Stuff You Should Know - How Narcolepsy Works
Episode Date: May 28, 2020Narcolepsy is one of those amazing rare disorders that everyone thinks they understand – people just fall asleep at random times, even in the middle of doing something. But there’s a lot more to i...t and – even better – we actually may be able to explain it. Learn more about your ad-choices at https://www.iheartpodcastnetwork.comSee omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
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On the podcast, Hey Dude, the 90s called,
David Lasher and Christine Taylor,
stars of the cult classic show, Hey Dude,
bring you back to the days of slip dresses
and choker necklaces.
We're gonna use Hey Dude as our jumping off point,
but we are going to unpack and dive back
into the decade of the 90s.
We lived it, and now we're calling on all of our friends
to come back and relive it.
Listen to Hey Dude, the 90s called
on the iHeart radio app, Apple Podcasts,
or wherever you get your podcasts.
Hey, I'm Lance Bass, host of the new iHeart podcast,
Frosted Tips with Lance Bass.
Do you ever think to yourself, what advice would Lance Bass
and my favorite boy bands give me in this situation?
If you do, you've come to the right place
because I'm here to help.
And a different hot, sexy teen crush boy bander
each week to guide you through life.
Tell everybody, ya everybody, about my new podcast
and make sure to listen so we'll never, ever have to say.
Bye, bye, bye.
Listen to Frosted Tips with Lance Bass
on the iHeart radio app, Apple Podcasts,
or wherever you listen to podcasts.
Welcome to Step You Should Know,
a production of iHeart radios, How Stuff Works.
Hey, and welcome to the podcast.
I'm Josh Clark, and there's Charles W.
Chuck Bryant over there, and Phil McJerry.
Chuck, wake up.
Huh?
We're gonna get some mail for that right off of the bat.
I feel quite refreshed.
So Chuck, you might have narcolepsy then.
If you just fell asleep, were you able to resist
that urge to sleep just now?
No, as soon as I heard, hey, welcome to the podcast,
I went lights out.
I think that happens to a lot of people.
Have you ever known anyone with narcolepsy?
I haven't.
The closest I've come to that is watching
my own private Idaho.
What, did you find that sleep inducing?
No, no, there's, I think, it's River Phoenix,
or Keanu Reeves has narcolepsy.
I forgot about that.
I thought you were saying it's so boring,
you can't stay awake.
No, no, no, that's cats.
Did you see that?
No, don't you remember that I tried to make myself
go to sleep in cats in the middle of the cats?
That's right.
I have not seen the movie now.
Yeah, that's what I was wondering about.
After having been on Movie Crush,
now I can't tell what's what anymore, what I said where.
So my great aunt Laura had narcolepsy,
which is my paternal grandmother's sister.
And I only met her a few times.
This is from my dad's side of the Mississippi clan.
So I think I only remember going to Mississippi
like once when I was a kid and visiting her.
And I just remembered my brother and I,
this is my only memory of the visit,
is Scott and I sitting in a room talking with her,
and her being in the middle of a sentence,
and then her head falling down.
And then 10 seconds later, she would pick her head up
and continue that sentence.
Wow, like without missing a beat,
or was there like, was she aware
that she had just fallen asleep and woken up?
In my memory, from being like 10 years old,
she didn't miss a beat and just finished her sentence
like right in the middle of a sentence
and didn't mention it.
And my brother and I were just like,
what is going on here?
Wait, your dad didn't prepare you for it?
I don't remember.
I blocked out, you know,
purposely blocked out a lot of my childhood.
Right, right, sure.
So I don't know.
And that guy folded into the shuffle?
That's the only thing I remember.
It may be a child's memory that is a little trumped up,
but that's how I remember it.
Wow, man.
Well, yeah, I've never known anybody with narcolepsy
and based on that going into this whole episode,
like I was just basically going in like,
I'm sure most of our listeners are,
where it's just like, yeah,
just somebody falls asleep in the middle of the day,
they can't help it, and then they wake back up
and who cares basically, you know?
But the more that I've researched this the more,
I'm like, you know, even if it were just that alone,
it would be pretty disruptive to your normal life,
depending on how often it happened to you every day.
But the fact is, it's not just that alone.
And there's a lot of extra symptoms to it
that make it frightening or terrifying or depressing
or just completely disruptive
or make it so that you are maybe unable
to hold down a job or go to school.
There's a, it's actually a much,
it's a much sadder condition
than I think most people think of,
because it seems innocuous.
It's just like, hey, you fall asleep here or there,
it's fine, you know?
And it's not, there's a lot more to it than that.
Yeah, for sure.
I should also mention too that something
that should not be confused with narcolepsy
is something that Emily's family has.
And I saw this when we would go to visit
when they lived in Ohio,
when he would stay at her parents' house.
Eating too much turkey?
Well, you know, eating, drinking during the day,
such that by seven to eight o'clock at night,
every night I would, Emily and I would look around,
we're watching TV and there are four,
usually three sleeping adults.
And I dubbed it the gas leak,
which everyone in their family thought was hysterical.
Right, now that's just played old funny.
Yeah, that's not narcolepsy at all.
That's just, you know, at what age does that start happening?
Is what I want to know, because I'm creeping up there.
21.
Because I can still jam late into the night.
I'm still, you know, I might be sleeping the next day,
but that's my only time when I don't have a five-year-old.
So I use that time.
I can stay up still till midnight,
one in the morning if I am doing something.
That's really neat.
You must have a lot of testosterone left.
