Secondary Narcolepsy as Worsening Sign in a Pediatric Case of Optic Pathway Glioma

Children (Basel). 2022 Sep 23;9(10):1455. doi: 10.3390/children9101455.

Abstract

Narcolepsy, a neurologic disorder that leads to excessive daytime sleepiness, may represent a rare consequence of neoplastic lesions involving the sellar/parasellar and hypothalamic regions, the anatomical areas responsible for wakefulness. Optic pathway gliomas represent the most common neoplasm of these regions and present an excellent overall survival, while long-term neurologic impairments, such as visual loss, endocrinopathies, or sleep disorders, are the principal causes of morbidity. In this case report, we describe a non-NF1 patient suffering from a very extensive optical pathway glioma, who several years after the diagnosis in a radiological condition of stable disease, presented with severe narcolepsy, a rare complication, that led to the death of the patient.

Keywords: brain tumor; hypersomnia; low-grade gliomas; neurological sequelae; optic pathway glioma; pediatric case report.

Publication types

  • Case Reports

Grants and funding

This research received no external funding.