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Restless legs syndrome

Restless legs syndrome (RLS), also known as Willis-Ekbom disease (WED), is generally a long-term disorder that causes a strong urge to move one's legs.[2][7] There is often an unpleasant feeling in the legs that improves somewhat by moving them.[2] This is often described as aching, tingling, or crawling in nature.[2] Occasionally, arms may also be affected.[2] The feelings generally happen when at rest and therefore can make it hard to sleep.[2] Due to the disturbance in sleep, people with RLS may have daytime sleepiness, low energy, irritability and a depressed mood.[2] Additionally, many have limb twitching during sleep.[8] RLS is not the same as habitual foot-tapping or leg-rocking.[9]

Restless legs syndrome
Other namesWillis–Ekbom disease (WED),[1] Wittmaack–Ekbom syndrome
Sleep pattern of a person with restless legs syndrome (red) compared to a healthy sleep pattern (blue)
SpecialtySleep medicine
SymptomsUnpleasant feeling in the legs that briefly improves with moving them[2]
ComplicationsDaytime sleepiness, low energy, irritability, sadness[2]
Usual onsetMore common with older age[3]
Risk factorsLow iron levels, kidney failure, Parkinson's disease, diabetes mellitus, rheumatoid arthritis, pregnancy, certain medications[2][4][5]
Diagnostic methodBased on symptoms after ruling out other possible causes[6]
TreatmentLifestyle changes, medication[2]
MedicationLevodopa, dopamine agonists, gabapentin[4]
Frequency2.5–15% (US)[4]

Risk factors for RLS include low iron levels, kidney failure, Parkinson's disease, diabetes mellitus, rheumatoid arthritis, pregnancy and celiac disease.[2][4][10] A number of medications may also trigger the disorder including antidepressants, antipsychotics, antihistamines, and calcium channel blockers.[5] There are two main types.[2] One is early-onset RLS which starts before age 45, runs in families and worsens over time.[2] The other is late-onset RLS which begins after age 45, starts suddenly, and does not worsen.[2] Diagnosis is generally based on a person's symptoms after ruling out other potential causes.[6]

Restless legs syndrome may resolve if the underlying problem is addressed.[11] Otherwise treatment includes lifestyle changes and medication.[2] Lifestyle changes that may help include stopping alcohol and tobacco use, and sleep hygiene.[11] Medications used include a dopamine agonist such as pramipexole.[4] RLS affects an estimated 2.5–15% of the American population.[4] Females are more commonly affected than males, and it becomes increasingly common with age.[3][1]

Signs and symptoms

RLS sensations range from pain or an aching in the muscles, to "an itch you can't scratch", a "buzzing sensation", an unpleasant "tickle that won't stop", a "crawling" feeling, or limbs jerking while awake. The sensations typically begin or intensify during quiet wakefulness, such as when relaxing, reading, studying, or trying to sleep.[12] Hoveidaei et al. showed that RLS symptoms were more prominent in patients with lumbosacral canal stenosis. [13]

It is a "spectrum" disease with some people experiencing only a minor annoyance and others having major disruption of sleep and impairments in quality of life.[14]

The sensations—and the need to move—may return immediately after ceasing movement or at a later time. RLS may start at any age, including childhood, and is a progressive disease for some, while the symptoms may remit in others.[15] In a survey among members of the Restless Legs Syndrome Foundation, it was found that up to 45% of patients had their first symptoms before the age of 20 years.[16]

  • "An urge to move, usually due to uncomfortable sensations that occur primarily in the legs, but occasionally in the arms or elsewhere."
The sensations are unusual and unlike other common sensations. Those with RLS have a hard time describing them, using words or phrases such as uncomfortable, painful, 'antsy', electrical, creeping, itching, pins and needles, pulling, crawling, buzzing, and numbness. It is sometimes described similar to a limb 'falling asleep' or an exaggerated sense of positional awareness of the affected area. The sensation and the urge can occur in any body part; the most cited location is legs, followed by arms. Some people have little or no sensation, yet still, have a strong urge to move.
  • "Motor restlessness, expressed as activity, which relieves the urge to move."
Movement usually brings immediate relief, although temporary and partial. Walking is most common; however, stretching, yoga, biking, or other physical activity may relieve the symptoms. Continuous, fast up-and-down movements of the leg, and/or rapidly moving the legs toward then away from each other, may keep sensations at bay without having to walk. Specific movements may be unique to each person.
  • "Worsening of symptoms by relaxation."
Sitting or lying down (reading, plane ride, watching TV) can trigger the sensations and urge to move. Severity depends on the severity of the person's RLS, the degree of restfulness, duration of the inactivity, etc.
  • "Variability over the course of the day-night cycle, with symptoms worse in the evening and early in the night."
Some experience RLS only at bedtime, while others experience it throughout the day and night. Most people experience the worst symptoms in the evening and the least in the morning.
  • "restless legs feel similar to the urge to yawn, situated in the legs or arms."
These symptoms of RLS can make sleeping difficult for many patients and a 2005 National Sleep Foundation poll[17] shows the presence of significant daytime difficulties resulting from this condition. These problems range from being late for work to missing work or events because of drowsiness. Patients with RLS who responded reported driving while drowsy more than patients without RLS. These daytime difficulties can translate into safety, social and economic issues for the patient and for society.

