep can impact work performance and safety, cognition, and emotional resilience. Long-term outcomes include an increased risk of many conditions, such as hypertension, cardiovascular disease, and colorectal cancer."
In this case, a 41-year-old woman sought chiropractic care primarily for complaints of headaches and neck pain. She reported that the neck pain had been constant for several years and she self-rated it as a 7 out of 10 in severity. She explained that her headaches had been present for as long as she could remember and had gotten worse in the last six months.
While the headaches and neck pain were the main reason she decided on chiropractic care, her health history revealed that the major disruptive problem in her life was sleepwalking. For the last six months, the woman would get up once or twice every night and proceed to punch her husband while still asleep. She would wake up the next morning and have no memory of these events. These sleeping events became such an issue that her husband was forced to start sleeping in a guest room in their home.
The woman had consulted an ear nose and throat specialist, an endocrinologist, neurologist, and ophthalmologist. The results were that she was wearing a CPAP at night and had been prescribed diuretic medication. These approaches did not resolve her problems.
A chiropractic examination was performed which included x-rays, posture analysis, spinal palpation, orthopedic and neurological testing. As a result of the examination, it was determined that multiple subluxations were present in the woman’s spine. With these findings, specific forms of chiropractic care were started, initially at the rate of three visits per week.
A follow-up examination was conducted three months after the start of chiropractic care. This update showed that the woman had achieved an 80% reduction in neck pain and was no longer having headaches. At that time, she also reported a 25% reduction in sleepwalking episodes. Chiropractic care was continued at a reduced frequency, and another evaluation was performed at the one-year point. At that time, the woman reported that sleepwalking had completely stopped and had not recurred.
The study authors included a quote from the woman about the results of her care. "I feel almost perfect now. A year and a half ago, I felt like everything in my body was not working right. Now, I sleep well and have no headaches, only the occasional neck stiffness. The changes have been dramatic." |