I don't think so.
Well, I mean, well, no, I mean, like to have energy
after, you know, a certain time of day is,
I think you have a lot of testosterone, Chuck.
I would bet, we're gonna take you in
for a test after this.
Well, I feel like it kicks back in,
like I'm sleepy sometimes during the day,
but then when the night comes and my daughter's asleep,
I'm like, all right, this is my time to shine.
No, that's very fortunate, man,
that you're not just like, this is my time
to Netflix and chill, like you're getting stuff done.
I'm envious of you for that,
because I get a little tired,
but I definitely don't have narcolepsy.
I'm just kind of like, I'm somewhere between you and
Emily's family, the ghastly, correct?
Yeah, so narcolepsy is, it's a chronic disorder.
It's a sleep disorder.
And I know we've talked a little bit about this
in some of our other sleep disorder episodes,
so much so that I thought we might've actually covered this,
but I quadruple-checked, and we have not.
But it's characterized by a few things.
One of the main tenets,
that basically everybody that has narcolepsy
has what's called excessive daytime sleepiness.
Right, that's what everybody thinks about
when you think of narcolepsy.
Somebody's just falling asleep,
they can't help it, they're just suddenly out.
That's right.
Yeah, they also call those sleep attacks,
which is pretty cute.
And no matter what variation of narcolepsy you have,
you have excessive daytime sleepiness, EDS, right?
That's right, and this is nothing new.
We're just now sort of figuring it out a little bit
since the 90s, which we'll get to,
but obviously this has been happening
since there have been people,
they've probably been suffering from narcolepsy,
a small percentage of people.
But it was first described in 1880
by a French physician named Jean-Baptiste-Edouard Guilineau.
Guilineau.
Not bad.
How would you have said it?
Jean-Baptiste-Edouard Guilineau.
Guilineau, is that?
Is it a...
You have to put that little uptick on the end.
I think that's called an accent a go.
Right, right.
So yeah, that's how I would have said it,
but either way, I think we basically got it across.
He was a French physician from 1880.
That's the important part.
Yeah, and the origin of the actual term is
from Greek narca, which is numbness or stupor.
Stupor is one of my favorite words.
And lepsis to attack or to seize.
Right, so it says an attack of stupor basically
is what he meant when he coined that term.
And the reason Jean-Baptiste-Edouard Guilineau
came up with this is because a 36 year old
wine caskmaker came to him and said,
hey, I think there might be something wrong with me.
I fall asleep suddenly out of nowhere
for one to five minutes, 200 times a day, every day.
What do you think?
And Guilineau said,
I think I'm gonna make my career on you, buddy.
I did the math there.
If you average about two and a half minutes
between the one to five, that's about eight hours of dozing.
Okay, I'm really glad you said that, Chuck,
because this was something that I had no idea about.
But if you take over a 24 hour period,
somebody with narcolepsy and put their amount of sleep
next to somebody without narcolepsy over 24 hours,
it's gonna wash out to roughly the same.
Did you know that?
I didn't know that, but does that mean
that this guy dozed eight hours a day
and then stayed up all night,
or did he sleep another five hours at night
and just slept a lot?
No, so that's one of the key reasons
that there is such thing as excessive daytime sleepiness
as part of narcolepsy.
It's that your sleep is so disrupted
that it's basically spread out over 24 hours
rather than concentrated over eight hours at night.
So they're up and awake in the middle of the night
for very long periods,
just like they fall asleep suddenly during the day.
But if you put all those bouts of sleep together,
even when they're trying at night
and then when they can't help it during the day,
it adds up to about the same
that a person without narcolepsy will sleep.
That's my understanding.
No, that's pretty remarkable.
It is.
Like the brain's like, I'm getting sleep
whether you like it or not,
we're making this happen at least by 24 hours,
we're gonna have had enough.
And of course, since this has been,
we're talking about the 1880s,
there've been a lot of explanations over the years.
Everyone from Freud to,
I was about to say legitimate doctors
that probably would offend certain people.
I like Freud.
I like Freud too, but I meant like, nevermind.
Sure.
But Freud of course said that sleep is an escape.
And he said, narcolepsy is a lot of times triggered
by really intense emotions.
So here's what I think,
it's just an extreme defense mechanism
that lets you escape from those emotions.
I love it.
Why not?
It's pretty Freudian.
It's about as Freudian an explanation
for anything as I've heard.
It's just classic, right?
Of course, it's just utterly wrong.
But I love, I just think Freud's attempts
at explaining the world were great and valuable
in the way that like preserving classic art is.
Yeah, I've been to his house.
What, where, in Texas?
No, yeah, the Sigmund Freud house in Tyler, Texas.
There are a lot of Germans in Texas,
although I know he was Austrian.
Yeah, I mean, I believe I saw it in Vienna
if I'm not mistaken.
That's neat.
That is very neat.
Was this when you were backpacking?
Yeah, of course.
Chuck, you need to do a memoir of that time in your life
and call it backpacking to Freud's house.
Okay?
Okay.
And the book could just be shaped like a penis.
Sometimes a book is just a book, Chuck.
That's right.
So Freud missed the mark a little bit,
but still, again, it's worth mentioning
just like appreciating art.
It wasn't until the 60s where they're like,
okay, I think we're starting to get some real clues here.
And that was when they first established
that people with narcolepsy enter REM sleep
during these bouts of narcolepsy,
which you are not supposed to do.
