What is narcolepsy?
Narcolepsy is a disorder that causes sudden, uncontrollable urges
to sleep. People with this disorder may fall asleep without any
warning for several minutes or an hour at a time. The number of
these sleep attacks can vary from a few to many in a single day.
What are the symptoms?
Symptoms of narcolepsy may include:
- Sleep attacks in which the desire to sleep cannot be resisted.
These attacks are brief, 5 to 10 minutes. The attacks can
occur many times a day.
- Cataplexy, which is a sudden loss of muscle tone that may
cause people to fall to the floor. It is brought on by
laughter, stress or other intense emotions.
- Hallucinations, seeing or hearing things that are not real,
that may occur when falling asleep or waking up.
- Sleep paralysis, which is being unable to move or speak for a
short time falling asleep or waking up.
Sleep attacks may happen after meals, or while talking, working,
driving a vehicle, reading, or watching TV.
How does it occur?
Narcolepsy usually starts between ages 15 and 30, but may begin at
any age. Once it appears, this disorder is lifelong.
The cause of this disorder is not known. It may be caused by a
shortage of a brain-stimulating protein called orexin. People with
narcolepsy may have fewer nerve cells, called hypocretin neurons,
in the brain. Other possible causes may include autoimmune
disease, brain injury, and infection.
Your risk is greater if another family member has narcolepsy.
How is it diagnosed?
Your healthcare provider will examine you and ask about:
- your sleep patterns
- use of caffeine, alcohol, medicine, and other drugs
- eating and exercise habits
- your medical and mental health history, and your family's
history
- your job and travel patterns
Your healthcare provider may also ask your family members about
your sleep habits. A blood sample may be taken for lab tests.
Your provider may refer you to a sleep center. At the sleep center
you may have a continuous, all-night recording of your breathing,
eye movements, muscle tone, blood oxygen levels, heart rate and
rhythm, and brain waves.
How is it treated?
Medicines and lifestyle changes may reduce the symptoms. Sleep
paralysis and cataplexy may be treated with certain
antidepressants. Excessive daytime sleepiness may be treated with
stimulants. It also helps to take regularly scheduled short naps
during the day.
Not all excessive sleepiness is caused by narcolepsy. If
sleepiness during the day interferes with normal tasks, see your
healthcare provider.
For more information about narcolepsy and sleep disorders, contact
the National Sleep Foundation at 202-347-3471 or visit their Web
site at http://www.sleepfoundation.org.
This content is reviewed periodically and is subject to
change as new health information becomes available. The
information is intended to inform and educate and is not a
replacement for medical evaluation, advice, diagnosis or
treatment by a healthcare professional.
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