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. 2009 Feb;32(2):175-80.
doi: 10.1093/sleep/32.2.175.

Decreased CSF histamine in narcolepsy with and without low CSF hypocretin-1 in comparison to healthy controls

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Decreased CSF histamine in narcolepsy with and without low CSF hypocretin-1 in comparison to healthy controls

Seiji Nishino et al. Sleep. 2009 Feb.

Abstract

Study objective: To examine whether cerebrospinal fluid (CSF) histamine contents are altered in human narcolepsy and whether these alterations are specific to hypocretin deficiency, as defined by low CSF hypocretin-1.

Methods: Patients meeting the ICSD-2 criteria for narcolepsy with and without cataplexy and who had CSF hypocretin-1 results available were selected from the Stanford Narcolepsy Database on the basis of CSF availability and adequate age and sex matching across 3 groups: narcolepsy with low CSF hypocretin-1 (n=34, 100% with cataplexy), narcolepsy without low CSF hypocretin-1 (n=24, 75% with cataplexy), and normal controls (n=23). Low CSF hypocretin-1 was defined as CSF < or =110 pg/mL (1/3 of mean control values). Six of 34 patients with low CSF hypocretin-1, six of 24 subjects with normal CSF hypocretin-1, and all controls were unmedicated at the time of CSF collection. CSF histamine was measured in all samples using a fluorometric HPLC system.

Results: Mean CSF histamine levels were: 133.2 +/- 20.1 pg/mL in narcoleptic subjects with low CSF hypocretin-1, 233.3 +/- 46.5 pg/mL in patients with normal CSF hypocretin-1 (204.9 +/- 89.7 pg/mL if only patients without cataplexy are included), and 300.5 +/- 49.7 pg/mL in controls, reaching statistically significant differences between the 3 groups.

Conclusion: CSF histamine levels are reduced in human narcolepsy. The reduction of CSF histamine levels was more evident in the cases with low CSF hypocretin-1, and levels were intermediate in other narcolepsy cases. As histamine is a wake-promoting amine known to decrease during sleep, decreased histamine could either passively reflect or partially mediate daytime sleepiness in these pathologies.

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Figures

Figure 1
Figure 1
CSF histamine levels in controls (Group C), narcolepsy with low CSF hypocretin-1 (Group D), and narcolepsy with normal CSF hypocretin-1 (Group ND). All 34 subjects for narcolepsy with low CSF hypocretin-1 exhibited cataplexy, while 6 of 24 of narcolepsy with normal hypocretin-1 did not have cataplexy. The patients with medication (at the time of CSF sampling) are indicated with closed circles and the non-medicated patients are indicated with open circles. HLA DQB1*0602 negative subjects are indicated with circles with horizontal bars.

References

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