Under normal sleep patterns,
which we talked about many, many times before,
like you said, when you fall asleep,
it should take you a little while to enter REM sleep.
That's a deeper phase of your sleep pattern, right?
With narcolepsy, they're out and into REM sleep so quickly
that a different way to characterize it
that narcolepsy researchers put it
is that REM activity intrudes into wakefulness.
The line between being awake and being in deep REM sleep
is that blurred for people with narcolepsy.
Yeah, and I feel like I've occasionally
in a really intense power nap had a dream,
but that's only when it's,
and I don't get to nap anymore,
but that's when I've just been so tired
that I just nap and fall asleep like immediately.
That's neat.
I'll bet you, do you feel refreshed when you wake up?
I tend to nap longer when I would nap,
so I wouldn't do the, when I say power nap,
I don't mean the 20 minute disco nap.
I mean, you really power through for a couple of hours.
Right, I thought you were recounting
some of your cocaine using days.
No, no, no.
I got you.
So that was in the 60s, so they say,
okay, REM and narcolepsy,
they go together like chocolate and peanut butter, right?
We're on to something here.
But finally in the 90s,
they're like really have started to figure it out
and they've zeroed in on the hypothalamus
and specifically a small cluster of cells
in the rear of the hypothalamus that we'll talk about later.
And if you learn about that as far as narcolepsy goes,
you can find it pretty convincing
that we have begun at least to finally truly understand
the cause of narcolepsy.
Yeah, I totally agree.
It's, they make a great case.
Yeah.
So if you wanna talk to some initial stats,
it occurs in all ethnic groups.
It has equal incidents on the gender spectrum, evidently.
Yeah, that's interesting.
And yeah, cause usually you would see
it tilted one way or the other.
Yeah, for sure.
And then as far as how often you're gonna see this,
it's in about 0.03 to 0.16% of gin pop
or about one in 2,000 people.
Yeah, which makes it, which classifies it as a rare disease.
Which by the way, shout out to among several others,
rarediseases.org for their take on narcolepsy.
It was very instructive.
Is it a disease or a disorder?
Or is it a fine line?
Geez, I think because there's a brain dysfunction
that it would be characterized as a disease, wouldn't you?
I don't know.
I still don't know the difference after all these years.
So it was, I mean, when it was considered
an REM sleep disorder,
maybe it still is, it was considered a parasomnia,
like sleepwalking or whatever.
So that would have been considered a disorder then,
but I think it's a disease now.
Okay.
Okay.
You wanna take a break and come back
and talk about what narcolepsy is?
Yes.
Okay.
We'll be right back everybody.
On the podcast, Hey Dude, the 90s called David Lasher and Christine Taylor,
stars of the cult classic show, Hey Dude,
bring you back to the days of slip dresses and choker necklaces.
We're gonna use Hey Dude as our jumping off point,
but we are going to unpack and dive back
into the decade of the 90s.
We lived it, and now we're calling on all of our friends
to come back and relive it.
It's a podcast packed with interviews, co-stars,
friends, and nonstop references to the best decade ever.
Do you remember going to Blockbuster?
Do you remember Nintendo 64?
Do you remember getting Frosted Tips?
Was that a cereal?
No, it was hair.
Do you remember AOL Instant Messenger
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So leave a code on your best friend's beeper
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Each episode will rival the feeling
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as we take you back to the 90s.
Listen to Hey Dude, the 90s called on the iHeart radio app,
Apple Podcasts, or wherever you get your podcasts.
Hey, I'm Lance Bass, host of the new iHeart podcast,
Frosted Tips with Lance Bass.
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Do you ever think to yourself,
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Okay, we're back and it turns out, Chuck,
that there are two types of narcolepsy.
And just from all of the research
that we've done over the years on interesting health stuff,
this smells a lot to me like something
that's going to be broken out into its own thing over time.
Yeah, I agree.
Because we've seen that happen time and time again.
We have narcolepsy type two,
which is what we were talking about sort of the more,
like when you think of narcolepsy,
this is probably what you're thinking of
Aunt Laura falling asleep during the middle of a sentence.
Right, and it's type two because it's
by far less prevalent than type one.
And type one is narcolepsy like you'd think of
with the excessive daytime sleepiness.
But on top of that,
there's something called cataplexy too.
And cataplexy can exist on its own.
It's the just sudden loss of voluntary muscle function.
Like you can't keep your head up
because your neck muscles just went limp
or your arms go limp or something like that.
And cataplexy can exist on its own.
It can exist in conjunction with other diseases,
two or disorders.
But it very frequently co-exists with narcolepsy.
And one of the hallmarks of it from what I understand,
because it gets kind of confusing.
And I couldn't fully find this out Chuck,
but I think that it can exist in a person with narcolepsy
in conjunction with a sleep attack or separately
to where you just suddenly like can't hold your head up
anymore.
The key is you're still conscious, conscious.
Oh my God, I just turned into an illiterate seventh grader.
You're still conscious.
You might look like you have just fainted
or something like that,
depending on the severity of the cataplexic attack.
Yeah, it's almost like a fainting goat, right?
Yes, very much like that.
Almost exactly like that.
Because remember with the fainting goats,
they would basically just fall over
because they were startled.
I think pretty much the same thing with cataplexy
in humans, although it seems to be more associated
with positive emotions.
Yeah, it's so interesting.
Yeah, we're gonna get into that.
There are four symptoms of narcolepsy,
which we're gonna break down in a second,
but they are excessive daytime sleepiness,
like we've talked about.
