Leg movement activity during sleep in school-age children and adolescents: a detailed study in normal controls and participants with restless legs syndrome and narcolepsy type 1

Sleep. 2018 Apr 1;41(4). doi: 10.1093/sleep/zsy010.

Abstract

Study objectives: To evaluate leg movement activity during sleep (LMS) in normal school-age children and adolescents, to eventually establish age-specific periodic LMS (PLMS) index thresholds that support the diagnosis of restless legs syndrome (RLS), and to evaluate the utility of other LMS indices.

Methods: Polysomnographic recordings from 61 controls, 46 children with RLS, and 44 children with narcolepsy type 1 (NT1) were analyzed for total leg movements (LMS), PLMS, and isolated leg movements (ISOLMS) duration and indices, separately for school-age children and adolescents. Moreover, intermovement interval (IMI) graphs and time-of-night distribution of LMS were analyzed, and cut-off thresholds for PLMS index and total LMS index were assessed for the separation of RLS from controls.

Results: All indices tended to decrease from school-age children to adolescents in normal controls and in NT1, whereas in RLS, only PLMS index increased. All school-age children had a similar IMI distribution with a single peak at IMI 2-4 s followed by gradual decline. In adolescents with RLS, a second peak at IMI 10-50 s was seen. Time-of-night distribution of most indices decreased in RLS, whereas most tended to increase in NT1. A PLMS index cutoff of 2 per hour best differentiated RLS from controls in school-age children (accuracy 70.0%) and in adolescents (accuracy 70.8%); however, most participants with NT1 also showed PLMS indices higher than this threshold.

Conclusions: PLMS index alone does not reliably predict the diagnosis of RLS in children and adolescents. However, analyses of IMI distribution and time-of-night distribution provide additional elements to support a diagnosis of RLS.

Publication types

  • Research Support, Non-U.S. Gov't

MeSH terms

  • Adolescent
  • Case-Control Studies
  • Child
  • Female
  • Humans
  • Male
  • Movement / physiology*
  • Narcolepsy / physiopathology*
  • Polysomnography
  • Restless Legs Syndrome / diagnosis
  • Restless Legs Syndrome / physiopathology*
  • Sleep / physiology*