March 14, 2006/New York TIMES

Study Links Ambien Use to Unconscious Food Forays
By STEPHANIE SAUL

The sleeping pill Ambien seems to unlock a primitive desire to eat in
some patients, according to emerging medical case studies that
describe how the drug's users sometimes sleepwalk into their kitchens,
claw through their refrigerators like animals and consume calories
ranging into the thousands.

The next morning, the night eaters remember nothing about their
foraging. But they wake up to find telltale clues: mouthfuls of peanut
butter, Tostitos in their beds, kitchen counters overflowing with
flour, missing food, and even lighted ovens and stoves. Some are so
embarrassed, they delay telling anyone, even as they gain weight.

"These people are hell-bent to eat," said Dr. Mark Mahowald, who is
director of the Minnesota Regional Sleep Disorders Center in
Minneapolis and is researching the problem.

He and colleagues are preparing a scientific paper based on their
findings that a sleep-related eating disorder is one of the unusual
side effects showing up with the widespread use of Ambien. Researchers
at the Mayo Clinic in Rochester, Minn., have made similar findings.

A woman in Salinas, Calif., whose case is to be included in the
Minnesota study, said she would awaken to find candy bar wrappers next
to her bed and Popsicle sticks on the floor near the refrigerator. She
blamed her husband and sons before finally believing their claims that
she was eating at night, unaware.

Worried that she would choke, "my son was so afraid at night, he'd
come sit by the bed and watch me," said the woman, Brenda Pobre, 54.
Despite seeing several doctors, Ms. Pobre did not link Ambien to her
nocturnal eating until after she gained 100 pounds.

Spurred in part by consumer advertising, more than 26 million
prescriptions for Ambien were dispensed in this country last year, an
increase of 53 percent since 2001.

more at: 
http://www.nytimes.com/2006/03/14/health/14sleep.html?_r=1&oref=slogin&pagewanted=print
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