There is the cataplexy, there's sleep paralysis,
and then hypnagogic hallucinations.
And if you have narcolepsy,
well, there's about a 20 to 25% chance
that you have all four.
And I don't think there's any rhyme or reason
which ones you do have,
but like we said,
everybody has the excessive daytime sleepiness.
And they're also talking about a fifth beetle.
I was gonna say that too.
Clarence, was that his name?
Yeah, or Poo said he was too.
The fifth symptom, which is disturbed nocturnal sleep,
which about 50% of the patients have,
but they haven't,
I think that'll end up in there at some point.
And technically there may be a sixth one too,
which is called automatic behavior,
where have you ever been like driving
and you're suddenly like five exits further
than you thought you were,
and you realize you just zoned out
and we're just driving just fine,
but you were basically on autopilot?
I don't know.
I mean, is that like the same as just daydreaming or?
Maybe, I think so,
but there's like no recollection of anything.
You didn't note any landmarks that you just passed,
or let's say you're gardening or something like that.
You don't remember finishing digging the hole with a trowel.
It's, you've just completed a task
that you have no memory of undertaking.
I don't think that happens.
Okay, so that's happened to me before,
but that's a symptom of,
it's an additional symptom.
It's not a classic symptom,
but they're starting to figure out
that it is a symptom of narcolepsy, yes.
So you're like, I just,
I went in my garage one day
and I had built a penny farthing.
No memory of how it got there.
So it usually starts out in adolescence,
which surprised me.
I did not know that just maybe
because my Laura characterized it as something
you got later in life,
but they do worsen with age.
So maybe that does make sense after all.
And sometimes your symptoms can be very steady.
Sometimes it can be months or years in between changes.
And sometimes the symptoms change a lot very quickly.
Right.
But the symptom that, again,
100% of people with narcolepsy have
is excessive daytime sleepiness.
And in almost every case of narcolepsy,
that is the first symptom that starts.
You almost never start with the other ones.
It's that one first.
And that's exactly what you think of
where somebody just falls asleep
and they're out for a few seconds
to a few minutes depending.
And it's not gonna be the same amount of time every time.
They're not gonna have the same number
of sleep attacks every time.
A lot of it has to do with just how tired they are,
like how poorly they slept the night before.
That's gonna make them more susceptible
to sleep attacks during the day.
And this is not the same as hitting the wall at three o'clock
because you ate lunch and all of your coffee
from the morning wore off.
I mean, it bears some resemblance to it,
but it is irresistible this urge to sleep
or just sleep, it just comes on.
So that's the main characteristic of narcolepsy.
But anybody who's kind of dozed off
like sitting in a comfortable chair
when it was a little warmer than normal at work
or something like that, right?
Like that is, it bears a resemblance
to that specific symptom of narcolepsy.
It's the other ones that you have in conjunction with that
that really make narcolepsy like its own disorder.
Have you ever slept at any job you've ever had?
It doesn't sound like me, but probably.
I'm sure I have here or there.
Why you?
Well, I mean, when I worked the midnight
to 7 a.m. shift at the Golden Pantry in Athens,
I had a regular routine of sleeping.
Yeah, cause you were allowed to close up the store
and mop and do things for like an hour.
So I would close up the store, go back in the back
and lay down on a little pallet I made on top of a freezer.
Nice.
Did you get some good sleep?
I would, it was pretty hard sleep.
And I will admit that when I had a baby,
I took a nap or two right here in our own office.
Oh, nice.
Can you tell me where?
Is it still a secret?
In one of the private telephone rooms.
Oh, that would be a good place to take a nap.
If you've ever gone in there and seen a pillow.
In the camp stove.
Sleep machine.
Yeah, there's an open bag of marshmallows and a stick.
You know, I took a couple of cat naps here at work
and such that I was like, you know what,
some countries and companies embrace this
and there's a lot of value to knocking out
for 20 or 30 minutes during a work day.
Is that what that one HR email they sent out
was all about?
Maybe.
Did you try to convince them of that?
Did you go to them and say, you know,
some countries really embrace this.
Why don't you guys be more continental?
At least don't fire me.
Right, yeah.
So yeah, so this is akin to that, you know,
falling asleep, but the key here is that it's unplanned
and with narcolepsy, it is straight up irresistible.
You know, like when you sit up
and you like open your eyes a little bit,
you're like, well, I can't fall asleep.
I gotta stay awake because I'm being paid right now.
Like if you have narcolepsy, you can't do that.
You just fall asleep and you're out.
And the other key is you feel really good
and refreshed right after one of those sleep attacks.
Yeah, which is, it's weird to think
that 10 seconds of that can refresh you.
I know, it is very weird, but that's part of it for sure.
So cataplexy, which we've talked about,
the fainting goat-like thing.
You mentioned positive emotions can trigger it.
Being surprised, laughter, elation, sometimes anger,
which is not positive, but intense emotions
like that can trigger this.
And it can be everything from, like you said,
your head just sort of nodding down
to full on just collapsing.
Yeah, which is called a drop attack,
which are kind of dangerous.
You can get banged up pretty bad
because this is not necessarily you falling asleep
or fainting, or as a matter of fact, it's not that.
Yeah, you're up, you're awake at least.
You're still totally conscious.
You are, you just can't control your muscles
all of a sudden for a very short period of time.
Yeah, and interestingly, and which is good news,
which is good news is that as you get older,
cataplexy might actually improve.
Yeah, that is good news.
