Restless Legs Syndrome as a First Manifestation of a Cerebral Infarct

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TitreRestless Legs Syndrome as a First Manifestation of a Cerebral Infarct
Type de publicationJournal Article
Year of Publication2014
AuteursRuppert E, Kilic-Huck U, Wolff V, Tatu L, Ghobadi M, Bataillard M, Bourgin P
JournalJOURNAL OF CLINICAL SLEEP MEDICINE
Volume10
Pagination1037-1038
Type of ArticleEditorial Material
ISSN1550-9389
Mots-clésPeriodic limb movements, Pontine anteromedial infarction, Pontine stroke, Restless legs syndrome, RLS, RLS pathophysiology
Résumé

The onset of restless legs syndrome (RLS) is usually progressive and the neural substrates underlying its pathophysiology remain to be identified. Here we report on a patient presenting with acute-onset RLS that was symptomatic of a right anteromedial pontine infarction. This case is exceptional because RLS appeared several hours before the occurrence of a regressive dysarthria clumsy-hand syndrome. Additionally, millimetric MRI sections showed that the structures possibly involved in RLS pathogenesis were the corticospinal tract, the pontine nuclei, and the pontocerebellar fibers. Although this is uncommon, clinicians should be aware that RLS characterized by a sudden onset can be a clinical manifestation related to stroke.

DOI10.5664/jcsm.4048