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Older Women at Risk of Sleeptime Leg-Movement Disorder

TUESDAY, Oct. 3 (HealthDay News) -- A disorder called "periodic leg movement during sleep" (PLMS) may be more common in older women, U.S. researchers report.

PLMS involves uncontrollable, repetitive tightening or flexing of leg muscles and is distinct from another condition, "restless legs syndrome," in that it usually only occurs during sleep.

Researchers at the University of California, San Francisco, noted that PLMS can lead to long-term health problems and they urged people with the disorder to consult with a sleep specialist.

The study of 455 women, averaging nearly 83 years of age, found that two-thirds of them experienced five or more leg movements during an hour of sleep, and 52 percent had 15 or more leg movements per hour.

It also found that leg movements disturbed the sleep of 27 percent of the women five or more times per hour, and woke 6 percent of the women 15 or more times in an hour.

Women whose sleep was disrupted by PLMS had a significantly higher arousal index, lower sleep efficiency, a higher percentage of sleep in stages 1-2, and a lower percentage of stages 3-4 and REM, the study said.

The findings are in the latest issue of the Journal of Clinical Sleep Medicine.

Both children and adults can have PLM, but the risk increases with age. Up to 34 percent of people over age 60 have PLMS.

More information

The National Sleep Foundation has more about periodic limb movements during sleep.



-- Robert Preidt



SOURCE: American Academy of Sleep Medicine, news release, Oct. 1, 2006

Last Updated: Oct. 3, 2006

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