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Narcolepsy: Why the Advanced Practice Nurse Should Care

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Title: Narcolepsy: Why the Advanced Practice Nurse Should Care


1
Narcolepsy Why the Advanced Practice Nurse
Should Care
2
History of Narcolepsy
  • 1870s first descriptions of narcolepsy/cataplexy
  • 1920 description of post-encephalitic narcolepsy
  • 1950s treatment with methylphenidate
    Description of the tetrad Description of
    idiopathic hypersomnia
  • 1960s use of TCAs for cataplexy Discovery of
    SOREMs First reports of OSA
  • 1970s consensus definition of narcolepsy First
    sleep nosology
  • 1990 international classification of sleep
    disorders (ICSD)

3
Classification of Sleep Disorders
  • Dyssomnias
  • Parasomnias
  • Medical-psychiatric sleep disorders
  • Proposed sleep disorders

4
The Narcolepsy Tetrad
  • Excessive daytime sleepiness (EDS)
  • Cataplexy
  • Hypnogogic hallucinations
  • Sleep paralysis
  • (Disrupted nocturnal sleep)

5
Excessive Daytime Sleepiness
  • Sleep attacks are neither sensitive nor
    specific markers of narcolepsy
  • EDS is the sine qua non of narcolepsy
  • monosymptomatic narcolepsy
  • Sleepiness of narcolepsy is no different from
    other kinds of sleepiness

6
Measuring Sleepiness
  • Subjective scales
  • Stanford sleepiness scale
  • Epworth sleepiness scale
  • Objective testing
  • Multiple sleep latency testing (MSLT)
  • Maintenance of wakefulness test (MWT)

7
Cataplexy
  • Episodic weakness without altered consciousness
    lasting seconds to minutes and precipitated by
    excitement or emotion
  • May occur several times/day or a few times/year
  • Sagging of face, eyelid, or jaw dysarthria Head
    drop Blurred vision Knee buckling Drop
    attack
  • Laughter is most common precipitator
  • Usually develops within a few months of EDS
    symptoms, but may develop 10-30 years later
  • Do you ever feel your muscles give out, your jaw
    sag, or your vision blur when you get tickled?

8
Hondas Definition of Cataplexy
  • Sudden bilateral weakness involving skeletal
    muscles
  • Provocation by a sudden strong wave of emotion
  • Lack of impairment of consciousness and memory
  • Short duration(lt a few minutes)
  • Responsiveness to rx with TCAs

9
Sleep Paralysis
  • The inability to move for a few seconds or
    minutes during sleep onset or offset
  • Probably occurs in the majority of narcoleptics
  • Paralysis ends spontaneously or after mild
    sensory stimulation (shake out of it)
  • How often do you feel that you are awake, but
    you just cant move?

10
Hypnogogic Hallucinations
  • Vivid, waking dreams that occur during
    transitions between sleep and wakefulness
  • Hypnogogic _at_ sleep onset
  • hypnopompic _at_ awakening
  • May accompany sleep paralysis or occur
    independently
  • May be tactile or auditory
  • Some awareness of surroundings is preserved
  • How often do you feel that you are awake, but
    dreaming when you first wake up?

11
Caution!
  • Sleep paralysis and hypnogogic hallucinations are
    not specific for narcolepsy!
  • These symptoms can occur in 15 of otherwise
    normal persons
  • often precipitated by sleep loss, schedule
    change, or alcohol
  • These symptoms can occur in idiopathic hypersomnia

12
Epidemiology of Narcolepsy
  • MF
  • 0.03-0.07 prevalence in U.S.
  • Prevalence varies with ethnicity
  • 1/600 in Japan
  • 1/4000 in north America and Europe
  • 1/500,000 in Israel
  • Symptoms usually appear in teens or 20s (but
    diagnosis is generally made in mid-life)

13
Pathophysiology
  • Sleep-onset REM accounts for associated symptoms
    (intrusion of REM atonia)
  • Impaired sleep/wake regulation is the primary
    problem

14
Whats Wrong With Sleep Regulation in Narcolepsy?
  • Defective monominergic regulation of cholinergic
    REM sleep mechanisms?
  • Stimulants increase synaptic availability of NE
    and DA
  • TCAs inhibit NE uptake
  • Dopamine D1 and D2 receptor binding is increased
    in the striatum of human narcoleptic brain tissue
  • Autoimmune-mediated neuronal damage?

