Difference between revisions of "Restless leg syndrome (RLS)"
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− | <span style="color:#FF0000">This article is a [[stub]]. You can help the '''Apnea Board Wiki''' by expanding it with additional information and sections. For help on the proper way to edit a wiki page, go to the [[Apnea Board Editor Guide]]. | + | <span style="color:#FF0000">This article is a [[stub]]. You can help the '''Apnea Board Wiki''' by expanding it with additional information and sections. For help on the proper way to edit a wiki page, go to the [[Apnea Board Editor Guide]].</span> |
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Revision as of 06:48, 8 February 2012
This article is a stub. You can help the Apnea Board Wiki by expanding it with additional information and sections. For help on the proper way to edit a wiki page, go to the Apnea Board Editor Guide.
Restless legs syndrome (RLS) or Willis-Ekbom disease is a neurological disorder characterized by an irresistible urge to move one's body to stop uncomfortable or odd sensations. It most commonly affects the legs, but can affect the arms, torso, and even phantom limbs. Moving the affected body part modulates the sensations, providing temporary relief.
RLS sensations can most closely be compared to an itching or tickling in the muscles, like "an itch you can't scratch" or an unpleasant "tickle that won't stop." The sensations typically begin or intensify during quiet wakefulness, such as when relaxing, reading, studying, or trying to sleep. In addition, most individuals with RLS have limb jerking during sleep, which is an objective physiologic marker of the disorder and is associated with sleep disruption. Some controversy surrounds the marketing of drug treatments for RLS. It is a "spectrum" disease with some people experiencing only a minor annoyance and others experiencing major disruption of sleep and significant impairments in quality of life
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