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Understanding Narcolepsy

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Understanding Narcolepsy

Narcolepsy is a chronic sleep disorder characterized by overwhelming daytime drowsiness and sudden attacks of sleep. People with narcolepsy often find it difficult to stay awake for long periods of time, regardless of the circumstances. Narcolepsy can cause serious disruptions in your daily routine.

Sometimes, narcolepsy can be accompanied by a sudden loss of muscle tone (cataplexy), which can be triggered by strong emotion. Narcolepsy that occurs with cataplexy is called type 1 narcolepsy. Narcolepsy that occurs without cataplexy is known as type 2 narcolepsy.

Narcolepsy is a chronic condition for which there's no cure. However, medications and lifestyle changes can help you manage the symptoms. Support from others — family, friends, employers, teachers — can help you cope with narcolepsy.

Symptoms

The signs and symptoms of narcolepsy may worsen for the first few years and then continue for life. They include:

  • Excessive daytime sleepiness

  • Sudden loss of muscle tone

  • Sleep paralysis: inability to move or speak while falling asleep

  • Changes in rapid eye movement (REM) sleep

  • Hallucinations

Other characteristics

People with narcolepsy may have other sleep disorders, such as obstructive sleep apnea — a condition in which breathing starts and stops throughout the night — restless legs syndrome and even insomnia.

Some people with narcolepsy experience automatic behavior during brief episodes of narcolepsy. For example, you may fall asleep while performing a task you normally perform, such as writing, typing or driving, and you continue to perform that task while asleep. When you awaken, you can't remember what you did, and you probably didn't do it well.

Campbell County Health’s Sleep Center at Campbell County Memorial Hospital is designed to monitor and evaluate people during sleep, providing information for physicians to diagnose and treat sleeping disorders in Gillette, Wyoming. If you think you may be experiencing a sleep problem like Narcolepsy, give the Sleep Center a call: 307-688-2350.

Article Source: Mayo Clinic: Narcolepsy
  • Category: Campbell County Medical Group Pulmonary & Sleep Medicine