RLS may contribute to higher rates of depression and anxiety disorders in RLS patients.[18]

Primary and secondary

RLS is categorized as either primary or secondary.

  • Primary RLS is considered idiopathic or with no known cause. Primary RLS usually begins slowly, before approximately 40–45 years of age and may disappear for months or even years. It is often progressive and gets worse with age. RLS in children is often misdiagnosed as growing pains.
  • Secondary RLS often has a sudden onset after age 40, and may be daily from the beginning. It is most associated with specific medical conditions or the use of certain drugs (see below).

Causes

While the cause is generally unknown, it is believed to be caused by changes in the nerve transmitter dopamine[19] resulting in an abnormal use of iron by the brain.[1] RLS is often due to iron deficiency (low total body iron status).[1] Other associated conditions may include end-stage kidney disease and hemodialysis, folate deficiency, magnesium deficiency, sleep apnea, diabetes, peripheral neuropathy, Parkinson's disease, and certain autoimmune diseases, such as multiple sclerosis.[20] RLS can worsen in pregnancy, possibly due to elevated estrogen levels.[1][21] Use of alcohol, nicotine products, and caffeine may be associated with RLS.[1] A 2014 study from the American Academy of Neurology also found that reduced leg oxygen levels were strongly associated with restless legs Syndrome symptom severity in untreated patients.[19]

ADHD

An association has been observed between attention deficit hyperactivity disorder (ADHD) and RLS or periodic limb movement disorder.[22] Both conditions appear to have links to dysfunctions related to the neurotransmitter dopamine, and common medications for both conditions among other systems, affect dopamine levels in the brain.[23] A 2005 study suggested that up to 44% of people with ADHD had comorbid (i.e. coexisting) RLS, and up to 26% of people with RLS had confirmed ADHD or symptoms of the condition.[24]

Medications

Certain medications may cause or worsen RLS, or cause it secondarily, including:[1]

Both primary and secondary RLS can be worsened by surgery of any kind; however, back surgery or injury can be associated with causing RLS.[28]

The cause vs. effect of certain conditions and behaviors observed in some patients (ex. excess weight, lack of exercise, depression or other mental illnesses) is not well established. Loss of sleep due to RLS could cause the conditions, or medication used to treat a condition could cause RLS.[29][30]

Genetics

More than 60% of cases of RLS are familial and are inherited in an autosomal dominant fashion with variable penetrance.[31]

Research and brain autopsies have implicated both dopaminergic system and iron insufficiency in the substantia nigra.[32] Iron is well understood to be an essential cofactor for the formation of L-dopa, the precursor of dopamine.

Six genetic loci found by linkage are known and listed below. Other than the first one, all of the linkage loci were discovered using an autosomal dominant model of inheritance.

  • The first genetic locus was discovered in one large French Canadian family and maps to chromosome 12q.[33][34] This locus was discovered using an autosomal recessive inheritance model. Evidence for this locus was also found using a transmission disequilibrium test (TDT) in 12 Bavarian families.[35]
  • The second RLS locus maps to chromosome 14q and was discovered in one Italian family.[36] Evidence for this locus was found in one French Canadian family.[37] Also, an association study in a large sample 159 trios of European descent showed some evidence for this locus.[38]
  • This locus maps to chromosome 9p and was discovered in two unrelated American families.[39] Evidence for this locus was also found by the TDT in a large Bavarian family,[40] in which significant linkage to this locus was found.[41]
  • This locus maps to chromosome 20p and was discovered in a large French Canadian family with RLS.[42]
  • This locus maps to chromosome 2p and was found in three related families from population isolated in South Tyrol.[43]
  • The sixth locus is located on chromosome 16p12.1 and was discovered by Levchenko et al. in 2008.[44]

Three genes, MEIS1, BTBD9 and MAP2K5, were found to be associated to RLS.[45] Their role in RLS pathogenesis is still unclear. More recently, a fourth gene, PTPRD was found to be associated with RLS.[46]

There is also some evidence that periodic limb movements in sleep (PLMS) are associated with BTBD9 on chromosome 6p21.2,[47][48] MEIS1, MAP2K5/SKOR1, and PTPRD.[48] The presence of a positive family history suggests that there may be a genetic involvement in the etiology of RLS.

Mechanism

Although it is only partly understood, pathophysiology of restless legs syndrome may involve dopamine and iron system anomalies.[49][50] There is also a commonly acknowledged circadian rhythm explanatory mechanism associated with it, clinically shown simply by biomarkers of circadian rhythm, such as body temperature.[51] The interactions between impaired neuronal iron uptake and the functions of the neuromelanin-containing and dopamine-producing cells have roles in RLS development, indicating that iron deficiency might affect the brain dopaminergic transmissions in different ways.[52]

Medial thalamic nuclei may also have a role in RLS as part as the limbic system modulated by the dopaminergic system[53] which may affect pain perception.[54] Improvement of RLS symptoms occurs in people receiving low-dose dopamine agonists.[55]

Diagnosis

There are no specific tests for RLS, but non-specific laboratory tests are used to rule out other causes such as vitamin deficiencies. Five symptoms are used to confirm the diagnosis:[1]

  • A strong urge to move the limbs, usually associated with unpleasant or uncomfortable sensations.
  • It starts or worsens during inactivity or rest.
  • It improves or disappears (at least temporarily) with activity.
  • It worsens in the evening or night.
  • These symptoms are not caused by any medical or behavioral condition.

