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Sleep is a function of the brain. However, the ultimate physiological function of sleep remains enigmatic and unknown despite recent extensive research of this ubiquitous and important brain activity. Sleep intervenes in functions of somatic growth, regeneration, and memory. Sleep is important in medicine because it modulates quality of life, while its disorders provoke family pathology, disturb work routines, alter social activities, and, in general, affect the health of the individual (1). | I TED BY Antonio Culebras Sleep Disorders and Neurologic Diseases SECOND EDITION Sleep Disorders and Neurologic Diseases SLEEP DISORDERS Advisory Board Antonio Culebras M.D. Professor of Neurology Upstate Medical University Consultant The Sleep Center Community General Hospital Syracuse New York U.S.A. Anna Ivanenko M.D. Ph.D. Loyola University Medical Center Department of Psychiatry and Behavioral Neuroscience Maywood Illinois U.S.A. Clete A. Kushida M.D. Ph.D. RPSGT Director Stanford Center for Human Sleep Research Associate Professor Stanford University Medical Center Stanford University Center of Excellence for Sleep Disorders Stanford California U.S.A. Nathaniel F. Watson M.D. University of Washington Sleep Disorders Center Harborview Medical Center Seattle Washington .