Hypersomnia, especially with long sleep time, is frequently associated with evening chronotype and young age. It is inadequately diagnosed using MSLT.
SUMMAR Y Patients with idiopathic hypersomnia never feel fully alert despite a normal or long sleep night. The spectrum of the symptoms is insufficiently studied. We interviewed 62 consecutive patients with idiopathic hypersomnia (with a mean sleep latency lower than 8 min or a sleep time longer than 11 h) and 50 healthy controls using a questionnaire on sleep, awakening, sleepiness, alertness and cognitive, psychological and functional problems during daily life conditions. Patients slept 3 h more on weekends, holidays and in the sleep unit than on working days. In the morning, the patients needed somebody to wake them, or to be stressed, while routine, light, alarm clocks and motivation were inefficient. Three-quarters of the patients did not feel refreshed after short naps. During the daytime, their alertness was modulated by the same external conditions as controls, but they felt more sedated in darkness, in a quiet environment, when listening to music or conversation. Being hyperactive helped them more than controls to resist sleepiness. They were more frequently evening-type and more alert in the evening than in the morning. The patients were able to focus only for 1 h (versus 4 h in the controls). They complained of attention and memory deficit. Half of them had problems regulating their body temperature and were near-sighted. Mental fatigability, dependence on other people for awakening them, and a reduced benefit from usually alerting conditions (except being hyperactive or stressed) seem to be more specific of the daily problems of patients with idiopathic hypersomnia than daytime sleepiness.k e y w o r d s fatigue, hypersomnia, long sleep time, mental fatigability, sleep drunkenness, sleepiness, tiredness
The characteristics of residual excessive sleepiness (RES), defined by an Epworth score .10 in adequately treated apnoeic patients, are unknown.40 apnoeic patients, with (n520) and without (n520) RES, and 20 healthy controls underwent clinical interviews, cognitive and biological tests, polysomnography, a multiple sleep latency test, and 24-h sleep monitoring.The marked subjective sleepiness in the RES group (mean¡SD score 16.4¡3) contrasted with moderately abnormal objective measures of sleepiness (90% of patients with RES had daytime sleep latencies .8 min). Compared with patients without RES, the patients with RES had more fatigue, lower stage N3 percentages, more periodic leg movements (without arousals), lower mean sleep latencies and longer daytime sleep periods. Most neuropsychological dimensions (morning headaches, memory complaints, spatial memory, inattention, apathy, depression, anxiety and lack of self-confidence) were not different between patients with and without RES, but gradually altered from controls to apnoeic patients without and then with RES.RES in apnoeic patients differs markedly from sleepiness in central hypersomnia. The association between RES, periodic leg movements, apathy and depressive mood parallels the post-hypoxic lesions in noradrenaline, dopamine and serotonin systems in animals exposed to intermittent hypoxia.
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