These symptoms are not essential, like the ones above, but occur commonly in RLS patients:[1][56]

  • genetic component or family history with RLS
  • good response to dopaminergic therapy
  • periodic leg movements during day or sleep
  • most strongly affected are people who are middle-aged or older
  • other sleep disturbances are experienced
  • decreased iron stores can be a risk factor and should be assessed

According to the International Classification of Sleep Disorders (ICSD-3), the main symptoms have to be associated with a sleep disturbance or impairment in order to support RLS diagnosis.[57] As stated by this classification, RLS symptoms should begin or worsen when being inactive, be relieved when moving, should happen exclusively or mostly in the evening and at night, not be triggered by other medical or behavioral conditions, and should impair one's quality of life.[57][58] Generally, both legs are affected, but in some cases there is an asymmetry.

Differential diagnosis

The most common conditions that should be differentiated with RLS include leg cramps, positional discomfort, local leg injury, arthritis, leg edema, venous stasis, peripheral neuropathy, radiculopathy, habitual foot tapping/leg rocking, anxiety, myalgia, and drug-induced akathisia.[9]

Peripheral artery disease and arthritis can also cause leg pain but this usually gets worse with movement.[8]

There are less common differential diagnostic conditions included myelopathy, myopathy, vascular or neurogenic claudication, hypotensive akathisia, orthostatic tremor, painful legs, and moving toes.[9]

Treatment

If RLS is not linked to an underlying cause, its frequency may be reduced by lifestyle modifications such as adopting improving sleep hygiene, regular exercise, and stopping smoking.[59] Medications used may include dopamine agonists or gabapentin in those with daily restless legs syndrome, and opioids for treatment of resistant cases.[1][27]

Treatment of RLS should not be considered until possible medical causes are ruled out. Secondary RLS may be cured if precipitating medical conditions (anemia) are managed effectively.[1]

Physical measures

Stretching the leg muscles can bring temporary relief.[12][60] Walking and moving the legs, as the name "restless legs" implies, brings temporary relief. In fact, those with RLS often have an almost uncontrollable need to walk and therefore relieve the symptoms while they are moving. Unfortunately, the symptoms usually return immediately after the moving and walking ceases. A vibratory counter-stimulation device has been found to help some people with primary RLS to improve their sleep.[61]

Iron

There is some evidence that intravenous iron supplementation moderately improves restlessness for people with RLS.[62]

Medications

For those whose RLS disrupts or prevents sleep or regular daily activities, medication may be useful. Evidence supports the use of dopamine agonists including pramipexole, ropinirole, rotigotine, and cabergoline.[63][64] They reduce symptoms, improve sleep quality and quality of life.[65] Levodopa is also effective.[66] However, pergolide and cabergoline are less recommended due to their association with increased risk of valvular heart disease.[67] Ropinirole has a faster onset with shorter duration.[68] Rotigotine is commonly used as a transdermal patch which continuously provides stable plasma drug concentrations, resulting in its particular therapeutic effect on patients with symptoms throughout the day.[68] One 2008 review[needs update] found pramipexole to be better than ropinirole.[69]

There are, however, issues with the use of dopamine agonists including augmentation. This is a medical condition where the drug itself causes symptoms to increase in severity and/or occur earlier in the day. Dopamine agonists may also cause rebound when symptoms increase as the drug wears off. In many cases, the longer dopamine agonists have been used, the higher the risk of augmentation and rebound as well as the severity of the symptoms. Patients may also develop dopamine dysregulation syndrome, meaning that they can experience an addictive pattern of dopamine replacement therapy. A 2007 study indicated that dopamine agonists used in restless legs syndrome can lead to an increase in compulsive gambling.[70] Patients may also exhibit other impulse-control disorders such as compulsive shopping and compulsive eating.[71] There are some indications that stopping the dopamine agonist treatment has an impact on the resolution or at least improvement of the impulse-control disorder, even though some people can be particularly exposed to dopamine agonist withdrawal syndrome.[71]

Benzodiazepines, such as diazepam or clonazepam, are not generally recommended,[74] and their effectiveness is unknown.[75] They, however, are sometimes still used as a second-line treatment,[76] as add-on agents.[75] Quinine is not recommended due to its risk of serious side effects involving the blood.[77]

Prognosis

RLS symptoms may gradually worsen with age, although more slowly for those with the idiopathic form of RLS than for people who also have an associated medical condition.[78] Current therapies can control the disorder, minimizing symptoms and increasing periods of restful sleep. In addition, some people have remissions, periods in which symptoms decrease or disappear for days, weeks, or months, although symptoms usually eventually reappear.[78] Being diagnosed with RLS does not indicate or foreshadow another neurological disease, such as Parkinson's disease.[78] RLS symptoms can worsen over time when dopamine-related drugs are used for therapy, an effect called augmentation which may represent symptoms occurring throughout the day and affect movements of all limbs.[78] There is no cure for RLS.[78]

