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Serum alpha-synuclein in restless legs syndrome.

Aboud Tahanis, Vera Hashem, William Ondo
Other Sleep 2025 3 citations
PubMed DOI
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Abstract

STUDY OBJECTIVES: To determine any correlation between serum alpha-synuclein (α-syn) concentrations and restless legs syndrome (RLS), and to explore the impact of intravenous iron supplementation on serum α-syn levels. METHODS: We collected clinical data on 113 RLS patients in whom serum α-syn levels were quantified using an ELISA kit and compared to a group of 45 age-matched controls. A subset of nine RLS patients who received intravenous (IV) iron underwent pre- and post-treatment blood sampling to assess α-syn and ferritin response. RESULTS: A family history of RLS was reported by 62.8% of patients, and current dopaminergic augmentation was observed in 31.0%. Low serum ferritin levels below 75 μg/L were seen in 39.8%. Serum α-syn levels were found to be significantly decreased in RLS patients (mean: 7.7 ng/mL) compared to controls (mean: 10.7 ng/mL), p < .05. Stratification based on sex, age, and age of onset, did not reveal significant differences in α-syn levels. In nine RLS patients who received IV iron treatment, a linear correlation between fold change in α-syn and ferritin was observed (R: 0.7, p < .05). The temporal relation between serum α-syn and IV iron treatment showed a gradual decline of α-syn and ferritin by time correlation (p = .023, R: -.739). CONCLUSION: In our study of 113 RLS participants, serum α-syn levels were decreased in RLS patients compared to healthy controls, and increased in the nine patients who received IV iron treatment in correlation with ferritin. This correlation could suggest a mechanism for reduced dopamine transmission in RLS.

TL;DR

Serum α-syn levels were decreased in RLS patients compared to healthy controls and increased in the 9 patients who received IV iron treatment in correlation with ferritin, which could suggest a mechanism for reduced dopamine transmission in RLS.

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