1. Child Neurology: A Case Series of Heterogeneous Neuropsychiatric Symptoms and Outcome in Very Early-Onset Narcolepsy Type 1.
- Author
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Veneruso M, Pizza F, Finotti E, Amore G, Vandi S, Filardi M, Antelmi E, Nobili L, Cassio A, Pession A, and Plazzi G
- Subjects
- Child, Humans, Quality of Life, Cataplexy diagnosis, Disorders of Excessive Somnolence diagnosis, Narcolepsy diagnosis, Narcolepsy therapy, Neurology
- Abstract
Narcolepsy type 1 is a central disorder of hypersomnolence characterized by excessive daytime sleepiness, cataplexy (i.e., sudden loss of muscle tone during wakefulness triggered by emotions), and REM sleep-related manifestations that can present with a peculiar phenotype when arising at a pediatric age. Several features of childhood-onset narcolepsy type 1 are also common in neuropsychiatric conditions; discrete neuropsychiatric comorbidity has also been demonstrated. Here, we report on 3 children with very early narcolepsy type 1. All 3 patients had psychiatric features at the time of symptom onset coupled with peculiar motor disturbances. The course of narcolepsy symptoms also paralleled neuropsychiatric symptoms, suggesting a possible intrinsic link between sleep and psychological features. Multidisciplinary management is mandatory for pediatric narcolepsy type 1 since prompt disease management addressing neuropsychiatric symptoms could lead to better clinical outcomes and quality of life., (© 2022 American Academy of Neurology.)
- Published
- 2022
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