Normal Sleep
Narcolepsy
Sleep & Psychiatric Disorders
Insomnia & Parasomnia
Sleep Disorders
100

Which stage of sleep occupies the most amount of time?

Stage 2

100

What are the 4 main features of narcolepsy?

cataplexy, hypnogogic hallucinations, sleep attacks, and sleep paralysis

100

What medication is used to treat nightmares in PTSD and what is the mechanism of action?

Prazosin

alpha 1 agonist

100

Which treatment has the best outcomes for treatment of insomnia?

CBT

100

A 34 year old obese main has difficulty falling asleep at night until 3am and is unable to wake up until the afternoon. This has caused him to lose several jobs and created difficulty in his relationships. What is the most likely diagnosis?

delayed sleep phase disorder
200

How often do normal people cycle between REM and non-REM sleep?

90 minutes

200

Cataplexy is present in what % of patients with narcolepsy?

60%

200

True or False: REM sleep latency is shortened during schizophrenia exacerbations

True

200

According to DSM, how often and for how long must sleep difficulty be present to meet criteria for insomnia?

at least 3 nights a week for at least 3 months

200

What are 4 treatments for obstructive sleep apnea?

weight loss, CPAP, surgery, stimulants (modafanil)

300

Which neurotransmitter ceases to fire during sleep? Where does it originate?


Histamine

tuberomammillary nucleus

300

What are 4 drugs approved to treat narcolepsy?


sodium oxybate, modafanil (and armodafanil), methylphenidate, amphetamine

300
How is sleep affected by depression (decreased or increased slow wave sleep, REM latency, total sleep time, and sleep-onset latency)?

decreased slow wave sleep

decreased REM latency

decreased total sleep time

increased sleep-onset latency

300

What sleep disorder is prodromal in 80% of patients with Lewy body dementia?

REM sleep behavior disorder 


Also a risk factor for other alpha-synuclein neuropathologies: Parkinson’s (33-50%), multiple system atrophy (80-95%)

300

How is muscle tone normally suppressed during REM sleep? In which disease is this disrupted?

Activation of cholinergic neurons in the brainstem → inhibition of spinal motor neurons


disrupted in REM sleep behavior disorder

400

Which brain structure regulates circadian rhythm?

suprachiasmatic nucleus in the anterior hypothalamus

400

What pathway is dysfunctional in narcolepsy?

Hypocretin (orexin) peptide pathway 

Hypocretin neurons in the lateral hypothalamus project to NE, DA, Ach neurons, modulates wide range of outputs related to arousal and motivated behavior

400

How is sleep change with alcohol use (increased or decreased sleep latency and REM sleep)? What happens to stage 4 sleep?

decreased sleep latency

decreased REM sleep

fragmentation of stage 4 sleep 

400

A 15 year old male comes to the clinic endorsing excessive daytime sleepiness, cognitive impairment. Per mom, he has been eating a lot more lately, apathetic, and hypersexual. What is the most likely diagnosis?

Kleine-Levin Syndrome

Recurrent episodes of hypersomnia associated with cognitive an behavioral disturbances such as confusion, derealization, apathy, compulsive eating, and hypersexuality. Episodes last days-weeks and are separated by weeks-months of normal sleep/behavior. Associated with abnormal birth history (long labor, hypoxia, prematurity), genetic factors (Ashkenazi Jews), infectious/immune-mediated theories, Klinefelter syndrome, von Willebrand disease, polycystic kidneys, and ASD.

400

Which TCA is least likely to cause sedation and is used off-label for narcolepsy and somnolence related to sleep apnea?

Protryptiline

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