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Restless legs syndrome, pica, and iron status in blood donors.

Bryan R Spencer, Steven Kleinman, David J Wright, Simone A Glynn, David B Rye et al.
Other Transfusion 2013 64 citas
PubMed DOI
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Study Design

Tipo de estudio
Cohort Study
Tamaño de muestra
2425
Población
Blood donors (REDS-II Iron Status Evaluation)
Intervención
Restless legs syndrome, pica, and iron status in blood donors. None
Comparador
None
Resultado primario
RLS and pica prevalence related to iron status
Dirección del efecto
Negative
Riesgo de sesgo
Unclear

Abstract

BACKGROUND: The association of blood donation-related iron deficiency with pica or restless legs syndrome (RLS) remains poorly elucidated. This study evaluated the prevalence of RLS and pica in blood donors completing the REDS-II Iron Status Evaluation (RISE) study. STUDY DESIGN AND METHODS: RISE enrolled 2425 blood donors in a prospective cohort study; 1334 donors provided blood samples to characterize iron status and answered a questionnaire inquiring into symptoms of RLS and pica at a final visit after 15 to 24 months of follow-up. Associations between both conditions and iron status were evaluated. RESULTS: There were 9 and 20% of donors reporting symptoms of probable or probable/possible RLS, respectively. Iron depletion and donation intensity were not predictive of RLS. Pica was reported by 65 donors (5.5%), half of whom reported daily cravings. Prevalence of pica increased with degree of iron depletion in women (2% in iron-replete females, 13% in those with ferritin < 12 ng/mL), but not in men. Probable RLS and pica coexpressed in eight individuals, but no more frequently than expected by chance. CONCLUSION: RLS and pica have been associated with iron deficiency in nondonor populations. This study indicates a potentially high prevalence of RLS in frequent blood donors but shows no association with iron status or donation intensity. Low iron stores were associated with higher prevalence of pica, but only in females. Furthermore, the results are incompatible with RLS and pica sharing a common pathophysiology.

TL;DR

This study evaluated the prevalence of RLS and pica in blood donors completing the REDS‐II Iron Status Evaluation (RISE) study to evaluate the association of blood donation–related iron deficiency with pica or restless legs syndrome.

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