Well, one thing is for sure; Lady Macbeth was not "unsex[ed]" by the "spirits that tend on mortal thoughts." If you recall in Act I, scene v before Macbeth comes home and before they murder King Duncan, Lady Macbeth asks the "spirits that tend on mortal thoughts" to "unsex" and to "Make thick [her] blood; / Stop up th' access and passage to remorse." In other words, she doesn't want to be human anymore so that she will not be bothered by her conscience after they murder the king.
Well, in the act to which you refer, it reveals that her conscience is bothering her immensely, so much that it manifests itself in her subconscious causing her to sleepwalk, and while she is sleepwalking, she is attempting to cleanse herself of the evil deeds that she has been apart of, in what seems to be a confession, for in it she mentions Duncan's, Banquo's and Lady Macduff's murders. But it doesn't work, for later in the Act she commits suicide.
This scene is extremely ironic when you take into consideration her earlier role in Act I.
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