Epidemiology

RLS affects an estimated 2.5–15% of the American population.[4][79] A minority (around 2.7% of the population) experience daily or severe symptoms.[80] RLS is twice as common in women as in men,[81] and Caucasians are more prone to RLS than people of African descent.[79] RLS occurs in 3% of individuals from the Mediterranean or Middle Eastern regions, and in 1–5% of those from East Asia, indicating that different genetic or environmental factors, including diet, may play a role in the prevalence of this syndrome.[79][82] RLS diagnosed at an older age runs a more severe course.[60] RLS is even more common in individuals with iron deficiency, pregnancy, or end-stage kidney disease.[83][84] The National Sleep Foundation's 1998 Sleep in America poll showed that up to 25 percent of pregnant women developed RLS during the third trimester.[85] Poor general health is also linked.[86]

There are several risk factors for RLS, including old age, family history, and uremia. The prevalence of RLS tends to increase with age, as well as its severity and longer duration of symptoms. People with uremia receiving renal dialysis have a prevalence from 20% to 57%, while those having kidney transplant improve compared to those treated with dialysis.[87]

RLS can occur at all ages, although it typically begins in the third or fourth decade.[58] Genome‐wide association studies have now identified 19 risk loci associated with RLS.[88] Neurological conditions linked to RLS include Parkinson's disease, spinal cerebellar atrophy, spinal stenosis,[specify] lumbosacral radiculopathy and Charcot–Marie–Tooth disease type 2.[79]

History

The first known medical description of RLS was by Sir Thomas Willis in 1672.[89] Willis emphasized the sleep disruption and limb movements experienced by people with RLS. Initially published in Latin (De Anima Brutorum, 1672) but later translated to English (The London Practice of Physick, 1685), Willis wrote:

Wherefore to some, when being abed they betake themselves to sleep, presently in the arms and legs, leapings and contractions on the tendons, and so great a restlessness and tossings of other members ensue, that the diseased are no more able to sleep, than if they were in a place of the greatest torture.

The term "fidgets in the legs" has also been used as early as the early nineteenth century.[90]

Subsequently, other descriptions of RLS were published, including those by François Boissier de Sauvages (1763), Magnus Huss (1849), Theodur Wittmaack (1861), George Miller Beard (1880), Georges Gilles de la Tourette (1898), Hermann Oppenheim (1923) and Frederick Gerard Allison (1943).[89][91] However, it was not until almost three centuries after Willis, in 1945, that Karl-Axel Ekbom (1907–1977) provided a detailed and comprehensive report of this condition in his doctoral thesis, restless legs: clinical study of hitherto overlooked disease.[92] Ekbom coined the term "restless legs" and continued work on this disorder throughout his career. He described the essential diagnostic symptoms, differential diagnosis from other conditions, prevalence, relation to anemia, and common occurrence during pregnancy.[93][94]

Ekbom's work was largely ignored until it was rediscovered by Arthur S. Walters and Wayne A. Hening in the 1980s. Subsequent landmark publications include 1995 and 2003 papers, which revised and updated the diagnostic criteria.[12][95] Journal of Parkinsonism and RLS is the first peer-reviewed, online, open access journal dedicated to publishing research about Parkinson's disease and was founded by a Canadian neurologist Dr. Abdul Qayyum Rana.

Nomenclature

In 2013, the Restless Legs Syndrome Foundation renamed itself the Willis–Ekbom Disease Foundation; however, it reverted to its original name in 2015 “to better support its mission”.[96]

A point of confusion is that RLS and delusional parasitosis are entirely different conditions that have both been called "Ekbom syndrome", as both syndromes were described by the same person, Karl-Axel Ekbom.[97] Today, calling WED/RLS "Ekbom syndrome" is outdated usage, as the unambiguous names (WED or RLS) are preferred for clarity.

Controversy

Some doctors express the view that the incidence of restless legs syndrome is exaggerated by manufacturers of drugs used to treat it.[98] Others believe it is an underrecognized and undertreated disorder.[79] Further, GlaxoSmithKline (GSK) ran advertisements that, while not promoting off-licence use of their drug (ropinirole) for treatment of RLS, did link to the Ekbom Support Group website. That website contained statements advocating the use of ropinirole to treat RLS. The Association of the British Pharmaceutical Industry (ABPI) ruled against GSK in this case.[99]

Research

Different measurements have been used to evaluate treatments in RLS. Most of them are based on subjective rating scores, such as IRLS rating scale (IRLS), Clinical Global Impression (CGI), Patient Global Impression (PGI), and Quality of life (QoL).[100] These questionnaires provide information about the severity and progress of the disease, as well as the person's quality of life and sleep.[100] Polysomnography (PSG) and actigraphy (both related to sleep parameters) are more objective resources that provide evidences of sleep disturbances associated with RLS symptoms.[100]

