Accelerometer-measured physical activity and its impact on sleep quality in patients suffering from restless legs syndrome

Abstract Background The primary symptoms of restless legs syndrome (RLS) are sleep onset insomnia and difficulty to maintain sleep. Previous studies have shown that regular physical activity can reduce the risk of developing RLS. However, the relationship between physical activity and sleep quality...

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Main Authors: A. K. Reimers, V. Heidenreich, H-J Bittermann, G. Knapp, C. D. Reimers
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: BMC 2021-02-01
Series:BMC Neurology
Subjects:
Online Access:https://doi.org/10.1186/s12883-021-02115-w
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spelling doaj-346c5716cf5444f681cc88afc0f9fdf92021-03-11T11:56:17ZengBMCBMC Neurology1471-23772021-02-0121111010.1186/s12883-021-02115-wAccelerometer-measured physical activity and its impact on sleep quality in patients suffering from restless legs syndromeA. K. Reimers0V. Heidenreich1H-J Bittermann2G. Knapp3C. D. Reimers4Department of Sport Science and Sport, Friedrich-Alexander-University Erlangen-NurembergPractice for NeurologyPractice for NeurologyDepartment of Statistics, TU Dortmund UniversityPractice for Neurology, Paracelsus-KlinikAbstract Background The primary symptoms of restless legs syndrome (RLS) are sleep onset insomnia and difficulty to maintain sleep. Previous studies have shown that regular physical activity can reduce the risk of developing RLS. However, the relationship between physical activity and sleep quality parameters in individuals suffering from RLS has not yet been investigated by applying accelerometry. Thus, the present study investigates the impact of physical activity (measuring both intensity levels and duration of physical activity) during the day (7–12 h, 12–18 h, 18–23 h) on sleep quality in patients suffering from idiopathic RLS by applying a real-time approach. Methods In a sample of 47 participants suffering from idiopathic RLS, physical activity and sleep quality were measured over one week using accelerometers. For data analysis, physical activity levels and step counts during three periods of the day (morning, afternoon, evening) were correlated with sleep quality parameters of the subsequent night. Results This observational study revealed that in most instances physical activity was not correlated with sleep parameters (two exceptions exist: steps taken in the morning were negatively correlated with periodic leg movements during sleep, and physical activity in the evening was negatively correlated with total sleep time). The physical activity levels of the participants in this study, however, were unexpectedly high compared to population-level data and variance in physical activity was low. The average activity was 13,817 (SD = 4086) steps and 347 (SD = 117) minutes of moderate physical activity per day in females, and 10,636 (SD = 3748) steps and 269 (SD = 69) minutes of moderate physical activity in males, respectively. Participants did not engage in any vigorous physical activity. Conclusions Further interventional studies are needed to investigate the daily effects of different intensities of physical activity on RLS symptoms.https://doi.org/10.1186/s12883-021-02115-wExerciseSportsNeurologyActigraphGermanySleep
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author A. K. Reimers
V. Heidenreich
H-J Bittermann
G. Knapp
C. D. Reimers
spellingShingle A. K. Reimers
V. Heidenreich
H-J Bittermann
G. Knapp
C. D. Reimers
Accelerometer-measured physical activity and its impact on sleep quality in patients suffering from restless legs syndrome
BMC Neurology
Exercise
Sports
Neurology
Actigraph
Germany
Sleep
author_facet A. K. Reimers
V. Heidenreich
H-J Bittermann
G. Knapp
C. D. Reimers
author_sort A. K. Reimers
title Accelerometer-measured physical activity and its impact on sleep quality in patients suffering from restless legs syndrome
title_short Accelerometer-measured physical activity and its impact on sleep quality in patients suffering from restless legs syndrome
title_full Accelerometer-measured physical activity and its impact on sleep quality in patients suffering from restless legs syndrome
title_fullStr Accelerometer-measured physical activity and its impact on sleep quality in patients suffering from restless legs syndrome
title_full_unstemmed Accelerometer-measured physical activity and its impact on sleep quality in patients suffering from restless legs syndrome
title_sort accelerometer-measured physical activity and its impact on sleep quality in patients suffering from restless legs syndrome
publisher BMC
series BMC Neurology
issn 1471-2377
publishDate 2021-02-01
description Abstract Background The primary symptoms of restless legs syndrome (RLS) are sleep onset insomnia and difficulty to maintain sleep. Previous studies have shown that regular physical activity can reduce the risk of developing RLS. However, the relationship between physical activity and sleep quality parameters in individuals suffering from RLS has not yet been investigated by applying accelerometry. Thus, the present study investigates the impact of physical activity (measuring both intensity levels and duration of physical activity) during the day (7–12 h, 12–18 h, 18–23 h) on sleep quality in patients suffering from idiopathic RLS by applying a real-time approach. Methods In a sample of 47 participants suffering from idiopathic RLS, physical activity and sleep quality were measured over one week using accelerometers. For data analysis, physical activity levels and step counts during three periods of the day (morning, afternoon, evening) were correlated with sleep quality parameters of the subsequent night. Results This observational study revealed that in most instances physical activity was not correlated with sleep parameters (two exceptions exist: steps taken in the morning were negatively correlated with periodic leg movements during sleep, and physical activity in the evening was negatively correlated with total sleep time). The physical activity levels of the participants in this study, however, were unexpectedly high compared to population-level data and variance in physical activity was low. The average activity was 13,817 (SD = 4086) steps and 347 (SD = 117) minutes of moderate physical activity per day in females, and 10,636 (SD = 3748) steps and 269 (SD = 69) minutes of moderate physical activity in males, respectively. Participants did not engage in any vigorous physical activity. Conclusions Further interventional studies are needed to investigate the daily effects of different intensities of physical activity on RLS symptoms.
topic Exercise
Sports
Neurology
Actigraph
Germany
Sleep
url https://doi.org/10.1186/s12883-021-02115-w
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