Conference Coverage

Distinguish ‘sleepiness’ from ‘fatigue’ to help diagnose hypersomnia


 

FROM PSYCHOPHARMACOLOGY UPDATE

For patients with comorbid psychiatric, medical and sleep disorders, focus on getting rid of medications that may cause sleepiness, including sedating medications and antidepressants, and consider using stimulants if appropriate. While there are Food and Drug Administration–approved medications for narcolepsy and some are approved for hypersomnia in patients with obstructive sleep apnea (OSA), none are officially approved to treat hypersomnia in psychiatric patients.

“Whenever we use these drugs for those reasons, we’re using them off label,” Dr. Benca said.

Modafinil/armodafinil, approved for narcolepsy, shift-work disorder, and OSA in Ehlers-Danlos syndrome, is one off-label option for patients with hypersomnia. “They are lower potency and less addictive than the amphetamines, [with] fewer side effects,” Dr. Benca explained, but should be prescribed with caution in some women because of potential reduced efficacy of oral contraceptives. Side effects of modafinil include headache, nausea, eosinophilia, diarrhea, dry mouth, and anorexia.

Methylphenidate is another option for hypersomnia, available in racemic mixture, pure D-isomer, and time-release formulations.

Patients taking methylphenidate may experience nervousness, insomnia, anorexia, nausea, dizziness, hypertension, hypotension, hypersensitivity reactions, tachycardia, and headache as side effects.

For patients with central nervous system hypersomnias, amphetamines can be used, with methamphetamines having a “very similar profile” and similar side effects, including insomnia, restlessness, tachycardia, dizziness, diarrhea, constipation, hypertension, impotence, and rare cases of psychotic episodes.

Practice parameters released by the American Academy of Sleep Medicine in 2007 suggest that modafinil may have efficacy in idiopathic hypersomnia, Parkinson’s disease, myotonic dystrophy, and multiple sclerosis. The practice parameters also suggest hypersomnias of central origin can be treated with modafinil, amphetamine, methamphetamine, dextroamphetamine, and methylphenidate based on evidence or “long history of use” (Sleep. 2007;30:1705-11).

“Interestingly, there is no mention of psychiatric disorders in these practice parameters, and they report that there are mixed results using stimulants off label for sleepiness and fatigue in traumatic brain injury and poststroke fatigue,” Dr. Benca said.

Dr. Benca reported that she is a consultant to Eisai, Idorsia, Jazz, Merck, and Sunovion. Global Academy and this news organization are owned by the same parent company.

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