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Uremic restless legs syndrome (RLS) and sleep quality in patients with end-stage renal disease on hemodialysis: potential role of homocysteine and parathyroid hormone.

Katrin Gade, Sabine Blaschke, Andrea Rodenbeck, Andreas Becker, Heike Anderson-Schmidt et al.
Other Kidney & blood pressure research 2013 43 اقتباسات
PubMed DOI
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Study Design

نوع الدراسة
Observational Study
حجم العينة
52
المجتمع المدروس
End-stage renal disease patients on hemodialysis
التدخل
Uremic restless legs syndrome (RLS) and sleep quality in patients with end-stage renal disease on hemodialysis: potential role of homocysteine and parathyroid hormone. None
المقارن
RLS-affected vs non-RLS hemodialysis patients
النتيجة الأولية
Homocysteine association with uremic RLS
اتجاه التأثير
Negative
خطر التحيز
Unclear

Abstract

BACKGROUND: The aetiology of uremic restless legs syndrome (RLS) remains unclear. Our research investigated whether an elevated plasma concentration of the excitatory amino acid homocysteine might be associated with RLS occurrence in patients with chronic renal insufficiency on hemodialysis. METHODS: Total plasma homocysteine as well as creatinine, urea, folate, parathyroid hormone, hemoglobin, iron, ferritin, phosphate, calcium, magnesium, and albumin levels were compared between 26 RLS-affected (RLSpos) and 26 non-affected (RLSneg) patients on chronic hemodialysis. We further compared subjective sleep quality between RLSpos and RLSneg patients using the Pittsburgh-Sleep-Quality-Index and investigated possible relationships between laboratory parameters and sleep quality. RESULTS: Taking individual albumin concentrations into account, a significant positive correlation between total plasma homocysteine and RLS occurrence was observed (r= 0.246; p=0.045). Sleep quality was significantly more reduced in RLSpos compared to RLSneg patients and RLS severity correlated positively with impairment of sleep quality. Bad sleep quality in all patients was associated with higher concentrations of parathyroid hormone. CONCLUSION: Our results suggest a possible aetiological role of homocysteine in uremic RLS. They confirm that uremic RLS is an important factor causing sleep impairment in patients on hemodialysis. Higher parathyroid hormone levels might also be associated with bad sleep quality in these patients.

باختصار

It is confirmed that uremic RLS is an important factor causing sleep impairment in patients on hemodialysis, and higher parathyroid hormone levels might also be associated with bad sleep quality in these patients.

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