See also

References

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External links

  • Restless legs syndrome at Curlie

restless, legs, syndrome, song, restless, legs, half, half, biscuit, achtung, bono, also, known, willis, ekbom, disease, generally, long, term, disorder, that, causes, strong, urge, move, legs, there, often, unpleasant, feeling, legs, that, improves, somewhat,. For the song Restless Legs by Half Man Half Biscuit see Achtung Bono Restless legs syndrome RLS also known as Willis Ekbom disease WED is generally a long term disorder that causes a strong urge to move one s legs 2 7 There is often an unpleasant feeling in the legs that improves somewhat by moving them 2 This is often described as aching tingling or crawling in nature 2 Occasionally arms may also be affected 2 The feelings generally happen when at rest and therefore can make it hard to sleep 2 Due to the disturbance in sleep people with RLS may have daytime sleepiness low energy irritability and a depressed mood 2 Additionally many have limb twitching during sleep 8 RLS is not the same as habitual foot tapping or leg rocking 9 Restless legs syndromeOther namesWillis Ekbom disease WED 1 Wittmaack Ekbom syndromeSleep pattern of a person with restless legs syndrome red compared to a healthy sleep pattern blue SpecialtySleep medicineSymptomsUnpleasant feeling in the legs that briefly improves with moving them 2 ComplicationsDaytime sleepiness low energy irritability sadness 2 Usual onsetMore common with older age 3 Risk factorsLow iron levels kidney failure Parkinson s disease diabetes mellitus rheumatoid arthritis pregnancy certain medications 2 4 5 Diagnostic methodBased on symptoms after ruling out other possible causes 6 TreatmentLifestyle changes medication 2 MedicationLevodopa dopamine agonists gabapentin 4 Frequency2 5 15 US 4 Risk factors for RLS include low iron levels kidney failure Parkinson s disease diabetes mellitus rheumatoid arthritis pregnancy and celiac disease 2 4 10 A number of medications may also trigger the disorder including antidepressants antipsychotics antihistamines and calcium channel blockers 5 There are two main types 2 One is early onset RLS which starts before age 45 runs in families and worsens over time 2 The other is late onset RLS which begins after age 45 starts suddenly and does not worsen 2 Diagnosis is generally based on a person s symptoms after ruling out other potential causes 6 Restless legs syndrome may resolve if the underlying problem is addressed 11 Otherwise treatment includes lifestyle changes and medication 2 Lifestyle changes that may help include stopping alcohol and tobacco use and sleep hygiene 11 Medications used include a dopamine agonist such as pramipexole 4 RLS affects an estimated 2 5 15 of the American population 4 Females are more commonly affected than males and it becomes increasingly common with age 3 1 Contents 1 Signs and symptoms 1 1 Primary and secondary 2 Causes 2 1 ADHD 2 2 Medications 2 3 Genetics 3 Mechanism 4 Diagnosis 4 1 Differential diagnosis 5 Treatment 5 1 Physical measures 5 2 Iron 5 3 Medications 6 Prognosis 7 Epidemiology 8 History 8 1 Nomenclature 9 Controversy 10 Research 11 See also 12 References 13 External linksSigns and symptoms EditRLS sensations range from pain or an aching in the muscles to an itch you can t scratch a buzzing sensation an unpleasant tickle that won t stop a crawling feeling or limbs jerking while awake The sensations typically begin or intensify during quiet wakefulness such as when relaxing reading studying or trying to sleep 12 Hoveidaei et al showed that RLS symptoms were more prominent in patients with lumbosacral canal stenosis 13 It is a spectrum disease with some people experiencing only a minor annoyance and others having major disruption of sleep and impairments in quality of life 14 The sensations and the need to move may return immediately after ceasing movement or at a later time RLS may start at any age including childhood and is a progressive disease for some while the symptoms may remit in others 15 In a survey among members of the Restless Legs Syndrome Foundation it was found that up to 45 of patients had their first symptoms before the age of 20 years 16 An urge to move usually due to uncomfortable sensations that occur primarily in the legs but occasionally in the arms or elsewhere The sensations are unusual and unlike other common sensations Those with RLS have a hard time describing them using words or phrases such as uncomfortable painful antsy electrical creeping itching pins and needles pulling crawling buzzing and numbness It is sometimes described similar to a limb falling asleep or an exaggerated sense of positional awareness of the affected area The sensation and the urge can occur in any body part the most cited location is legs followed by arms Some people have little or no sensation yet still have a strong urge to move Motor restlessness expressed as activity which relieves the urge to move Movement usually brings immediate relief although temporary and partial Walking is most common however stretching yoga biking or other physical activity may relieve the symptoms Continuous fast up and down movements of the leg and or rapidly moving the legs toward then away from each other may keep sensations at bay without having to walk Specific movements may be unique to each person Worsening of symptoms by relaxation Sitting or lying down reading plane ride watching TV can trigger the sensations and urge to move Severity depends on the severity of the person s RLS the degree of restfulness duration of the inactivity etc Variability over the course of the day night cycle with symptoms worse in the evening and early in the night Some experience RLS only at bedtime while others experience it throughout the day and night Most people experience the worst symptoms in the evening and the least in the morning restless legs feel similar to the urge to yawn situated in the legs or arms These symptoms of RLS can make sleeping difficult for many patients and a 2005 National Sleep Foundation poll 17 shows the presence of significant daytime difficulties resulting from this condition These problems range from being late for work