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  • Title: Patients cured from craniopharyngioma or nonfunctioning pituitary macroadenoma (NFMA) suffer similarly from increased daytime somnolence despite normal sleep patterns compared to healthy controls.
    Author: van der Klaauw AA, Biermasz NR, Pereira AM, van Kralingen KW, Dekkers OM, Rabe KF, Smit JW, Romijn JA.
    Journal: Clin Endocrinol (Oxf); 2008 Nov; 69(5):769-74. PubMed ID: 18435832.
    Abstract:
    OBJECTIVE: Adults patients previously treated for craniopharyngioma have increased general and physical fatigue compared to healthy controls. This could be related to disturbed sleep patterns. The aim of this study was to compare sleepiness and sleep patterns in those patients to healthy controls and to patients treated for nonfunctioning macroadenomas (NFMA) of the pituitary. DESIGN: Case-control study. PATIENTS AND METHODS: Sleepiness and sleep patterns were assessed in 27 adult patients [14 men, 8 patients diagnosed at childhood age, mean age of 53 years (range 27-80 year)] after long-term follow-up and compared to 50 healthy controls and 38 age-, gender- and BMI-matched patients with NFMA. We used two validated questionnaires for sleep parameters (Epworth sleepiness score and Münchener Chronotype Questionnaire). RESULTS: Sleep patterns (onset, sleep timing, duration and rise time) were not statistically different between the three groups. However, daytime sleepiness scores were increased in patients treated for craniopharyngioma compared to healthy controls, but not different from patients with NFMA. Thirty-three percent of patients with craniopharyngiomas had ESS scores above 10 compared to 8% of healthy controls (P = 0.005), indicating severe daytime hypersomnolence. Neither type of surgery, previous radiotherapy, or age at diagnosis influenced the sleepiness scores in patients with craniopharyngioma. CONCLUSION: Patients treated for craniopharyngioma or NFMA have increased daytime somnolence despite normal sleep patterns, compared to healthy subjects. The results indicate that increased daytime somnolence is a general consequence of large tumours, and/or their treatment, in the hypothalamic/pituitary region, rather than a specific feature of craniopharyngiomas per se.
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