Childhood-onset narcolepsy, obesity and puberty in four consecutive children: a close temporal link.
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Abstract
Narcolepsy is a rare but disabling condition that causes excessive daytime sleepiness. Interestingly, weight gain is frequent in patients with narcolepsy and it has sometimes been described very early in the course of the disease. Here, we report four consecutive obese children who were referred to our sleep laboratory for excessive daytime sleepiness and suspected sleep apnoea syndrome. They underwent nocturnal polysomnography associated with multiple sleep latency tests. Narcolepsy was diagnosed in all children with a close temporal link between the onset of narcolepsy, obesity and puberty. Scientifically, the relationship between sleep, weight, growth rate and puberty onset is striking and merits further investigation. From the clinical point of view, narcolepsy must be investigated in obese sleepy children along with obstructive sleep apnoea. Indeed, it can be controlled with appropriate treatment but the proper diagnosis relies not only upon nocturnal polysomnography but involves the systematic use of multiple sleep latency tests.