Clinical effect of atomoxetine hydrochloride in 66 children with narcolepsy.
- Author:
Shen ZHANG
1
;
Changhong DING
2
;
Email: DINGCHANGHONG@MEDMAIL.COM.CN.
;
Husheng WU
1
;
Fang FANG
1
;
Xiaohui WANG
1
;
Xiaotun REN
1
Author Information
- Publication Type:Journal Article
- MeSH: Adolescent; Atomoxetine Hydrochloride; adverse effects; therapeutic use; Cataplexy; drug therapy; Child; Child, Preschool; Electroencephalography; Female; Humans; Male; Narcolepsy; drug therapy; Neuroimaging; Polysomnography
- From: Chinese Journal of Pediatrics 2015;53(10):760-764
- CountryChina
- Language:Chinese
-
Abstract:
OBJECTIVETo observe the efficacy and safety of atomoxetine hydrochloride in children with narcolepsy.
METHODTotally 66 patients with narcolepsy who were conformed international classification of sleep disturbances (ICSD-2) diagnostic criteria treated with atomoxetine hydrochloride seen from November 2010 to December 2014 were enrolled into this study, 42 of them were male and 24 female, mean age of onset was 7.5 years (3.75-13.00 years), mean duration before diagnosis was 1.75 years (0.25-5.00 years). Complete blood count, liver and kidney function, multiple sleep latency test (MSLT), polysomnography (PGS), neuroimaging and electroencephalography (EEG) were performed for each patient. For some of the children HLA-DR2 gene and serum markers of infection were tested. The 66 cases were followed up from 2 to 49 months (average 18 months) to observe the clinical efficacy and adverse reactions.
RESULTSIn 62 cases excessive daytime sleepiness was improved, in 11 cases (16.7%) it was controlled (16.7%), in 29 cases (43.9%) the treatment was obviously effective and in 22 (33.3%) it was effective; cataplexy occurred in 54 cases, in 18 (33.3%) it was controlled, in 19 (35.2%) the treatment was obviously effective and in 10 (18.5%) effective; night sleep disorders existed in 55 cases, in 47 cases it was improved, in 14 (25.5%) it was controlled, in 20 (36.4%) the treatment was obviously effective and in 13 (23.6%) effective; hypnagogic or hypnopompic hallucination was present in 13 cases, in only 4 these symptoms were controlled. Sleep paralysis existed in 4 cases, it was controlled in only 1 case. In 18 cases attention and learning efficiency improved.Anorexia occurred in 18 cases, mood disorder in 5 cases, depression in 2 cases, nocturia, muscle tremors, involuntary tongue movement each occurred in 1 case. P-R interval prolongation and atrial premature contraction were found in 1 case.
CONCLUSIONAtomoxetine hydrochloride showed good effects in patients with narcolepsy on excessive daytime sleepiness, cataplexy and night sleep disorders, the effects on hallucinations and sleep paralysis were not significant. Adverse reactions were slight, anorexia and mood disorder were common. As a non-central nervous system stimulant, atomoxetine hydrochloride does not induce drug dependence and has no prescription limits; it has good tolerability, safety and effectiveness, it can be a good alternative in treatment of children with narcolepsy.