Matches in SemOpenAlex for { <https://semopenalex.org/work/W2003227005> ?p ?o ?g. }
Showing items 1 to 74 of
74
with 100 items per page.
- W2003227005 endingPage "524" @default.
- W2003227005 startingPage "519" @default.
- W2003227005 abstract "Perhaps as many as 5% of adults are excessively sleepy to a clinically relevant extent.1 The comparable figure for children is not known, but sleepiness is associated with many different conditions and, although a neglected topic, it can be the cause of serious psychological and social disadvantage.2Narcolepsy is by no means the most common cause of excessive sleepiness. Nonetheless, it is not the rarity once supposed, and poses special problems of recognition and management, especially in young people. The purpose of this article is mainly to review the clinical picture of narcolepsy in children and adolescents, emphasising the need for paediatricians, child psychiatrists, and others to take a wide view of the ways in which the condition can show itself. The clinical picture is often very different from that of the fully developed narcolepsy syndrome in adults. It is, therefore, at particular risk of either being overlooked or misconstrued.Narcolepsy is a neurological disorder, the main classic feature of which is excessive sleepiness during the day, with recurrent episodes of irresistible sleep (sleep attacks). In its fully developed form the “narcolepsy syndrome” also includes sudden loss of muscle tone in response to strong emotion (cataplexy), vivid dream-like experiences before falling asleep (hypnagogic hallucinations) or on waking (hypnopompic hallucinations), and episodes of inability to move after waking in the morning (sleep paralysis). Estimates for the occurrence of the non-sleepiness (“ancillary”) components of the syndrome are: cataplexy (all cases where cataplexy is required for the diagnosis of narcolepsy; however, others accept that in about 20% of cases cataplexy is not present), hypnagogic or hypnopompic hallucinations (50–60%), and sleep paralysis (40%). These symptoms occur in various combinations and less than half of those with narcolepsy develop all four of them. In narcolepsy, overnight sleep is generally disrupted, causing some degree …" @default.
- W2003227005 created "2016-06-24" @default.
- W2003227005 creator A5056143951 @default.
- W2003227005 date "1999-12-01" @default.
- W2003227005 modified "2023-10-14" @default.
- W2003227005 title "Recognition and management of narcolepsy" @default.
- W2003227005 cites W1486366951 @default.
- W2003227005 cites W1541240044 @default.
- W2003227005 cites W1967339988 @default.
- W2003227005 cites W1988248056 @default.
- W2003227005 cites W1994936506 @default.
- W2003227005 cites W2023117957 @default.
- W2003227005 cites W204010425 @default.
- W2003227005 cites W2064197144 @default.
- W2003227005 cites W2079353592 @default.
- W2003227005 cites W2081286149 @default.
- W2003227005 cites W2093356085 @default.
- W2003227005 cites W2101921241 @default.
- W2003227005 cites W2110757095 @default.
- W2003227005 cites W2125007341 @default.
- W2003227005 cites W2138940725 @default.
- W2003227005 cites W2155674253 @default.
- W2003227005 cites W2406988637 @default.
- W2003227005 cites W39345803 @default.
- W2003227005 cites W4238852364 @default.
- W2003227005 cites W4241477637 @default.
- W2003227005 cites W4242837552 @default.
- W2003227005 doi "https://doi.org/10.1136/adc.81.6.519" @default.
- W2003227005 hasPubMedCentralId "https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/1718150" @default.
- W2003227005 hasPubMedId "https://pubmed.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/10569973" @default.
- W2003227005 hasPublicationYear "1999" @default.
- W2003227005 type Work @default.
- W2003227005 sameAs 2003227005 @default.
- W2003227005 citedByCount "35" @default.
- W2003227005 countsByYear W20032270052012 @default.
- W2003227005 countsByYear W20032270052013 @default.
- W2003227005 countsByYear W20032270052014 @default.
- W2003227005 countsByYear W20032270052016 @default.
- W2003227005 countsByYear W20032270052019 @default.
- W2003227005 crossrefType "journal-article" @default.
- W2003227005 hasAuthorship W2003227005A5056143951 @default.
- W2003227005 hasBestOaLocation W20032270051 @default.
- W2003227005 hasConcept C118552586 @default.
- W2003227005 hasConcept C16568411 @default.
- W2003227005 hasConcept C2779494582 @default.
- W2003227005 hasConcept C71924100 @default.
- W2003227005 hasConceptScore W2003227005C118552586 @default.
- W2003227005 hasConceptScore W2003227005C16568411 @default.
- W2003227005 hasConceptScore W2003227005C2779494582 @default.
- W2003227005 hasConceptScore W2003227005C71924100 @default.
- W2003227005 hasIssue "6" @default.
- W2003227005 hasLocation W20032270051 @default.
- W2003227005 hasLocation W20032270052 @default.
- W2003227005 hasLocation W20032270053 @default.
- W2003227005 hasLocation W20032270054 @default.
- W2003227005 hasOpenAccess W2003227005 @default.
- W2003227005 hasPrimaryLocation W20032270051 @default.
- W2003227005 hasRelatedWork W1506200166 @default.
- W2003227005 hasRelatedWork W1995515455 @default.
- W2003227005 hasRelatedWork W2080531066 @default.
- W2003227005 hasRelatedWork W2748952813 @default.
- W2003227005 hasRelatedWork W2899084033 @default.
- W2003227005 hasRelatedWork W2942127280 @default.
- W2003227005 hasRelatedWork W297665121 @default.
- W2003227005 hasRelatedWork W3031052312 @default.
- W2003227005 hasRelatedWork W3032375762 @default.
- W2003227005 hasRelatedWork W3108674512 @default.
- W2003227005 hasVolume "81" @default.
- W2003227005 isParatext "false" @default.
- W2003227005 isRetracted "false" @default.
- W2003227005 magId "2003227005" @default.
- W2003227005 workType "article" @default.