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Neuromyelitis optica spectrum disorder presenting with repeated hypersomnia due to involvement of the hypothalamus and hypothalamus-amygdala linkage
28
Citations
9
References
2015
Year
Orexin NeuronsNeuropsychologyNeurological DisorderNeuropsychiatryCommon Neurological DisordersTemporal LesionOptic NerveSocial SciencesNeurobiology Of DiseaseNeurologyBrain PathologyNeuropathologyOphthalmologyPsychiatryHypothalamus-amygdala LinkageOptica Spectrum DisorderNeuromuscular PathologyClinical DisordersNeurophysiologyNeuroanatomyNeuroscienceBiological PsychiatryCentral Nervous SystemMedicine
We report the case of a 46-year-old Japanese woman with neuromyelitis optica spectrum disorder presenting with repeated hypersomnia accompanied by decreased CSF orexin level. First episode associated with hypothalamic-pituitary dysfunction showed bilateral hypothalamic lesions that can cause secondary damage to the orexin neurons. The second episode associated with impaired memory showed a left temporal lesion involving the amygdala. The mechanism remains unknown, but the reduced blood flow in the hypothalamus ipsilateral to the amygdala lesion suggested trans-synaptic hypothalamic dysfunction secondary to the impaired amygdala. A temporal lesion involving the amygdala and hypothalamus could be responsible for hypersomnia due to neuromyelitis optica spectrum disorder.
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