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Leg restlessness preceding the onset of motor symptoms of Parkinson disease: A case series of 5 patients

Authors :
Hiroaki Fujita
Yuji Watanabe
Takeo Matsubara
Hirotaka Sakuramoto
Taro Kadowaki
Koichi Hirata
Mai Hamaguchi
Keisuke Suzuki
Narihiro Nozawa
Source :
Medicine
Publication Year :
2019

Abstract

Patients with Parkinson disease (PD) often show restless legs syndrome (RLS), leg motor restlessness (LMR) and other leg restlessness (OLR) related to sensorimotor symptoms. Here, we describe 5 patients who presented with leg restlessness as an early manifestation of PD. In case 1, the patient had leg restlessness that was not LMR or RLS and preceded the onset of motor symptoms by 1 year. In case 2, LMR preceded motor symptoms by 2 years. Case 3 had unilateral RLS symptoms on the left side of the body for 33 years. Two and a half years after the spread of RLS symptoms to the right leg with increased frequency of left-sided RLS symptoms, the patient developed PD at the age of 58 years. In cases 4 and 5, RLS symptoms preceded motor symptoms by 3 months and 1 month, respectively. All patients developed Parkinsonism within 3 years (median, 1.0 year; range 0.083–2.5 years) after initial onset or exacerbation of leg restlessness. All patients had frequent leg restlessness symptoms (6–7 days per week). In our series, the preceding leg restlessness was unilateral and confined to the dominant side of the subsequent Parkinsonism, or preceding leg restlessness was bilateral but dominant on the dominant side of the subsequent Parkinsonism. Clinicians should be aware that late-onset leg restlessness (>50 years of age) including RLS, LMR, and OLR, particularly if frequent and asymmetrical, can be an early nonmotor manifestation of PD.

Details

ISSN :
15365964
Volume :
98
Issue :
33
Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
Medicine
Accession number :
edsair.doi.dedup.....d6c2a69c26a89a6b0cfaf56b0e9b920f