Because taking a fall in the hallway at, you know,
80 years old is much different than at 18.
For sure.
Let's see, oh, there's also sleep paralysis,
which we did an entire episode on.
Yeah.
It's not fun.
It frequently is accompanied by hallucinations,
which is another symptom we'll talk about next,
but sleep paralysis was first described by a physician
who had a patient that presented with narcolepsy.
And this guy figured out there was such a thing
as sleep paralysis, but it's basically
when you're falling asleep or waking up,
there's like a few fleeting moments
where you can't move at all.
You're paralyzed and it's not pleasant one bit.
So if you are having a sleep attack
and you're coming in and out of sleep, you know,
a bunch of times a day and you feel paralyzed
as you're coming in and out of sleep
and you don't know what's going on,
it can make the whole narcoleptic experience
a lot more terrifying.
Yeah, as will hallucinations.
These can come at the onset of sleep
or at the end of sleep.
They can be really scary.
Sometimes it could just be hearing a noise.
What was the one thing we talked about at the time
where you hear a loud noise?
Exploding head.
That's right, exploding head.
Somehow all this seems to be related somehow.
Oh yeah.
Right? Yeah.
I think so, yeah, I think a lot of it has to do
with the neurons that we'll talk about in a little bit.
So the hallucinations when they happen
when you're waking up, they're called hypnopompic.
And when you're falling asleep,
those are the hypnagogic that we mentioned earlier.
Yeah, and again, they very frequently
accompany sleep paralysis and that like,
you can't move and you're hallucinating
a demon standing on your chest.
Right.
And that's why you can't move.
And again, this is happening to you many, many times a day
against your will and it makes it unpleasant.
And then there's also something called
disrupted nighttime sleep,
which is basically the exact polar opposite
of excessive daytime sleepiness,
where during the night when everybody else is asleep
and when you wish you were sleeping,
you might be wide awake.
So that again, your sleep pattern
is not concentrated into eight hours at night.
It's spread out in about eight hours
throughout a 24 hour period.
That's right.
So we talked a lot about the various sort of explanations
for this over the years, what they thought was going on
and that it wasn't until the 1990s
that they kind of zeroed in on what they think is going on
now, which to me and you holds a lot of promise.
But 1998 was the year that they finally discovered
and isolated the chemical in the brain
that seems to be the cause of all this.
And it's called hypocretin.
Hippocretin?
I want to say hypocretin.
I do too.
So let's do.
Okay, let's.
Hypocretin.
Yeah, so they isolated that.
And we have our cousins the rats to thank for this
because they did a lot of rats tests
and figured out from those tests,
just how this whole thing works.
But what they figured out is that
hypocretin has a few different functions,
but its main function is maintaining wakefulness
in us humans.
And it's a peptide.
It also has another name chuck called Erexin.
And it's the exact same neurochemical,
but it would just happen to be discovered independently
by two different groups at about the same time.
So it has two names still.
They haven't settled on one.
But it basically goes around and says,
hey, serotonin, you're looking good.
Here's a little boost.
Hey, norepinephrine, you're looking great yourself.
Here's another little boost.
And so all of these neurochemicals
that keep us awake and alert,
get a boost from hypocretin
so that they can do their job better.
And what they found is that people with type one narcolepsy
have about 90 to 95% fewer
of this very specialized cluster of neurons in the brain
that are responsible for producing
all of the hypocretin in our bodies.
Yeah, that's case closed, right?
Basically, yeah.
I think the only thing left to explain is twofold.
One, exactly why the hypocretin
is the neurons that produce hypocretin
are so diminished.
And it seems like they've basically explained that one.
And then two, what to do about it.
That's the big one.
Yeah, and we should mention too
that there are about 86 million,
I'm sorry, billion neurons in the brain.
And only about between 100 and 200,000 neurons
produce hypocretin.
So it is a very specialized cluster of neural cells.
Yeah, but it also makes it really vulnerable too.
And they're all in one space in the rear of the hypothalamus.
So it's really weird that evolution was like,
oh, that's fine.
This is a really, really, really important chemical.
But we're just gonna localize it right here
in this one spot to just 100,000 neurons.
Yeah, and it's also really weird
that if you only have type two narcolepsy,
you don't show any decrease in hypocretin.
Right, right.
That's just the one where you have sleep attacks
and not cataplexy.
And it is really weird.
And that's why I was saying like,
I wonder if that's gonna be broken out eventually
in the future into its own disorder or disease.
But the current thinking for that is that
that is a less pronounced or less advanced case
of type one narcolepsy.
To where you're probably going to eventually get cataplexy
or you may never get cataplexy,
but your case of narcolepsy just stopped progressing
at some point, that's what they think currently.
A lot of the sleepiness of narcolepsy,
this, it's a theory at least from researchers,
is that it's a consequence of sleep state instability.
And that's something I know we've talked about before,
that threshold between being awake and being asleep
and those lines getting blurred and crossing over.
And I guess that must have been sleep paralysis
that we talked about that.
I think so because that is like an example of like,
that is like wakefulness intruding on REM sleep.
It's almost like the opposite of narcolepsy.
People experiencing sleep paralysis without narcolepsy.
It's kind of like that.
But it's ultimately that it's a consequence of
your brain no longer able to,
being able to hold the switch down
between the on-off switch between sleep and wakefulness.
So it's like hypocrite is the thumb
that holds the on-off switch in place.
And without it, that switch is kind of hair trigger
so that it just kind of can shift back and forth
between on and off really easily and really quickly.