to missing work or events because of drowsiness Patients with RLS who responded reported driving while drowsy more than patients without RLS These daytime difficulties can translate into safety social and economic issues for the patient and for society RLS may contribute to higher rates of depression and anxiety disorders in RLS patients 18 Primary and secondary Edit RLS is categorized as either primary or secondary Primary RLS is considered idiopathic or with no known cause Primary RLS usually begins slowly before approximately 40 45 years of age and may disappear for months or even years It is often progressive and gets worse with age RLS in children is often misdiagnosed as growing pains Secondary RLS often has a sudden onset after age 40 and may be daily from the beginning It is most associated with specific medical conditions or the use of certain drugs see below Causes EditWhile the cause is generally unknown it is believed to be caused by changes in the nerve transmitter dopamine 19 resulting in an abnormal use of iron by the brain 1 RLS is often due to iron deficiency low total body iron status 1 Other associated conditions may include end stage kidney disease and hemodialysis folate deficiency magnesium deficiency sleep apnea diabetes peripheral neuropathy Parkinson s disease and certain autoimmune diseases such as multiple sclerosis 20 RLS can worsen in pregnancy possibly due to elevated estrogen levels 1 21 Use of alcohol nicotine products and caffeine may be associated with RLS 1 A 2014 study from the American Academy of Neurology also found that reduced leg oxygen levels were strongly associated with restless legs Syndrome symptom severity in untreated patients 19 ADHD Edit An association has been observed between attention deficit hyperactivity disorder ADHD and RLS or periodic limb movement disorder 22 Both conditions appear to have links to dysfunctions related to the neurotransmitter dopamine and common medications for both conditions among other systems affect dopamine levels in the brain 23 A 2005 study suggested that up to 44 of people with ADHD had comorbid i e coexisting RLS and up to 26 of people with RLS had confirmed ADHD or symptoms of the condition 24 Medications Edit Certain medications may cause or worsen RLS or cause it secondarily including 1 certain antiemetics antidopaminergic ones 25 certain antihistamines especially the sedating first generation H1 antihistamines often in over the counter cold medications 25 many antidepressants both older TCAs and newer SSRIs 1 25 antipsychotics and certain anticonvulsants 1 a rebound effect of sedative hypnotic drugs such as a benzodiazepine withdrawal syndrome from discontinuing benzodiazepine tranquilizers or sleeping pills 1 alcohol withdrawal can also cause restless legs syndrome and other movement disorders such as akathisia and parkinsonism usually associated with antipsychotics 26 opioid withdrawal is associated with causing and worsening RLS 27 Both primary and secondary RLS can be worsened by surgery of any kind however back surgery or injury can be associated with causing RLS 28 The cause vs effect of certain conditions and behaviors observed in some patients ex excess weight lack of exercise depression or other mental illnesses is not well established Loss of sleep due to RLS could cause the conditions or medication used to treat a condition could cause RLS 29 30 Genetics Edit More than 60 of cases of RLS are familial and are inherited in an autosomal dominant fashion with variable penetrance 31 Research and brain autopsies have implicated both dopaminergic system and iron insufficiency in the substantia nigra 32 Iron is well understood to be an essential cofactor for the formation of L dopa the precursor of dopamine Six genetic loci found by linkage are known and listed below Other than the first one all of the linkage loci were discovered using an autosomal dominant model of inheritance The first genetic locus was discovered in one large French Canadian family and maps to chromosome 12q 33 34 This locus was discovered using an autosomal recessive inheritance model Evidence for this locus was also found using a transmission disequilibrium test TDT in 12 Bavarian families 35 The second RLS locus maps to chromosome 14q and was discovered in one Italian family 36 Evidence for this locus was found in one French Canadian family 37 Also an association study in a large sample 159 trios of European descent showed some evidence for this locus 38 This locus maps to chromosome 9p and was discovered in two unrelated American families 39 Evidence for this locus was also found by the TDT in a large Bavarian family 40 in which significant linkage to this locus was found 41 This locus maps to chromosome 20p and was discovered in a large French Canadian family with RLS 42 This locus maps to chromosome 2p and was found in three related families from population isolated in South Tyrol 43 The sixth locus is located on chromosome 16p12 1 and was discovered by Levchenko et al in 2008 44 Three genes MEIS1 BTBD9 and MAP2K5 were found to be associated to RLS 45 Their role in RLS pathogenesis is still unclear More recently a fourth gene PTPRD was found to be associated with RLS 46 There is also some evidence that periodic limb movements in sleep PLMS are associated with BTBD9 on chromosome 6p21 2 47 48 MEIS1 MAP2K5 SKOR1 and PTPRD 48 The presence of a positive family history suggests that there may be a genetic involvement in the etiology of RLS Mechanism EditAlthough it is only partly understood pathophysiology of restless legs syndrome may involve dopamine and iron system anomalies 49 50 There is also a commonly acknowledged circadian rhythm explanatory mechanism associated with it clinically shown simply by biomarkers of circadian rhythm such as body temperature 51 The interactions between impaired neuronal iron uptake and the functions of the neuromelanin containing and dopamine producing cells have roles in RLS development indicating that iron deficiency might affect the brain dopaminergic transmissions in different ways 52 Medial thalamic nuclei may also have a role in RLS as part as the limbic system modulated by the dopaminergic system 53 which may affect pain