http://www.smh.com.au/world/science/restless-legs-the-annoyance-that-never-sleeps-20100224-p3mn.html


Restless legs: the annoyance that never sleeps 
LUCY ATKINS 
February 25, 2010 

NEUROLOGISTS call it the ''commonest movement disorder you've never heard of''. 
Restless legs syndrome, or Ekbom's syndrome, is the uncontrollable urge to move 
your legs when resting.

About 5-10 per cent of adults will develop it but while some will just 
experience a sporadic twitchiness at the end of the day, for others it is a 
torment.

Symptoms usually begin during the evenings or at night and are variously 
described as burning, creeping, itching, aching or tugging sensations in the 
legs; the feeling of insects crawling around inside; or of ''Coca-Cola in the 
blood''. The only relief is movement. Trying to stay still, says Julian Spinks, 
an RLS specialist, ''is like trying to eat a doughnut without licking your 
lips''.

Long flights, car journeys or any trip where you have to sit still for long can 
be unbearable. ''It's almost impossible for me to go to the theatre,'' says 
Emma, 42, whose symptoms are getting worse with age. ''Nowadays I can only go 
if I take half a Valium.

''At the cinema or on flights you worry that you're bothering everyone around 
you by shifting all the time.'' Going out to dinner is agony, too. ''By 10pm my 
legs are twitching so much I have to get up and walk around.''

Tiredness exacerbates the problem, but relaxation is often out of the question.

Dawn, 38, who has had RLS for 20 years, says: ''It can get unbelievably 
infuriating in the evenings. The more tired I am, the worse it is. I've set up 
a mini-trampoline in the front room and I get on and off it when we're watching 
TV. It irritates my husband beyond belief, but it's better than me thrashing 
next to him.''

RLS can push relationships to breaking point. ''If your partner is waking 
multiple times a night it puts a strain on you both,'' Spinks says. Couples 
often end up in separate beds. ''People get so desperate they'll even batter 
their own legs for relief. British people use umbrellas; Americans tend to use 
baseball bats.''

RLS is caused by an imbalance in the neurotransmitter dopamine. ''A lack of 
dopamine in one area of the brain can trigger it,'' Spinks says. There is also 
a genetic link, with around half of sufferers inheriting the condition. Many 
remember a parent having the evening jitters, but it is only when they develop 
symptoms, then get a diagnosis themselves, that they understand why. Women tend 
to get RLS more often than men, and symptoms often worsen with age.

The disease can also be linked to low iron levels, but exactly how this is 
related to dopamine is not yet understood. Pregnant women sometimes develop RLS 
because of fluctuating iron levels during pregnancy.

Other triggers include common medications such as cold and flu remedies, 
antihistamines or antidepressants. Symptoms can also be caused by chronic 
diseases such as kidney failure - where there can be problems with the body's 
iron and mineral levels - or Parkinson's disease.

But misdiagnosis is common, and treatment is difficult. Doctors have been known 
to confuse RLS with depression, stress, sciatica or arthritis, so Spinks trains 
GPs to look for these symptoms: an urge to move, which comes on while resting, 
is better after movement, and is worse at night.

Lifestyle changes such as cutting out caffeine, alcohol and tobacco help ease 
the condition in some people. And when the symptoms come on, a hot bath or 
shower, leg massage or a hot water bottle may bring relief. Iron supplements 
can help, too, or a low dose of magnesium (iron and magnesium deficiency can be 
connected), but severe cases may need drug treatments.

''There is no cure,'' Spinks says. ''But I often see people improve 
dramatically when given medication.'' There are drugs that mimic the action of 
dopamine in the brain or anti-epileptic drugs that change the way nerve cells 
react to each other, helping to ease painful symptoms of RLS, as well as 
helping to stop involuntary limb movements.

However, some people get worse with these treatments. There are also side 
effects such as nausea or even, in rare cases, compulsive behaviour: in 
particular, compulsive gambling, which dopamine can help trigger. Usually, 
patients turn to medication when bouts of RLS are particularly bad, so it is 
not used all the time, but medication may have to be taken for many years.

The condition can feel like a life sentence, and sufferers often dread passing 
it to their children. ''I worry that my daughter may have it,'' Emma says. 
''She's eight, and has growing pains, and I fear that the two are linked.'' In 
fact there is no connection between growing pains and RLS. But RLS is sometimes 
misdiagnosed in children as growing pains.

On the website whatisrls.org, Lynne, 44, remembers what it was like to have RLS 
as a child. ''I would be up pacing at night while my family was sleeping. I 
felt like I lived alone, living on the sidelines of my own life . the lack of 
sleep turns you into a different person.''

Spinks says: ''It has a trivial-sounding name but RLS can affect your whole 
life.''

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