Attention impairments and ADHD symptoms in adult narcoleptic patients with and without hypocretin deficiency
Academic Article
Publication Date:
2017
Short description:
Attention impairments and ADHD symptoms in adult narcoleptic patients with and without hypocretin deficiency / Filardi, Marco; Pizza, Fabio; Tonetti, Lorenzo; Antelmi, Elena; Natale, Vincenzo; Plazzi, Giuseppe. - In: PLOS ONE. - ISSN 1932-6203. - 12:8(2017), pp. e0182085-e0182085. [10.1371/journal.pone.0182085]
abstract:
Background
Attentional complaints are common in narcolepsy patients and can overlap with daytime
sleepiness features. Few studies attempted to characterize attentional domains in narcolepsy
leading to controversial results. We aimed to assess the impact of hypocretin deficiency
on attentional functioning by comparing performances on the attention network test
(ANT) of narcoleptic patients with hypocretin deficiency (narcolepsy type 1ÐNT1) versus
patients without hypocretin deficiency (narcolepsy type 2ÐNT2) and healthy controls. We
also addressed frequency and severity of psychopathological symptoms and their influence
on performances on ANT.
Methods
Twenty-one NT1 patients, fifteen NT2 patients and twenty-two healthy controls underwent
the ANT, which allows assessing three separate attentional processes (alerting, orienting
and executive control), and a psychometric assessment including questionnaires on attention-
deficit hyperactivity disorder (ADHD), obsessive-compulsive disorder, anxiety and
depression symptoms.
Results
NT1 and NT2 patients presented with slower reaction times compared to controls. NT1
patients exhibited an impairment of alerting network relative to NT2 and healthy controls,
while orienting and executive control networks efficiency were comparable between groups.
NT1 and NT2 displayed higher severity of ADHD inattentive domain than controls, NT1
patients also displayed higher severity of ADHD hyperactive domain and depressive symptoms.
In NT1, ADHD and depressive symptoms were positively correlated.
Conclusions
Despite a shared slowing of reaction times in both NT1 and NT2, a selective impairment of
alerting network was present only in hypocretin deficient patients. Clinicians should carefully consider attentional deficits and psychopathological symptoms, including ADHD symptoms,
in the clinical assessment and management of patients with narcolepsy.
Iris type:
Articolo su rivista
Keywords:
Medicine (all); Biochemistry; Genetics and Molecular Biology (all); Agricultural and Biological Sciences (all)
List of contributors:
Filardi, Marco; Pizza, Fabio; Tonetti, Lorenzo; Antelmi, Elena; Natale, Vincenzo; Plazzi, Giuseppe
Published in: