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F wave in restless legs syndrome, as an electrophysiological response of clinical relief

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ABSTRACT Objective The study aimed to evaluate the impact of postural changes on the F wave-related parameters and whether those changes were associated with clinical relaxation, which was achieved in… Click to show full abstract

ABSTRACT Objective The study aimed to evaluate the impact of postural changes on the F wave-related parameters and whether those changes were associated with clinical relaxation, which was achieved in restless legs syndrome patients with standing up. Methods F wave duration (FWD), compound muscle action potential duration (CMAPD), and FWD/CMAPD ratio were evaluated in supine and upward positions in 18 restless legs syndrome patients and compared with 18 age and gender-matched healthy volunteers. Results FWD/CMAPD was significantly higher for the tibial nerve at supine position (p = 0.043) but not at upright position (p = 0.206) and for ulnar nerve, both at supine (p = 0.007) and upright positions (p = 0.023) in RLS patients compared to controls. Ulnar FWD decreased significantly at the upright position in both control and RLS patients (p = 0.035, p = 0.028, respectively). CMAPD decreased only in the control group with standing up for both ulnar and tibial nerves (p = 0.048, p = 0.017, respectively). Discussion Ulnar and tibial FWD/CMAPD ratios increased in RLS patients compared to controls. However, FWD/CMAPD was not affected by the posture within the groups. Postural change seems to be a factor that decreased ulnar FWD both in RLS patients and the control group. Ulnar and tibial CMAPD reduced only in healthy controls with an upright position. Tibial and ulnar FWD/CMAPD ratios are favorable electrophysiological parameters diagnosing RLS. The tibial FWD/CMAPD ratio loses its significance only when the patient stands up, reflecting the clinical relief achieved with the postural change.

Keywords: legs syndrome; restless legs; rls patients; fwd cmapd

Journal Title: Neurological Research
Year Published: 2022

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