Narcolepsy


Risk

  • Prevalence approximately 1:2000

  • Women and men equally affected

  • Prevalence higher in Japan (1:600)

Perioperative Risks

  • Potential for masking or mimicking periop complications

  • Potential deleterious interactions between drugs for narcolepsy and drugs administered periop

Worry About

  • There is little evidence that pts with narcolepsy actually have an increased periop risk.

  • Theoretical concerns are:

    • Potential drug interactions with anesthetics leading to

      • Hemodynamic changes.

      • Altered anesthetic requirements.

      • Increased risk of serotonin syndrome.

    • Periop narcoleptic episodes mimicking or masking other anesthesia complications (e.g., delayed emergence or postop residual curarization).

Overview

  • Chronic neurologic sleep disorder

  • Onset usually in adolescence

  • May take years to be diagnosed (polysomnography and multiple sleep latency test)

  • Classic symptoms: Excessive daytime sleepiness, cataplexy, sleep paralysis, hypnagogic/hypnopompic hallucinations (nocturnal sleep disruption)

  • Excessive daytime sleepiness:

    • Daytime sleep episodes occurring at inappropriate times

    • Difficult to avoid falling asleep

    • Frequently rationalized

    • Differential Dx: OSA, sleep deprivation

  • Cataplexy:

    • Sudden decrease in muscle tone

    • Usually partial (e.g., affecting only facial or neck muscles)

    • May be complete, with fall risk; pts are fully conscious

    • Both partial/complete can be triggered by emotions (e.g., periop anxiety)

    • Can last up to 60 min

  • Hallucinations:

    • Hypnagogic (during transition from waking to sleep) or hypnopompic (during transition from sleep to waking)

    • Often visual but may also be auditory, tactile, or multisensory

    • May be misdiagnosed as mental illness

  • Sleep paralysis:

    • Inability to move during sleep onset or offset

    • Pt fully conscious

    • Breathing unaffected

    • May occur in conjunction with hallucinations

  • Other symptoms:

    • Automatic behavior (performing routine tasks without conscious awareness)

    • Memory lapses

    • Secondary psychological symptoms (e.g., depression)

Etiology

  • Multiple etiologies, at least partially genetic (HLA-DR and HLA-DQ).

  • Decreased concentrations of neurotransmitter (hypocretin, also known as orexin) in lateral hypothalamus.

  • Undetectable levels of hypocretin in CSF of most pts.

  • Current theory favors an autoimmune process that attacks hypocretin-producing neurons (possibly triggered by upper airway infections).

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