Article ID Journal Published Year Pages File Type
3043001 Clinical Neurophysiology 2015 7 Pages PDF
Abstract

•Restless legs syndrome, now called Willis-Ekbom Disease (RLS/WED), is a sensorimotor-related sleep disorder characterised by an abnormal urge to move.•The aim of the current study was to investigate upper limb function in RLS/WED patients using objective methodology.•RLS/WED patients manipulate objects in a normal manner and exhibit normal maximal pinch grip, tremor during movement, and movement speed and rhythmicity compared to age- and gender-matched healthy controls.

ObjectiveRestless legs syndrome, now called Willis-Ekbom Disease (RLS/WED), is a sensorimotor-related sleep disorder. Little is known of the effect of RLS/WED on motor function. The current study investigated upper limb function in RLS/WED patients. We hypothesised that RLS/WED patients exhibit subtle changes in tremor amplitude but normal dexterity and movement speed and rhythmicity compared to healthy controls.MethodsRLS/WED patients (n = 17, 59 ± 7 years) with moderate disease and healthy controls (n = 17, 58 ± 6 years) completed screening tests and five tasks including object manipulation, maximal pinch grip, flexion and extension of the index finger (tremor assessment), maximal finger tapping (movement speed and rhythmicity assessment), and the grooved pegboard test. Force, acceleration, and/or first dorsal interosseus EMG were recorded during four of the tasks.ResultsTask performance did not differ between groups. Learning was evident on tasks with repeated trials and the magnitude of learning did not differ between groups.ConclusionsHand function, tremor, and task learning were unaffected in RLS/WED patients. Patients manipulated objects in a normal manner and exhibited normal movement speed, rhythmicity, and tremor.SignificanceFurther research is needed to assess other types of movement in RLS/WED patients to gain insight into the motor circuitry affected and the underlying pathophysiology.

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