Less well known is that Parkinson’s share other symptoms with narcolepsy, a sleep disorder characterized by sudden and uncontrollable episodes of deep sleep, severe fatigue and general sleep disorder.
Now a team of UCLA and Veterans Affairs researchers think they know why the two disorders share something in common: Parkinson’s disease patients have severe damage to the same small group of neurons whose loss causes narcolepsy.
The findings suggest a different clinical course of treatment for people suffering with Parkinson’s that may ameliorate their sleep symptoms.
In their report in the May issue of the journal Brain, Jerry Siegel, professor of psychiatry and biobehavioral sciences at the Semel Institute for Neuroscience and Human Behavior at UCLA, assistant resident neurobiologist Thomas C. Thannickal and associate research physiologist Yuan-Yang Lai have determined that Parkinson’s disease patients have a loss of up to 60 percent of brain cells containing the peptide hypocretin.
In 2000, this same group of UCLA researchers first identified the cause of narcolepsy as a loss of hypocretin, thought to be important in regulating the sleep cycle.
This latest research points to a common cause for the sleep disorders associated with these two diseases and suggests that treatment of Parkinson’s disease patients with hypocretin or hypocretin analogs may reverse these symptoms.
The narcolepsy symptoms are nighttime sleepiness, cataplexy, sleep attacks and sudden loss of skeletal muscle tone without loss of consciousness. The person will be in a state of high alertness, feeling, hearing and remembering everything but the person cannot talk or move.
Parkinson’s disease is accompanied by daytime sleep attacks, insomnia, hallucinations and depression. All these symptoms are also present in narcolepsy.
For more information on link between Parkinson’s and narcolepsy, visit:
http://www.sciencedaily.com/
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