perception 54 Improvement of RLS symptoms occurs in people receiving low dose dopamine agonists 55 Diagnosis EditThere are no specific tests for RLS but non specific laboratory tests are used to rule out other causes such as vitamin deficiencies Five symptoms are used to confirm the diagnosis 1 A strong urge to move the limbs usually associated with unpleasant or uncomfortable sensations It starts or worsens during inactivity or rest It improves or disappears at least temporarily with activity It worsens in the evening or night These symptoms are not caused by any medical or behavioral condition These symptoms are not essential like the ones above but occur commonly in RLS patients 1 56 genetic component or family history with RLS good response to dopaminergic therapy periodic leg movements during day or sleep most strongly affected are people who are middle aged or older other sleep disturbances are experienced decreased iron stores can be a risk factor and should be assessedAccording to the International Classification of Sleep Disorders ICSD 3 the main symptoms have to be associated with a sleep disturbance or impairment in order to support RLS diagnosis 57 As stated by this classification RLS symptoms should begin or worsen when being inactive be relieved when moving should happen exclusively or mostly in the evening and at night not be triggered by other medical or behavioral conditions and should impair one s quality of life 57 58 Generally both legs are affected but in some cases there is an asymmetry Differential diagnosis Edit The most common conditions that should be differentiated with RLS include leg cramps positional discomfort local leg injury arthritis leg edema venous stasis peripheral neuropathy radiculopathy habitual foot tapping leg rocking anxiety myalgia and drug induced akathisia 9 Peripheral artery disease and arthritis can also cause leg pain but this usually gets worse with movement 8 There are less common differential diagnostic conditions included myelopathy myopathy vascular or neurogenic claudication hypotensive akathisia orthostatic tremor painful legs and moving toes 9 Treatment EditIf RLS is not linked to an underlying cause its frequency may be reduced by lifestyle modifications such as adopting improving sleep hygiene regular exercise and stopping smoking 59 Medications used may include dopamine agonists or gabapentin in those with daily restless legs syndrome and opioids for treatment of resistant cases 1 27 Treatment of RLS should not be considered until possible medical causes are ruled out Secondary RLS may be cured if precipitating medical conditions anemia are managed effectively 1 Physical measures Edit Stretching the leg muscles can bring temporary relief 12 60 Walking and moving the legs as the name restless legs implies brings temporary relief In fact those with RLS often have an almost uncontrollable need to walk and therefore relieve the symptoms while they are moving Unfortunately the symptoms usually return immediately after the moving and walking ceases A vibratory counter stimulation device has been found to help some people with primary RLS to improve their sleep 61 Iron Edit There is some evidence that intravenous iron supplementation moderately improves restlessness for people with RLS 62 Medications Edit For those whose RLS disrupts or prevents sleep or regular daily activities medication may be useful Evidence supports the use of dopamine agonists including pramipexole ropinirole rotigotine and cabergoline 63 64 They reduce symptoms improve sleep quality and quality of life 65 Levodopa is also effective 66 However pergolide and cabergoline are less recommended due to their association with increased risk of valvular heart disease 67 Ropinirole has a faster onset with shorter duration 68 Rotigotine is commonly used as a transdermal patch which continuously provides stable plasma drug concentrations resulting in its particular therapeutic effect on patients with symptoms throughout the day 68 One 2008 review needs update found pramipexole to be better than ropinirole 69 There are however issues with the use of dopamine agonists including augmentation This is a medical condition where the drug itself causes symptoms to increase in severity and or occur earlier in the day Dopamine agonists may also cause rebound when symptoms increase as the drug wears off In many cases the longer dopamine agonists have been used the higher the risk of augmentation and rebound as well as the severity of the symptoms Patients may also develop dopamine dysregulation syndrome meaning that they can experience an addictive pattern of dopamine replacement therapy A 2007 study indicated that dopamine agonists used in restless legs syndrome can lead to an increase in compulsive gambling 70 Patients may also exhibit other impulse control disorders such as compulsive shopping and compulsive eating 71 There are some indications that stopping the dopamine agonist treatment has an impact on the resolution or at least improvement of the impulse control disorder even though some people can be particularly exposed to dopamine agonist withdrawal syndrome 71 Gabapentin or pregabalin a non dopaminergic treatment for moderate to severe primary RLS 72 Opioids are only indicated in severe cases that do not respond to other measures due to their very high abuse liability and high rate of side effects which may include constipation fatigue and headache 73 27 Benzodiazepines such as diazepam or clonazepam are not generally recommended 74 and their effectiveness is unknown 75 They however are sometimes still used as a second line treatment 76 as add on agents 75 Quinine is not recommended due to its risk of serious side effects involving the blood 77 Prognosis EditRLS symptoms may gradually worsen with age although more slowly for those with the idiopathic form of RLS than for people who also have an associated medical condition 78 Current therapies can control the disorder minimizing symptoms and increasing periods of restful sleep In addition some people have remissions periods in which symptoms decrease or disappear for days weeks or months although symptoms usually eventually reappear 78 Being diagnosed with RLS does