And so without that hypocrite and that's that
you can just kind of go in between wakefulness
and REM sleep with no transition
and just at the drop of a hat basically.
So they think that that's it,
that it is a lack of hypocrite
that is responsible at least for type one narcolepsy,
which is narcolepsy with cataplexy.
Should we take the break now?
Sure.
All right, let's take a break
because we're going to get into our third act here
with a very, what I think is the most interesting part
of all this, which is what it has to do
with your genes and your immune system, right after this.
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All right.
So I promise talk of genes in your immune system.
This is super interesting to me because I feel like they're
really zeroing in on what's going on here with this research.
Dude, how many episodes have we done on stuff like this
where we're like, they think maybe this or studies
are starting to come in.
We have caught this at like peak ripeness.
Right before everybody knows it, it's just so plain
and obvious and it's been talked about so much.
But right after all of these important advancements
in the study of it have really kind of come together
and gelled.
I mean, it is perfectly fresh.
Yeah, it is a very rare, satisfying feeling.
I feel satisfied myself.
So they think there's a genetic basis for narcolepsy.
But the genes that are involved in narcolepsy
really aren't involved with sleep.
It's about your immune system.
So how it goes is a little something like this.
All right, man.
There are genes that code for these T cell receptors
and the HLA gene, human leukocyte antigen.
And not everyone has this variant, but if you do,
you're gonna have about a 25% greater chance
of having narcolepsy.
Yeah, that variant of the HLA gene, very important.
That's a big increase.
Yeah, 25 is for real.
Cause a lot of those, they'll show like the relative increase.
It increases your risk, you know, 80%.
But if you look at the absolute increase,
it's like, well, you have 1.5 times the chance
or something like that.
25 times likely or is definitely a huge increase for sure.
My hat is off to that one.
Yeah, but so what they're thinking is that
it's actually the basis of narcolepsy
is an autoimmune disease.
And that is what's killing off.
Your immune system is killing off
those hypocretin producing neurons.
Yes, yes.
Just like Crohn's irritable bowel syndrome
or rheumatoid arthritis, it's your body turning on itself.
It's mistaken, so it attacks itself.
Your immune system attacks your own body.
And in this case, in the case of narcolepsy,
they think that something about those
hypocretin producing neurons,
I guess are producing something
that seems like an antigen to your body
if you have that specific variant of that HLA gene
and it attacks them, kills off those neurons.
You don't have any hypocretin any longer
and so you can't maintain wakefulness.
And so sleep and wakefulness just toggle back
and forth throughout your day.
Are you gonna drop the streptococcus bomb?
I think you should.
I think I understand it.
But just after the onset of narcolepsy,
it looks like you have an increased level
of antibodies against streptococcus.
And that's like strep throat
and there are other infections involved.
And so they've also tied that to the time of year.
Narcolepsy usually begins in late spring and early summer,
which would kind of make sense
that there's an autoimmune attack going on
against those neurons triggered by strep throat
or some other kind of infection you get during the winter.
Yeah, like your immune system just goes bonkers
because of strep.
And it's like, what else, what else can I go after?
I'm really primed and pumped.
And for some reason it goes after your hypocretin
producing neurons in your hypothalamus.
That's nuts.
So your immune response is triggered
by an actual infection, they think.
And the reason why they think this,
and it greatly pains me to reveal this.
I know.
But there is a vaccine called Pandemrix
that is no longer available anywhere in the world,
but it was hot and heavy as a vaccine
against H1N1 swine flu.
And it was a really potent vaccine
against H1N1 swine flu.
And some Northern European countries
during the 2009 to 2011 swine flu pandemic
chose to use this to inoculate their population with, right?
Yeah.
Well, there were reports that have been backed up
by studies, not just in Finland,
which is a big place where this happened,
but in other places like the UK did studies too
that found the same results,
that there was a link between pandemrix and narcolepsy,
that the pandemrix triggered that immune response
that ultimately led to the immune system attacking
the hypocretin producing neurons.
So that H1N1 vaccine brought on
a lifelong chronic case of narcolepsy.
Yeah, that was hard to say, wasn't it?
Yeah, it really was.
I really, really hate saying stuff like that.
I know, but you know what?
You gotta, we gotta preach the science
and the science appears valid here.
Agreed, yeah.
Dozens of kids in Finland developed narcolepsy.
And I think the new rate of cases of narcolepsy in kids
increased eight to 12 fold.
And you know, I think out of the 54 kids
who were diagnosed with narcolepsy,
50 of them had had the vaccine, so 50 out of 54.
Yeah, and I mean, these numbers
are really, really small, but if you think about it,
so four kids apparently in 2010
would have been diagnosed with narcolepsy.
Right.
Had that pandemic not happened in that,
or that particular vaccine not been administered.
But because it was, the number was 54, not four.
So even though the numbers, again, absolutely
are rather small, percentage-wise,
that's an enormous, a mind-boggling increase
in the number of narcolepsy diagnoses.
And it was linked directly to that vaccine.
Yeah, and they caught it.
I'm so sorry, I keep saying that.
And they caught it, and it is no longer being given anywhere.
It was never available in the United States.
So Finland just sort of got the brunt of it, it seems like.
Yeah, Finland, the UK had a bunch,
their rate was one case of diagnosed narcolepsy
for every 55,000 inoculations in children,
I think six months to 18.
But that washed out to like 16 people.
