Litcius/Paper detail

Impaired cognition in narcolepsy: clinical and neurobiological perspectives

Christopher A. Cano, Brian Harel, Thomas E. Scammell

2024SLEEP17 citationsDOIOpen Access PDF

Abstract

In addition to well-known symptoms such as sleepiness and cataplexy, many people with narcolepsy have impaired cognition, reporting inattention, poor memory, and other concerns. Unfortunately, research on cognition in narcolepsy has been limited. Strong evidence demonstrates difficulties with sustained attention, but evidence for executive dysfunction and impaired memory is mixed. Animal research provides some insights into how loss of the orexin neurons in narcolepsy type 1 may give rise to impaired cognition via dysfunction of the prefrontal cortex, and cholinergic and monoaminergic systems. This paper reviews some of these clinical and preclinical findings, provides a neurobiological framework to understand these deficits, and highlights some of the many key unanswered questions.

Topics & Concepts

NarcolepsyCognitionPsychologyNeuroscienceMedicineModafinilCognitive psychologyPsychiatryClinical psychologyNeurologySleep and Wakefulness ResearchSleep and related disordersMemory and Neural Mechanisms