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Diagnostic Aspects of Narcolepsy
Neurol 50:S2-S7, Aldrich,M.S., 1998
See this aricle in Pubmed

Article Abstract
The diagnostic criteria for narcolepsy continue to evolve as more is learned about the features of this and other sleep disorders.A variety of symptoms have been said to distinguish narcolepsy from other sleep disorders,including cataplexy,character of daytime sleepiness,sleep paralysis,hypnagogic hallucinations,and automatic behavior.Other diagnostic assessments,such as determination of human leukocyte antigen (HLA)haplotype and findings of sleep laboratory assessments,also contribute to the differential diagnosis.As diagnostic and analytic techniques have become more sophisticated,however,it has become apparent that many of the characteristic features of narcolepsy-including the HLA- DR2 haplotype,sleep-onset REM sleep and short sleep latency-may also be present in other sleep disorders.Although unambiguous cataplexy dose not occur with other sleep disorders,and is therefore a valuable symptom for diagnosis,it may occur with a few other neurologic disorders.Furthermore, the clinical assessment of cataplexy-like symptoms is not always straightforward.Currently evidence suggests there is a fairly well-defined syndrome of narcolepsy-substantial clinical overlap between narcolepsy without cataplexy and idiopathic hypersominia.Patients with features of narcolepsy who do not have definite cataplexy and patients with features of idiopathic hypersomnia must be assessed thoroughly because of the possibility that other sleep disorders are the cause of the symptoms.
 
Related Tags
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cataplexy
hallucination,hypnagogic
HLA
hypersomnia
hypersomnia,idiopathic
multiple sleep latency test
narcolepsy
neurologic disease,diagnoses of
REM sleep
review article
sleep paralysis
sleep pathology and physiology

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