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Sleep, Narcolepsy, and Sodium Oxybate

Journal

CURRENT NEUROPHARMACOLOGY
Volume 20, Issue 2, Pages 272-291

Publisher

BENTHAM SCIENCE PUBL LTD
DOI: 10.2174/1570159X19666210407151227

Keywords

Sleep; narcolepsy; sodium oxybate; sleep homeostasis; depression; oxidative stress

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Sodium oxybate is a medication used to treat narcolepsy with cataplexy. It acts as a weak GABAB agonist and an antioxidant, improving alertness and correcting neuronal imbalance.
Sodium oxybate (SO) has been in use for many decades to treat narcolepsy with cataplexy. It functions as a weak GABAB agonist but also as an energy source for the brain as a result of its metabolism to succinate and as a powerful antioxidant because of its capacity to induce the formation of NADPH. Its actions at thalamic GABAB receptors can induce slow-wave activity, while its actions at GABAB receptors on monoaminergic neurons can induce or delay REM sleep. By altering the balance between monoaminergic and cholinergic neuronal activity, SO uniquely can induce and prevent cataplexy. The formation of NADPH may enhance sleep's restorative process by accelerating the removal of the reactive oxygen species (ROS), which accumulate during wakefulness. SO improves alertness in normal subjects and in patients with narcolepsy. SO may allay severe psychological stress - an inflammatory state triggered by increased levels of ROS and characterized by cholinergic supersensitivity and monoaminergic deficiency. SO may be able to eliminate the inflammatory state and correct the cholinergic/ monoaminergic imbalance.

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