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Presentation of Narcolepsy After 40
Neurol 50:459-465, Rye,D.B.,et al, 1998
See this aricle in Pubmed
Article Abstract
To advance understanding of the clinical spectra of narcolepsy,we retrospectively reviewed the histories and clinical and polysomnographic features of 41 consecutive patients in whom this diagnosis was established in our center over 3 years.A total of 51%presented after the age of 40 years.Among the older patients,three subpopulations were noted:1) narcolepsy/cataplexy with presentation delayed because of mild disease severity of misdiagnostics;2)narcolepsy/cataplexy with diagnosis delayed until late-life expression of cataplexy;and 3)narcolepsy lacking cataplexy with later-life onset of excessive daytime sleepiness.Clinical, polysomnographic,and multiple sleep latency test assessments of rapid eye movement sleep dycontrol and sleepiness were unrelated to age.This analysis identified older patients lacking cataplexy as the least severely affected narcoleptic subgroup.Narcolepsy,a continuum of phenotypes and severities that masks its recognition,should be considered in the differential diagnosis of sleepiness or transient loss of muscle tone in older patients.
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cataplexy
hypersomnia
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narcolepsy
neurologic disease,diagnoses of
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review article
sleep pathology and physiology
tone,muscle
transient loss of muscle tone
transient neurologic deficit
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