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Article title: NINDS Narcolepsy Information Page: NINDS
Main condition: Narcolepsy
Conditions: Narcolepsy
Is there any
treatment?
There is presently no cure for narcolepsy; however, the
symptoms can be controlled with behavioral and medical therapy. The
excessive daytime sleepiness may be treated with stimulant drugs or with
the drug modafinil (Provigil), which was approved by the FDA for this use
in 1999. Cataplexy and other REM-sleep symptoms may be treated with
antidepressant medications. At best, medications will reduce the symptoms,
but will not alleviate them entirely. Also, many currently available
medications have side effects. Basic lifestyle adjustments such as
regulating sleep schedules, scheduled daytime naps and avoiding
"over-stimulating" situations may also help to reduce the intrusion of
symptoms into daytime activities.
What is the
prognosis?
Although narcolepsy is a life-long condition, most
individuals with the disorder enjoy a near-normal lifestyle with adequate
medication and support from teachers, employers, and families. If not
properly diagnosed and treated, narcolepsy may have a devastating impact
on the life of the affected individual, causing social, educational,
psychological, and financial difficulties.
What research is being
done?
The NINDS supports a broad range of clinical and basic
research on sleep disorders including narcolepsy. NINDS has notified
investigators that it is seeking grant applications in both clinical and
basic sleep and wakefulness research, including basic and clinical
research in narcolepsy.
In 1999, a research team working with canine
models identified a gene that causes narcolepsy — a breakthrough that
brings a cure for this disabling condition within reach. The researchers
are currently searching for defective versions of this gene in people with
narcolepsy.
Selected references
Broughton, R.
Narcolepsy. In Handbook of Sleep Disorders.
Marcel Decker, Inc., New York, 197-216 (1990).
Moscovitch, A, Partinen, M, and Guilleminault, C.
The
positive diagnosis of narcolepsy and narcolepsy's borderland. Neurology,
43; 55-60 (1993).
Bassetti, C, and Aldrich, M.
Narcolepsy. Neurologic Clinics,
14; 545-571 (1996).
National Commission on Sleep Disorders Research
Wake up
America: A National Sleep Alert, Volume 1. Executive Summary and Executive
Report. Report of the National Commission on Sleep Disorders Research,
DHHS, (January 1993).
Aldrich, M.
The clinical spectrum of narcolepsy and
idiopathic hypersomnia. Neurology, 46; 393-401 (1996).
Narcolepsy and Sleep Disorders: A Newsletter/ American Narcolepsy
Foundation
528 Abrego Street
PMB 149
Monterey, CA 93940
http://www.narcolepsy.com/
Tel:
831-646-2055
Fax: 831-646-2051
Narcolepsy Network, Inc.
10921 Reed Hartman Hwy.
#119
Cincinnati, OH 45242
narnet@aol.com
http://www.narcolepsynetwork.org/
Tel:
513-891-3522
Fax: 513-891-3836
National Sleep Foundation
1522 K Street NW
Suite 500
Washington, DC 20005
nsf@sleepfoundation.org
http://www.sleepfoundation.org/
Tel:
202-347-3471 (no public calls please)
Fax: 202-347-3472
Related NINDS Publications and Information
Fact sheet on
normal sleep and sleep disorders developed by the National Institute of
Neurological Disorders and Stroke (NINDS).
This fact sheet is in the public domain. You may copy it.Provided
by:
The National Institute of Neurological Disorders and Stroke
National Institutes of Health
Bethesda, MD
20892
» Next page: NINDS Neurofibromatosis Information Page: NINDS
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