The more frequent the symptoms, the stronger the connection,
study finds.
The study, by researchers from Harvard University, builds on
earlier research by the scientists that found that impotence, or erectile
dysfunction, was more common among older men with restless legs syndrome — and
the more frequent the symptoms of the sleep disorder the higher the risk of
impotence.
For the new study, the researchers started with more than
11,000 men, with an average age of 64 at the start of the trial in 2002, who
did not suffer from impotence, diabetes or arthritis. The trial, called the
Health Professionals Follow-up Study, began with the men answering a
standardized set of health-related questions.
Men were considered to have restless legs syndrome (RLS) if
they met four RLS diagnostic criteria recommended by the International RLS
Study Group and had symptoms more than five times a month.
The researchers went on to identify 1,979 cases of erectile
dysfunction. And men with restless legs syndrome were approximately 50 percent
more likely to become impotent, compared to men without the syndrome, even
after the researchers compensated for the participants' age, weight, whether
they smoked or used antidepressants, as well as the presence of several chronic
diseases.
Men who experienced restless legs syndrome symptoms up to 14
times a month were 68 percent more likely to struggle with erectile
dysfunction, the study found.
The research was presented at SLEEP 2011, the annual meeting
of the Associated Professional Sleep Societies, in Minneapolis. Because the
study was presented at a medical meeting, the conclusions should be viewed as
preliminary until published in a peer-reviewed journal.
In the Jan. 1, 2010, issue of the journal Sleep, the same
researchers reported that erectile dysfunction was more common among older men
with restless legs syndrome than those without RLS, and the link was stronger
among men with a higher frequency of restless legs symptoms.
"The mechanisms underlying the association between RLS
and erectile dysfunction could be caused by hypofunctioning of [the brain
chemical] dopamine in the central nervous system, which is associated with both
conditions," study lead author Dr. Xiang Gao, an instructor at Harvard Medical
School and an associate epidemiologist at Brigham and Women's Hospital in
Boston, said at the time.
According to the U.S. National Library of Medicine, restless
legs syndrome triggers a powerful urge to move the legs, which become
uncomfortable when lying down or sitting. Some people describe it as a
creeping, crawling, tingling or burning sensation. Moving makes your legs feel
better, but the relief doesn't last. Typically, there is no known cause for
restless legs syndrome. In some cases, it can be caused by a disease or
condition, such as anemia or pregnancy. Caffeine, tobacco and alcohol may make
symptoms worse.



No comments:
Post a Comment