Publication | Open Access
Iron and The Restless Legs Syndrome
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1998
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The observed lack of correlation between PLMS/hour and ferritin may be due to outliers or severe sleep disturbance in severe RLS patients. The study used blinded procedures to examine how serum ferritin levels relate to the severity of subjective and objective RLS symptoms across a representative adult sample. Researchers retrospectively reviewed 27 RLS patients (18 females, 9 males, aged 29–81) who had ferritin measured concurrently with polysomnography, recording clinical RLS severity and PSG metrics of sleep efficiency and periodic limb movements with and without arousal. Lower ferritin levels were associated with greater RLS severity, reduced sleep efficiency, and increased PLMS with arousal, and nearly all patients with severe RLS had ferritin ≤50 mcg/L, indicating that ferritin above 50 mcg/L may lessen RLS symptoms.
Using blinded procedures, determine the relation between serum ferritin levels and severity of subjective and objective symptoms of the restless legs syndrome (RLS) for a representative patient sample covering the entire adult age range. All patient records from the past 4 years were retrospectively reviewed to obtain data from all cases with RLS. All patients were included who had ferritin levels obtained at about the same time as a polysomnogram (PSG), met diagnostic criteria for RLS and were not on iron or medications that would reduce the RLS symptoms at the time of the PSG. Sleep Disorders Center 27 (18 females, 9 males), aged 29–81 years. None Measurements included clinical ratings of RLS severity and PSG measures of sleep efficiency and periodic limb movements (PLMS) in sleep with and without arousal. Lower ferritin correlated significantly to greater RLS severity and decreased sleep efficiency. All but one patient with severe RLS had ferritin levels ≤50 mcg/l. Patients with lower ferritin (≤50 mcg/l) also showed significantly more PLMS with arousal than did those with higher ferritin, but the PLMS/hour was not significantly related to ferritin. This last finding may be due to inclusion of two 'outliers' or because of severely disturbed sleep of the more severe RLS patients. These data are consistent with those from a prior unblinded study and suggest that RLS patients will have fewer symptoms if they have ferritin levels greater than 50 mcg/l.