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"Restless leg syndrome" tied to mental woes
Yahoo ^ | 11/1/05

Posted on 11/01/2005 3:44:53 PM PST by linkinpunk

Restless leg syndrome tied to mental woes

By Martha Kerr Mon Oct 31, 3:02 PM ET

MONTREAL (Reuters Health) - People who suffer from restless leg syndrome (RLS) often have debilitating psychiatric disorders, including depression and anxiety, investigators reported today at big medical convention in Montreal.

At a news conference during the annual meeting of the American College of Chest Physicians, Dr. Barbara Phillips of the University of Kentucky at Lexington presented results of the annual sleep poll conducted by the National Sleep Foundation. Phillips is president of the Foundation.

Researchers conducted a telephone survey of some 1,500 randomly selected adults aged 18 and older. Their average age was 49.

Symptoms of RLS were reported by 9.7 percent of the participants - 8 percent of all men and 11 percent of all women.

Residents of the Southern and Western US had a higher risk of RLS than those living in the Northeast US. Other risk factors were heavy smoking, unemployment status, hypertension, gastroesophageal reflux disease, arthritis, diabetes, depression and anxiety.

Sleep apnea and insomnia appear to be other risk factors for RLS, along with difficulty falling asleep (taking more than 30 minutes), driving while drowsy and excessive daytime fatigue.

Subjects with self-reported RLS also had a higher incidence of being late for work, missing work, making errors at work and missing social events because of fatigue more often than those without RLS.

"There is definitely a circadian rhythm," Phillips told Reuters Health. Patients describe their symptoms as more of an urge to move rather than actual pain, Phillips said. Sleep labs are not actually necessary to make a diagnosis of RLS, she added.

"No one really knows what causes RLS," Dr. Phillips said. "RLS is probably not a single thing...A lot of things look the same but aren't the same."

"Primary RLS probably has some genetic basis," she said. "The brain content of iron is different in RLS...Iron and dopamine stores are low...Treating iron deficiency can correct the symptoms," she pointed out.

This past summer, FDA approved the dopamine agonist ropinirole (Requip) as first-line therapy for RLS. Phillips predicts that other similar drugs will soon receive similar approval.

She called for studies to better define the diagnosis of restless leg syndrome.


TOPICS: News/Current Events
KEYWORDS: disorders; rls
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1 posted on 11/01/2005 3:44:54 PM PST by linkinpunk
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To: linkinpunk

My husband, who is the most laid back and stable person I've ever met has RLS so I have a feeling this study is just another piece of junk science.


2 posted on 11/01/2005 3:46:01 PM PST by Peach (The Dems enabled Able Danger. 3,000 Americans died.)
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To: linkinpunk

Is this the jimmie-legs?


3 posted on 11/01/2005 3:46:56 PM PST by tallhappy (Juntos Podemos!)
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To: linkinpunk

Okay, what the HELL is Restless Leg Syndrome LOL

I read the friggin article and it didnt say it, did it?

MM


4 posted on 11/01/2005 3:47:17 PM PST by motormouth (Good Grief!!!!)
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To: tallhappy

Yeah.

Kramer calls it the "jimmie legs."


5 posted on 11/01/2005 3:48:03 PM PST by linkinpunk
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To: motormouth

Have you ever sat at the table with someone who bounces their leg up and down?

They have their own syndrome now.


6 posted on 11/01/2005 3:48:53 PM PST by linkinpunk
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To: linkinpunk

I've had RLS-type symptoms for some time. I recently started exercising, walking on a treadmill at least a mile a day. No more RLS.


7 posted on 11/01/2005 3:49:40 PM PST by Spiff ("They start yelling, 'Murderer!' 'Traitor!' They call me by name." - Gael Murphy, Code Pink leader)
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To: linkinpunk

"Restless leg syndrome" tied to mental woes

Same thing with people who bite their nails to the quick. I've never met anybody who had chewed-up nails that I didn't suspect had some issues.


8 posted on 11/01/2005 3:51:52 PM PST by L98Fiero
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To: eyespysomething
People who suffer from restless leg syndrome (RLS) often have debilitating psychiatric disorders

Aren't you always saying you have RLS? LOL ...

9 posted on 11/01/2005 3:52:07 PM PST by SittinYonder (Flea, feather, bird, egg, nest, twig, branch, limb, tree, and the bog down in the valley - o.)
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To: motormouth
Okay, what the HELL is Restless Leg Syndrome

Ping Rush, I think he might be familiar with this...

10 posted on 11/01/2005 3:53:24 PM PST by Diddle E. Squat
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To: linkinpunk
"Have you ever sat at the table with someone who bounces their leg up and down?"

Funny, just about three hours ago I was at the food court during my lunch break, and I noticed two young men with extreme jimmie legs. Then I see this story . . .
11 posted on 11/01/2005 3:54:18 PM PST by Steve_Seattle
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To: tallhappy
American College of Chest Physicians

Chest Physician? Why didn't my college guidance counselor ever mention that career option?

12 posted on 11/01/2005 3:54:24 PM PST by linkinpunk
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To: linkinpunk
She called for studies to better define the diagnosis of restless leg syndrome.

In other words she is guessing and wants a grant to study it.

13 posted on 11/01/2005 3:54:31 PM PST by marty60
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To: linkinpunk

14 posted on 11/01/2005 3:54:58 PM PST by Revolting cat! ("In the end, nothing explains anything.")
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To: Peach

When I have it -- not too often, but sometimes, I find one aspirin before bed effectively stops it.


15 posted on 11/01/2005 3:55:00 PM PST by bvw
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To: linkinpunk
RLS is "jimmy legs"... or as my wife calls it, "happy feet." My insomnia got so bad about five years ago, my wife made me get a test done, fearing I had apnea. When I woke up at the sleep clinic the nurse said, "I have never seen anyone kick so much in my life!"

They gave me some stuff called Mirapex which cleared it up, but I haven't taken it for the past couple of years. It just started coming back, so this week I got an iron supplement (325mg/day) to see if that makes a difference.

My dad has the same problem, so in my case it seems to be genetic. Either way it very annoying (as I'm sure my long-suffering wife will agree!).

16 posted on 11/01/2005 3:55:12 PM PST by inkling
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To: linkinpunk

I thought so, but it I figured it HAD to be more involved than that.

Their own syndrome, damn, what will they think of next LOL

MM

ps Thanks for the clarification.


17 posted on 11/01/2005 3:56:50 PM PST by motormouth (Good Grief!!!!)
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To: linkinpunk

I have RLS and I keep my whole side of the street lit up.


18 posted on 11/01/2005 3:56:52 PM PST by InvisibleChurch (The search for someone to blame is always successful. - Robert Half)
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To: inkling

Hey does that mean I can get a "Handicap" sticker? Does it mean that I have preferential treatment to get a job (if I needed one)?


19 posted on 11/01/2005 3:57:49 PM PST by DocJ69
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To: linkinpunk
What a load of twaddle. Something on me is always twitching, my leg or foot moves incessantly before I go to sleep. The only time I don't twitch somewhere is when I'm working.

I drive the wife crazy and she ends up slapping me at night.

Somehow over time every twitch or flinch becomes a "syndrome" or "disease".

Maybe a cure for all these maladies is for fat ass ed sedentary American's to get off their big bums and WORK, rather than sit about pondering their every twitch as if it held some cosmic significance.
20 posted on 11/01/2005 3:58:28 PM PST by mmercier
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