Which still, I mean, if you're one of those people,
you're like, well, son of a gun, that really sucks.
But here's the key, and this is really, really important.
And this is how we will be able to still use a vaccine
that is viable and potent and works against swine flu
without giving somebody narcolepsy.
And that is personalized drugs based on gene tests.
Yes. DNA tests.
Because of those 50 kids in Finland
that received the vaccine in 2010 that developed narcolepsy,
every single one of them carried that specific variant
of the HLA gene that is tied to narcolepsy.
So if you just did a simple DNA test,
which hopefully will be widespread in just a few years,
you'd say, oh, no, I'm glad we did this.
You can't have pandemics, you might get narcolepsy.
Or basically, there's 100% chance
you're gonna get narcolepsy.
We'll give you this other vaccine instead
that has been shown not to produce narcolepsy
in people like you.
That's right.
And you can refer to our episode on personalized medicine.
Yes. Right?
We should do a follow up on that one.
Yeah, I agree.
We'll put that on the list for six years from now.
Basically, you've got these genes that predispose you
to your immune system mistakenly attacking
that part of your hypothalamus.
There has to be some sort of trigger,
either an infection or pandemics, something like that,
typically an infection with strep.
And then there seem to be two age windows
where you're particularly vulnerable, around 15 and around 36.
They have no idea about any of that.
They just have, they're starting to put this data together.
Yeah, I bet you they'll figure that out too.
Agreed.
I really feel like narcolepsy is going to be
like totally and completely figured out in the next decade.
And I cannot be more jazzed about it.
Really?
Yeah.
No, that's, I agree.
Love science, just figuring things out.
Yeah, we do.
You know, just doggedly, you know, working and building on,
you know, somebody else's work.
It's just, it's a beautiful thing when it's done, right?
Agreed.
So if you are going to be diagnosed with narcolepsy,
there are a couple of tests that they're going to give you.
One is called an overnight polysomnogram.
That's right, a PSG.
And that is a test when you, it's one of those tests.
It's like a sleep study is when you go in and sleep
for them, basically.
Sleep for me, baby.
Yeah, and they measure a lot of things.
They measure your brainwaves.
They measure your heart rate, eye movements, limb movements,
muscle tone, respiration.
Get a lot of info there.
And then they'll say, now you're going to,
this is going to be followed by the multiple sleep latency
test, which also sounds kind of fun.
Because that measures how quickly you fall asleep for a nap
every couple of hours during the day.
I know, when you have to go in for one, you're like,
I got to go to a doctor's appointment.
Somebody goes, oh, sorry.
And go, no, no, it's great.
It's going to be the greatest day of my life.
Yeah, those rooms make me sleepy.
I could see some people being like, oh, I can't go sleep
in a room.
But I was well known as a child for falling asleep
in a dentist's chair, waiting for the dentist to come in,
or in a waiting room for, or not a waiting room,
but in the exam room for a doctor.
I still get sleepy in those just super clean, super cool,
quiet rooms with fluorescent lighting.
It just zaps me.
Yeah, that's very odd, very odd indeed.
So four or five nap opportunities during the day,
they're going to see how fast you fall asleep.
And if you fall asleep, if you have narcolepsy,
you're going to fall asleep super easy,
compared to someone without narcolepsy.
Right, so that's a pretty big giveaway.
If they're still like, I don't know,
this is all this, you know, this patient history
that we've taken in these tests are inconclusive.
They might test your cerebrospinal fluid,
because hypocretin levels are very easily tested through that.
Not as fun.
No, not nearly as fun,
because they're going to go through the base of your skull,
that hole in your skull where your spinal cord goes.
Yeah.
I don't know.
I hope that that never befalls either one of us,
and to anyone who's ever had to go through that,
we are very, very sorry.
Yeah.
But that also is looking like a place
where they're trying to figure out how to cure narcolepsy,
because as it stands right now,
if you were diagnosed with narcolepsy,
you have just been given a lifelong chronic diagnosis.
Yep.
There's no cure for narcolepsy as it stands right now,
but there are treatments, and from everything I read,
if you are actively treating your narcolepsy
through a doctor usually with prescriptions
and also like behavioral modification,
not like, you know, hooking you up to a car battery
and changing your behavior like that,
more like making sure you stick to like a good sleep pattern.
Right.
You can very much keep your symptoms in check for sure.
It doesn't have to ruin your life.
The trouble is, is that it's very frequently misdiagnosed
and it's underdiagnosed,
and they think it's because it occurs
with so many comorbidities like depression,
where the doctor's like,
well, sure you're falling asleep all day
because you're just sitting around on the couch
because you don't have any low energy,
because you're depressed.
Really, it's possible that you have developed depression
because of the narcolepsy.
They haven't figured out if they're comorbid
or if one causes the other,
but they're pretty sure that the narcolepsy
causes the depression.
Yeah, you're probably gonna get a prescription for something.
It may be, or it's probably likely to be
modafinil these days.
And we talked about that in our
is science phasing out sleep episode.
Yeah, we've done a bunch of sleep ones.
I forgot about that one.
Ritalin you might get.
It says in the old days, methamphetamines,
but they still prescribe a variation of speed for,
I'm not sure if it's narcolepsy,
but I know an individual that was diagnosed with,
I guess just extreme daytime sleepiness.
Not doing chores fast enough?
No, no for falling or just feeling
really, really sleepy during the day
and did the sleep study and all that.
And they were prescribed kind of
whatever the version of speed is these days.
When was that?
When were they prescribed that?
