The thesis contains a large study in which eight male hypocretin deficient narcolepsy with cataplexy patients and eight matched controls were enrolled. Blood was sampled before and on the 5th day... Show moreThe thesis contains a large study in which eight male hypocretin deficient narcolepsy with cataplexy patients and eight matched controls were enrolled. Blood was sampled before and on the 5th day of SXB administration. SXB was taken 2 times 3g per night for 5 consecutive nights. Both groups underwent 24-h blood sampling and many hormones (prolactin, Growth hormone, melatonin, ghrelin, leptin) were measured and compared before and during SXB treatment. A study using the golden standard on insuline sensitivity is decribed to compare insuline sensitivity between patients and controls, and between patients, before and during satisfactory SXB treatment. ANother study describes body and skintemperature differences between narcolepsy patients and controls. Another chapter describes a rarely described, common feature in narcolepsy, in which patients mistake the memory of a dream for a real experience. In another chapter describes that date of birth is not a risk factor for narcolepsy. Show less
The first part deals with the hypothalamic hypocretin system in disorders that are accompanied by narcolepsy-like sleep disturbances, i.e. Prader-Willi Syndrome, Parkinson__s Disease and Huntington... Show moreThe first part deals with the hypothalamic hypocretin system in disorders that are accompanied by narcolepsy-like sleep disturbances, i.e. Prader-Willi Syndrome, Parkinson__s Disease and Huntington__s Disease. To determine whether the hypocretin system is affected in these disorders, the total number of hypocretin neurons was determined using quantitative techniques in post-mortem human hypothalami. The reason why hypocretin neurons disappear in narcolepsy is still a mystery. A putative autoimmune aetiology has been hypothesized, but a screening for autoantibodies and a n=1 trial with intravenous immunoglobulins yielded no unequivocal results in favor of this hypothesis. In the second part, the consequences of hypocretin deficiency in narcoleptic patients are explored, focussing on vigilance, metabolism and the autonomic nervous system and skin temperature regulation. The ability of a specific neuropsychological test to measure vigilance as a severity indicator for narcolepsy is explored. Two possible causes for the obesity commonly seen in narcolepsy are a decreased basal metabolic rate and a changed autonomic tone. To assess the influence of hypocretin deficiency on skin temperature regulation, thermoregulatory profiles of the proximal and distal skin of narcoleptic subjects were compared to profiles of healthy controls during a daytime sleep registration. Show less