15
Genetic and Family Studies
  • Older historic accounts did not control for OSA
    (which is much more common)
  • Class II HLA testing shows a strong genetic link
  • gt90 European/Caucasians narcoleptics with
    cataplexy have HLA-DR2 (subtype DR15) and HLA-DQ1
    (subtype DQB1-0602) antigens
  • worldwide, DQB1-0602 is most strongly associated
    with narcolepsy
  • Children of narcoleptics have a 1 risk (40 X
    that of general population)

16
Making the Diagnosis
  • History
  • Physical examination
  • Specific testing

17
Differential Diagnosis of EDS
  • Sleep deprivation
  • Another sleep disorder (OSA, RLS)
  • Poor sleep quality due to illness (CHF)
  • Medications, drugs, toxins
  • Depression
  • Delayed sleep-phase syndrome
  • Idiopathic hypersomnia

18
Narcolepsy Vs Idiopathic Hypersomnia
  • IH has considerable overlap with narcolepsy (all
    symptoms except cataplexy exist)
  • Presence of DQ1 antigen is increased in IH
  • IH may include misdiagnosed UARS, depression, and
    narcolepsy

19
Comparison of Narcolepsy and IH
  • Narcolepsy
  • sleepiness
  • naps are frequent
  • naps are restorative
  • cataplexy
  • disrupted nocturnal sleep
  • other associated symptoms
  • never remits
  • IH
  • prolonged or deep sleep
  • naps are not restorative
  • no cataplexy
  • reports of remission
  • may follow viral infection, head trauma

20
IN-Lab Testing for Narcolepsy
  • Polysomnography (PSG)
  • Multiple Sleep Latency Testing (MSLT)

21
MSLT Protocol
  • Consider drug testing
  • Should follow an overnight PSG
  • 4 or 5 naps, 2 hours apart
  • naps last 20 minutes, or 15 minutes after onset
    of sleep (longest can be 35 mins)
  • unit of measure
  • minutes to sleep onset (stage 1)
  • minutes to REM sleep onset (beginning with stage
    1)

22
MSLT Findings
  • Mean sleep latency
  • Normal is gt 10 minutes
  • 5-10 minutes is gray zone
  • lt5 minutes is pathological sleepiness
  • REM-onset sleep periods
  • Normal is lt 2
  • If there is only one, it is most likely to be in
    first nap
  • One SOREM obligates you to 5th nap or second SOREM

23
Diagnostic Criteria for Narcolepsy and IH
  • Narcolepsy
  • PSG short sleep latency
  • PSG short REM sleep latency
  • MSLT sleep latencylt5 minutes
  • MSLT gt 2 SOREMs
  • IH
  • PSG short sleep latency
  • PSG normal REM latency
  • PSG prolonged sleep period
  • MSLT sleep latencylt 10 minutes
  • MSLT lt 2 SOREMs

24
HLA Testing in Narcolepsy?
  • Dr2-negative and DQI-negative narcolepsy patients
    exist
  • Dr2-positive monozygotic twins discordant for
    narcolepsy exist
  • DR2 has a 20-35 prevalence in the general
    population (gt99 of those with this antigen do
    not have narcolepsy)
  • Environmental factors must play a role
  • HLA-D gene neither necessary nor sufficient to
    make the diagnosis

25
Management of Narcolepsy
  • Patient and family education
  • Sleep hygiene
  • Napping
  • Safety issues
  • Medications

26
Drug Treatment for Narcolepsy
  • EDS-stimulants
  • REM-associated phenomena-TCAs

27
Stimulants-Schedule IV
  • Pemoline / Cylert Ò
  • 18.75 and 37.5 mg tablets
  • up to 112.5 mg/day
  • once or twice a day
  • liver disease
  • Modafinil / Provigil Ò
  • 100 and 200 mg tablets
  • up to 400 mg
  • once or twice a day
  • headache, nausea, insomnia

28
Stimulants-Schedule II
  • Methylphenidate / Ritalin Ò
  • 5, 10, and 20 mg tabs/ 20 mg SR tablets
  • up to 60 mg/day
  • bid or tid
  • nervousness, rash, insomnia, CV effects
  • Dextroamphetamine/ Dexedrine Ò
  • 5 mg tablets/5, 10, and 15 mg spansules
  • up to 60 mg/day
  • bid or tid
  • CV effects, insomnia, psychosis

29
Tricyclics
  • Protriptyline, 5-30 mg/day
  • Imipramine, 50-250 mg/day
  • Nortriptyline, 50-200 mg/day
  • (Fluoxetine, 20-60 mg/day)

30
Drug Therapy Issues
  • Abuse (not!)
  • Compliance
  • Drug holidays

31
Social and Economic Costs
  • Poor school performance
  • Avoidance of social interaction
  • Workplace injury
  • Automobile accidents
  • Interpersonal difficulty (divorce)
  • Depression

32
The Future of Narcolepsy
  • Dysfunction of the hpocretin (AKA orexin) peptide
    system is associated with narcolepsy in dogs and
    in mice
  • hypocretins affect gamma amino butyric acid
    (GABA) and glutamate secretion
  • hypocretins also have a role in appetite
    stimulation
  • Can we treat narcolepsy by hypocretin
    administration?

33
Take Home Points
  • We can do better than diagnosing narcolepsy 2
    decades after Sx appear!
  • EDS, cataplexy, hallucinations, paralysis
    constitute the tetrad
  • Specific in-lab diagnostic criteria are normal
    PSG, MSLT with SLlt 5 minutes, gt 2 SOREMs
  • Treat with stimulants, follow with symptoms and
    Epworth
  • APNs are integral to the diagnosis and treatment
    of narcolepsy!
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