While the symptoms of narcolepsy usually appear during a person's late teens or early 20s, the disease may not be diagnosed for many years.
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Narcolepsy typically presents in adolescence or early adulthood, although it can occur at any age. Symptoms may develop gradually over time or suddenly. Common signs include excessive daytime sleepiness, sudden loss of muscle tone (cataplexy), sleep paralysis, and hallucinations.
Narcolepsy typically presents with excessive daytime sleepiness, sudden loss of muscle tone (cataplexy), sleep paralysis, and hallucinations during falling asleep or waking up. It can also involve sudden sleep attacks or episodes of microsleep.
The suffix -lepsy refers to a seizure disorder or epilepsy, characterized by recurrent seizures or convulsions. It is commonly used in medical terms such as epilepsy and narcolepsy.
The correct spelling is "present," as in "present your work nicely."
The verb is is the present tense.
The present perfect form of "present" is "have/has presented."