| Literature DB >> 21352569 |
Diego Garcia-Borreguero1, Paul Stillman, Heike Benes, Heiner Buschmann, K Ray Chaudhuri, Victor M Gonzalez Rodríguez, Birgit Högl, Ralf Kohnen, Giorgio Carlo Monti, Karin Stiasny-Kolster, Claudia Trenkwalder, Anne-Marie Williams, Marco Zucconi.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: Restless legs syndrome (RLS) is a neurological disorder with a lifetime prevalence of 3-10%. in European studies. However, the diagnosis of RLS in primary care remains low and mistreatment is common.Entities:
Mesh:
Year: 2011 PMID: 21352569 PMCID: PMC3056753 DOI: 10.1186/1471-2377-11-28
Source DB: PubMed Journal: BMC Neurol ISSN: 1471-2377 Impact factor: 2.474
Essential diagnostic criteria
| Essential criteria | Supportive criteria | Associated features |
|---|---|---|
| An urge to move the legs, usually accompanied/caused by uncomfortable/unpleasant sensations in the legs. | Positive family history of RLS. | Natural clinical course of the disorder. |
| Urge to move or unpleasant sensations begin or worsen during periods of rest or inactivity. | Positive response to dopaminergic drugs. | Sleep disorders are a frequent but unspecific symptom of the RLS. |
| Urge to move or unpleasant sensations are partially/totally relieved by movement, at least as long as the activity continues. | PLMW/PLMS as assessed with polysomnography or leg activity devices. | Medical evaluation/physical examination: The neurological examination is usually normal. |
| Urge to move or unpleasant sensations are worse in the evening/night than during the day, or only occur in the evening/night. | Probable causes for secondary RLS should be excluded. |
Common terms use to describe RLS [7]
| Insects/ants crawling | Throbbing |
| Jittery | Tight feeling |
| Pulling | Grabbing sensation |
| Worms moving | Itching bones |
| Soda bubbling in the veins | Electric current |
| Electric current | Fidgets |
| Pain | Twitching |
| Burning | Water moving |
| Tingling | Aching |
Differential diagnosis
| Meeting Criteria | Comment | Disorder | |
|---|---|---|---|
| Definite RLS | Awake symptom diagnosis made by clinical history; uncomfortable urge to move with or without deep creepy-crawling sensation brought on at time of inactivity or rest (sitting or lying); immediate relief either complete or partial with movement; symptomatic relief is persistent as long as movement continues; presence of circadian pattern with peak around midnight and nadir in the morning | ||
| Neurological disorder with "urge to move" | Feeling of restlessness which may be localized in legs, brought on by sitting still; should not occur while lying down but might be relieved by movement; occurs in patients with orthostatic hypotension | ||
| Pain Disorder | Dysesthesias and pain in the legs, frequently one-sided, often radicular arrangement of sensory symptoms, atrophic changes of musculature, no urge to move the legs, symptoms can be initiated by sitting and lying and improve by movement, usually neurological and neurophysiological deficits, does not respond to dopaminergic therapy | ||
| Vascular Disorder | Dysesthesias and pain in the legs. May appear to occur with or after rest but is associated with or occurs after periods of standing/walking; ntensity increased by movement and usually relieved by prolonging rest often best in a lying position, no urge to move, no circadian pattern, usually no sleep disturbances, frequently associated with skin alterations and edemas. Often associated with vascular disease, circadian pattern if any relates more to activity levels | ||
| Neurological disorder with "urge to move" | Looks like very severe RLS affecting the whole body -but usually without any sensations of pain reported by RLS patients often no relief with movement;, should have a history of specific medication exposure | ||
| Pain Disorder | Sensory symptoms commonly reported as numbness, burning, and pain; not as common in RLS; numbness is rare in RLS, no urge to move; sensory symptoms usually present throughout the day, less frequent at night, complete and persistent relief is not obtained while walking or during sustained movement | ||
| Pain Disorder | Patients after surgeries frequently do not remember the origin of their complaints. They almost always report symptoms in the legs or in the back, when lying or sitting or during movement. | ||
| Disorders without "urge to move" | Often comes on with prolonged sitting or lying in the same position but usually relieved by a simple change in position, unlike RLS, which often returns when change of position, movement, or walking is not continued, no circadian pattern | ||
| Neurological disorder with "urge to move" | Leg cramps or charley horse cramps can come on at night and are relieved with stretching or walking; no urge to move; experienced as a usually painful muscular contraction, often involving the calf muscles, unlike RLS sensations; sudden onset, occurs not regularly, short duration, usually palpable contractions | ||
| Sleep-related Disorders | Involuntary muscle (myoclonic) twitch which occurs during falling asleep, described as an electric shock or falling sensation which can cause movements of legs and arms. Occurring once or twice per night, frequent in the population. | ||
| Psychiatric Disorders | Depressive disorder with somatic symptoms like psychomotor agitation and diverse somatic complaints, circadian pattern with early awakening in the morning, daytime sleepiness. | ||
| Neurological disorder with "urge to move" | Occurs in subjects who fidget, especially when bored or anxious, but usually do not experience associated sensory symptoms, discomfort, or conscious urge to move; symptoms do not bother the subject, usually lacks a circadian pattern, more of a type of psychic restlessness, less sleep disturbances, no response to dopaminergic medication | ||
| Disorders without "urge to move" | Discomfort centered more in joints, may not have prominent circadian pattern as seen in RLS, increase of symptoms during movement .does not respond to dopaminergics, usually no PLMs | ||
| Disorders without "urge to move" | Multiple, alternating, multiform complaints in muscle groups and joints; sometimes leg-accentuated but mostly whole body affected; frequent sleep disorders, no circadian pattern, no relief by movement, no dopaminergic response | ||
| Vascular Disorder | Discomfort in legs, some relief with massage or inactivity | ||
Figure 1Diagnostic algorithm.
Overview of treatments
| Drug | Starting dose and maximum recommended dosage | Time to full effective therapeutic dose | Half-life | Side effects |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Levodopa | 50 mg | At first dose | 1.5-2 hours | Augmentation |
| Ropinirole | 0.25 mg | 4-10 days | 6 hours | Nausea, low blood pressure, dizziness, headache, nasal congestion |
| Pramipexole | 0.125 mg | At first dose | 8-12 hours | Nausea, low blood pressure, dizziness, headache, nasal congestion |
| Rotigotine | 1-3 mg patches | 1 week | 5-7 hours | Skin irritation, nausea, low blood pressure, dizziness, headache, nasal congestion |
| Pregabalin | 25-300 mg | 3-6 days | 10 hrs | Sleepiness, dizziness, headache, fluid retention |
| Clonazepam | 0.50 mg | First dose: effect mainly on sleep | 30-40 hours | Sleepiness, dizziness, morning drug hangover |
| Gabapentin | 300 mg | 3-6 days | 5-7 hours | Sleepiness, dizziness, fluid retention |
Drugs that may exacerbate RLS
| Diphenhydramine (and other over the counter cold remedies) |
| Metoclopramide |
| Prochlorperazine |
| Chlordiazepoxide |
| Traditional antipsychotics (phenothiazines) |
| Atypical neuroleptics (olanzapine and risperidone) |
| Antidepressants (especially norepinehrine or selective serotonin reuptake inhibitors) |
| Anticonvulsants (zonisamide, phenytoin, methsuximide) |
| Antihistamines |
| Opiods |
Figure 2Symptom diary.
Figure 3Treatment algorithm.