not indicate or foreshadow another neurological disease such as Parkinson s disease 78 RLS symptoms can worsen over time when dopamine related drugs are used for therapy an effect called augmentation which may represent symptoms occurring throughout the day and affect movements of all limbs 78 There is no cure for RLS 78 Epidemiology EditRLS affects an estimated 2 5 15 of the American population 4 79 A minority around 2 7 of the population experience daily or severe symptoms 80 RLS is twice as common in women as in men 81 and Caucasians are more prone to RLS than people of African descent 79 RLS occurs in 3 of individuals from the Mediterranean or Middle Eastern regions and in 1 5 of those from East Asia indicating that different genetic or environmental factors including diet may play a role in the prevalence of this syndrome 79 82 RLS diagnosed at an older age runs a more severe course 60 RLS is even more common in individuals with iron deficiency pregnancy or end stage kidney disease 83 84 The National Sleep Foundation s 1998 Sleep in America poll showed that up to 25 percent of pregnant women developed RLS during the third trimester 85 Poor general health is also linked 86 There are several risk factors for RLS including old age family history and uremia The prevalence of RLS tends to increase with age as well as its severity and longer duration of symptoms People with uremia receiving renal dialysis have a prevalence from 20 to 57 while those having kidney transplant improve compared to those treated with dialysis 87 RLS can occur at all ages although it typically begins in the third or fourth decade 58 Genome wide association studies have now identified 19 risk loci associated with RLS 88 Neurological conditions linked to RLS include Parkinson s disease spinal cerebellar atrophy spinal stenosis specify lumbosacral radiculopathy and Charcot Marie Tooth disease type 2 79 History EditThe first known medical description of RLS was by Sir Thomas Willis in 1672 89 Willis emphasized the sleep disruption and limb movements experienced by people with RLS Initially published in Latin De Anima Brutorum 1672 but later translated to English The London Practice of Physick 1685 Willis wrote Wherefore to some when being abed they betake themselves to sleep presently in the arms and legs leapings and contractions on the tendons and so great a restlessness and tossings of other members ensue that the diseased are no more able to sleep than if they were in a place of the greatest torture The term fidgets in the legs has also been used as early as the early nineteenth century 90 Subsequently other descriptions of RLS were published including those by Francois Boissier de Sauvages 1763 Magnus Huss 1849 Theodur Wittmaack 1861 George Miller Beard 1880 Georges Gilles de la Tourette 1898 Hermann Oppenheim 1923 and Frederick Gerard Allison 1943 89 91 However it was not until almost three centuries after Willis in 1945 that Karl Axel Ekbom 1907 1977 provided a detailed and comprehensive report of this condition in his doctoral thesis restless legs clinical study of hitherto overlooked disease 92 Ekbom coined the term restless legs and continued work on this disorder throughout his career He described the essential diagnostic symptoms differential diagnosis from other conditions prevalence relation to anemia and common occurrence during pregnancy 93 94 Ekbom s work was largely ignored until it was rediscovered by Arthur S Walters and Wayne A Hening in the 1980s Subsequent landmark publications include 1995 and 2003 papers which revised and updated the diagnostic criteria 12 95 Journal of Parkinsonism and RLS is the first peer reviewed online open access journal dedicated to publishing research about Parkinson s disease and was founded by a Canadian neurologist Dr Abdul Qayyum Rana Nomenclature Edit In 2013 the Restless Legs Syndrome Foundation renamed itself the Willis Ekbom Disease Foundation however it reverted to its original name in 2015 to better support its mission 96 A point of confusion is that RLS and delusional parasitosis are entirely different conditions that have both been called Ekbom syndrome as both syndromes were described by the same person Karl Axel Ekbom 97 Today calling WED RLS Ekbom syndrome is outdated usage as the unambiguous names WED or RLS are preferred for clarity Controversy EditSome doctors express the view that the incidence of restless legs syndrome is exaggerated by manufacturers of drugs used to treat it 98 Others believe it is an underrecognized and undertreated disorder 79 Further GlaxoSmithKline GSK ran advertisements that while not promoting off licence use of their drug ropinirole for treatment of RLS did link to the Ekbom Support Group website That website contained statements advocating the use of ropinirole to treat RLS The Association of the British Pharmaceutical Industry ABPI ruled against GSK in this case 99 Research EditDifferent measurements have been used to evaluate treatments in RLS Most of them are based on subjective rating scores such as IRLS rating scale IRLS Clinical Global Impression CGI Patient Global Impression PGI and Quality of life QoL 100 These questionnaires provide information about the severity and progress of the disease as well as the person s quality of life and sleep 100 Polysomnography PSG and actigraphy both related to sleep parameters are more objective resources that provide evidences of sleep disturbances associated with RLS symptoms 100 See also EditPeriodic limb movement disorderReferences Edit a b c d e f g h i j k l m n Restless Legs Syndrome 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Periodic Limb Movement Disorder in Adults An Update for 2012 Practice Parameters with an Evidence Based Systematic Review and Meta Analyses Sleep 35 8 1037 doi 10 5665 sleep 1986 PMC 3397810 PMID 22851800 External links Edit Wikimedia Commons has media related to Restless leg syndrome Look up restless legs syndrome in Wiktionary the free dictionary Restless legs syndrome at Curlie Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Restless legs syndrome amp oldid 1133345668, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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