Rapid eye movement (REM) sleep behavior disorder (RBD) is characterized by loss of the muscle atonia of REM sleep, withrelease of complex and violent behaviors that are often attempted dream-enactments. This study reviewed the literature on RBD with regard to poten-tially lethal behavior. A total of 39–41 clinical cases of RBD associated with potentially lethal behaviors to self and ⁄ or others were found, involvinga child and adults of all age groups, that manifested as choking ⁄ headlock (n = 22–24), defenestration ⁄ near-defenestration (n = 7), and diving frombed (n = 10). A total of 80.8% (n = 21) were males; 19.2% (n = 5) were females; mean age was 65.6 € (SD) 13.8 years (range: 27–81 years, and achild). (Gender ⁄ age data were not listed in the remaining cases.) An etiologic association of RBD with a neurologic disorder (or with pharmacother-apy of psychiatric disorders, n = 4) was present in 21–23 patients. Thus, RBD carries well-documented, potential forensic consequences during RBDepisodes that could possibly have been misinterpreted as suicidal or homicidal behavior
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