Was that back in the 90s?
Like last year.
Oh really?
I'm surprised because from what I saw modafinil is like,
nope, don't need anything else.
Just take modafinil.
You don't get addicted to it.
There are very few side effects.
It's supposed to just be like a wonder drug basically.
Anytime I hear that I get dubious.
Right, I think that's pretty smart actually.
They might also prescribe you antidepressant like an SSRI
which inhibits reuptake of serotonin,
which means you have more serotonin in your brain,
which would make sense because what hypocretin does
is boost your levels of serotonin and other neurochemicals.
So this is kind of going around that problem
and just making you have more serotonin than before,
which apparently helps maintain REM sleep,
the barrier between that and wakefulness a lot better.
Yeah, and then the final thing which is really interesting
and promising is they did the sort of logical thing
which is, hey, maybe we can just get some more
hypocretin in your body because if that's the problem,
why don't we just do that?
So they cut out fat hog legs of it for you
at the doctor's office.
There are different methods.
Cell transplantation, which is just implanting cells,
maybe implantation of the gene, like gene therapy,
maybe just giving it through your nose
or injecting it into your body.
That's what I'm saying.
It could all work.
Interest cisternally, Chuck,
which is again through the base of the skull
in the back of your head where your spinal cord
goes up to your brain.
They can inject into your cerebral spinal fluid
like that too.
It's probably the least fun of all of them,
but they're on the case basically is what that means.
Yeah, and we've talked sort of off and on
throughout this thing about your quality of life
with narcolepsy.
It's obviously a serious thing.
There can, besides just like holding a job
and socially and not being depressed
because you don't wanna hang out with people
because you may be embarrassed by it.
There's also like the very real chance of accidents.
Some people are not allowed to drive.
Some people are allowed to drive.
It kinda depends on, I guess, your diagnosis.
School is tricky, work can be tricky,
although they do with the Americans with Disabilities Act.
They provide for letting people take naps
and stuff like that, which is kinda cool.
It is, yeah.
If you have narcolepsy and you're at work,
you can say, hey, employer,
I need a place to take a nap.
And they'll say, okay, that's great.
They'll say right in here.
And they're like, oh my God, Chuck's in there.
Right, Chuck, sorry.
There's, I mean, it gets even sadder though.
Like there are people who die by suicide
from narcolepsy.
There was a girl named Katie Clack
who got pandemrics and developed narcolepsy as a result.
And she ended up taking her life
because it just completely derailed things for her.
She was in no way, shape, or form prepared for it,
although I don't know that anybody's prepared for it.
And then also, like you were saying,
an accident can happen.
And from what I read, the risk of death and injury
among people with narcolepsy is almost twice
that of the general population.
Through things like car accidents or cooking
or going up a ladder or something like that.
You suddenly develop cataplexy or a sleep attack
or something, that's a bad time to fall asleep
or lose control of your muscles, you know?
Well, and at the very least, you're gonna have to
really arrange your life to accommodate for this stuff.
Right.
But again, if you are managing your symptoms,
you can lead a pretty normal life.
I think it's just a question of like
getting diagnosed correctly.
Yeah.
Yeah.
Well, that's it for narcolepsy.
Hopefully we'll have it all figured out
and when we revisit it in five or 10 years,
we'll be like, it was all right.
Everything was correct.
It was all right.
And since I said it was all right,
it's time for Listener Man.
I'm gonna call this Soul Train Feedback.
Nice.
That was a fun show and this is from Julia.
Hello guys, we really enjoyed your Soul Train episode.
You did a great job capturing the feeling
and cultural significance of the show.
You depicted a brilliant flawed Don Cornelius
without negating his profound contribution.
There was a monthly black teenage magazine named Right On.
This publication gave names to the dancers and dancers.
We would read the ink off of the pages.
Being black in America then and now,
we watch mainstream America love the culture
while devaluing the people and criminalizing the young.
Thank you for this episode.
And that is from Julia Pierce.
The president of the Tybee MLK Human Rights Committee.
Nice, Tybee Island, I guess, down in Georgia.
I don't know, I guess so, I hope so.
That's great.
Thanks a lot, Julia.
Much appreciated.
Agreed.
If you wanna get in touch with us like Julia did,
give us props or just say,
hey, you guys are doing this too much or be quiet.
We never will, but you can still say it.
You can send us an email to stuffpodcast.
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to your favorite shows.
On the podcast, Hey Dude, the 90s called,
David Lasher and Christine Taylor,
stars of the cult classic show, Hey Dude,
bring you back to the days of slipdresses
and choker necklaces.
We're gonna use Hey Dude as our jumping off point,
but we are going to unpack and dive back
into the decade of the 90s.
We lived it, and now we're calling on all of our friends
to come back and relive it.
Listen to Hey Dude, the 90s called,
on the iHeartRadio app, Apple podcasts,
or wherever you get your podcasts.
Hey, I'm Lance Bass, host of the new iHeart podcast,
Frosted Tips with Lance Bass.
Do you ever think to yourself,
what advice would Lance Bass and my favorite boy bands
give me in this situation?
If you do, you've come to the right place
because I'm here to help.
And a different hot, sexy teen crush boy bander
each week to guide you through life,
tell everybody, yeah, everybody,
about my new podcast and make sure to listen
so we'll never, ever have to say, bye, bye, bye.
Listen to Frosted Tips with Lance Bass
on the iHeartRadio app, Apple podcasts,
or wherever you listen to podcasts.