Narcolepsy and rapid eye movement sleep

Author:

Biscarini Francesco12ORCID,Barateau Lucie345,Pizza Fabio12,Plazzi Giuseppe26ORCID,Dauvilliers Yves345ORCID

Affiliation:

1. Department of Biomedical and Neuromotor Sciences (DIBINEM) University of Bologna Bologna Italy

2. IRCCS Istituto delle Scienze Neurologiche di Bologna Bologna Italy

3. Sleep‐Wake Disorders Unit, Department of Neurology Gui‐de‐Chauliac Hospital, CHU Montpellier Montpellier France

4. National Reference Centre for Orphan Diseases, Narcolepsy, Idiopathic Hypersomnia, and Kleine‐Levin Syndrome Montpellier France

5. Institute for Neurosciences of Montpellier University of Montpellier, INSERM Montpellier France

6. Department of Biomedical, Metabolic and Neural Sciences University of Modena and Reggio‐Emilia Modena Italy

Abstract

SummarySince the first description of narcolepsy at the end of the 19th Century, great progress has been made. The disease is nowadays distinguished as narcolepsy type 1 and type 2. In the 1960s, the discovery of rapid eye movement sleep at sleep onset led to improved understanding of core sleep‐related disease symptoms of the disease (excessive daytime sleepiness with early occurrence of rapid eye movement sleep, sleep‐related hallucinations, sleep paralysis, rapid eye movement parasomnia), as possible dysregulation of rapid eye movement sleep, and cataplexy resembling an intrusion of rapid eye movement atonia during wake. The relevance of non‐sleep‐related symptoms, such as obesity, precocious puberty, psychiatric and cardiovascular morbidities, has subsequently been recognized. The diagnostic tools have been improved, but sleep‐onset rapid eye movement periods on polysomnography and Multiple Sleep Latency Test remain key criteria. The pathogenic mechanisms of narcolepsy type 1 have been partly elucidated after the discovery of strong HLA class II association and orexin/hypocretin deficiency, a neurotransmitter that is involved in altered rapid eye movement sleep regulation. Conversely, the causes of narcolepsy type 2, where cataplexy and orexin deficiency are absent, remain unknown. Symptomatic medications to treat patients with narcolepsy have been developed, and management has been codified with guidelines, until the recent promising orexin‐receptor agonists. The present review retraces the steps of the research on narcolepsy that linked the features of the disease with rapid eye movement sleep abnormality, and those that do not appear associated with rapid eye movement sleep.

Publisher

Wiley

Reference225 articles.

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