Cryptic Restlessness and Sleepwalking
pii: sp- 00222-16
http://dx.doi.org/10.5665/sleep.5986
LETTERS TO THE EDITOR
Cryptic Restlessness and Sleepwalking
Response to Lopez and Dauvilliers. Is restless legs syndrome involved in ambulation related to sleepwalking? SLEEP 2016;39(4):955–956
Michael Howell, MD, FAASM
Department of Neurology, University of Minnesota, Minneapolis, MN; Program Director, Clinical Sleep Medicine Fellowship, Minnesota Regional Sleep Disorders Center,
Hennepin County Medical Center, Minneapolis, MN; Medical Director, Fairview Sleep Services-Edina, MN
SLEEP, Vol. 39, No. 7, 2016
whose insomnia have restless features.4 It was methodologically understandable that Lopez et al. did not include patients
in their series whose SW behaviors were induced with sleeping
medications; however, it precludes them from concluding that
RLS or more cryptic forms of restlessness are not predisposing
them to sleepwalking.1,2
Finally, several independent investigators have already
linked RLS to the form of sleepwalking where individuals eat
(sleep-related eating disorder [SRED]), and these individuals
frequently respond to RLS treatments.4,7,9–11 While current
ICSD-3 criteria separate SW from SRED, recent reports reveal
an overlap between these two conditions.12 Both conditions
are NREM parasomnias arising out of N3 in the first half of
the night, and 66% of patients with SRED describe comorbid
sleepwalking (without eating) behaviors.12
I concede to Lopez et al. that RLS (strictly defined) does not
appear to be linked to non-medication induced SW. However,
it is still reasonable to conclude that RLS (strictly defined) is
a predisposition where the subjects eat (SRED); it is also still
reasonable to hypothesize that subtle motor restlessness, not
enough to meet RLS criteria but enough to interfere with sleep
and trigger a prescription for a sedative hypnotic agent, is a
predisposition for sleepwalking as well.
Regardless, I greatly appreciate Lopez et al. contributions to
our understanding of this common and occasionally injurious
condition. Sleepwalking is one of the oldest reported medical
conditions with untested models to base explorations of pathophysiology upon. Further studies of those who are predisposed
to medication induced sleepwalking can be of great value and
help provide these somnambulists with a restful, not restless,
night of sleep.
1481
CITATION
Howell M. Cryptic restlessness and sleepwalking. SLEEP
2016;39(7):1481–1482.
REFERENCES
1. Lopez R, Dauvilliers Y. Is restless legs syndrome involved in
ambulation related to sleepwalking? Sleep 2016;39:955–6.
2. Lopez R, Jaussent I, Dauvilliers Y. Pain in sleepwalking: a clinical
enigma. Sleep 2015;38:1693–8.
3. Howell M. Darwin’s predisposition and the restlessness that drives
sleepwalking. Sleep 2015;38:1667–8.
4. Howell MJ, Schenck CH. Restless nocturnal eating: a common feature
of Willis-Ekbom Syndrome (RLS). J Clin Sleep Med 2012;8:413–9.
5. Rinaldi F, Galbiati A, Marelli S, et al. Defining the phenotype of
restless legs syndrome/Willis-Ekbom disease (RLS/WED): a clinical
and polysomnographic study. J Neurol 2016;263:396–402.
6. Aquino CC, Mestre T, Lang AE. Restless genital syndrome in
Parkinson disease. JAMA Neurol 2014;71:1559–61.
Letter to the Editor—Howell
I thank Lopez et al. for providing further insight on the topic
of sleepwalking (SW), a common, occasionally injurious disorder for which there is scant therapeutic evidence.1,2 In their
letter responding to my editorial, “Darwin’s Predisposition
and the Restlessness that Drives Sleepwalking,” 3 Lopez et
al. report on their data demonstrating an absence of a link
between isolated SW and clinically defined restless legs syndrome (RLS).1 Their additional data are valuable to note, especially in light of the paucity of data regarding the etiology
of this common condition.
However, Lopez et al. may have misunderstood my editorial
and did not consider the wealth of data linking RLS to cases
of SW induced by medications, as well as when individuals eat
during their SW behaviors (sleep-related eating disorder).
Of note, I did not suggest that RLS, using current restrictive
diagnostic criteria, is the predisposition of isolated SW, but instead that a more subtle form of restlessness (I described it as
“cryptic motor restlessness”) could explain many cases of medication induced sleepwalking. Of note, medication-induced
SW was specifically excluded from their analysis.1–3
It is widely recognized by sleep clinicians that, while helpful,
RLS diagnostic criteria fail to characterize many patients who
struggle to fall asleep due to discomfort that compels them to
move.4–6 Patients will describe symptoms in innumerous ways
(painful, cramping, deep itching, numbness, pulling, crawling),
and not surprisingly many patients will attribute the discomfort to some other problem: “that is just my back pain” or “my
diabetic neuropathy.” Others describe a restlessness not confined to the lower extremities, for example: restless arms, restless abdomen, and restless genitalia.6 Many patients ultimately
feel that these symptoms cannot be placed into language and
merely state that “there is something wrong that is compelling me to move.” Other nocturnal urges that do not fit into
the strict RLS criteria have also been described, such as restless eating and restless smoking.4,7–9 Further, commonly prescribed medications such as alpha 2-delta ligands (gabapentin,
pregabalin) and opioids can mask restlessness and prevent
proper diagnosis.
These patients with poorly characterized restlessness often
present to a clinician and request a medication to initiate sleep.
Considering how frequently these agents are dispensed (e.g.,
one agent, zolpidem, in one year, 2011, in one country, the
United States, was prescribed more than 39 million times for 9
million individuals (Food and Drug Administration: http://fda.
gov/Drugs/DrugSafety/ucm334033.htm), it is not surprising
that many of these patients are given a benzodiazepine receptor agonist. These medications suppress brain activity in
regions of memory and executive function and thus would be
expected to unleash amnestic ambulating behavior in patients
SLEEP, Vol. 39, No. 7, 2016
12. Brion A, Flamand M, Oudiette D, Voillery D, Golmard JL, Arnulf I.
Sleep-related eating disorder versus sleepwalking: a controlled study.
Sleep Med 2012;13:1094–101.
SUBMISSION & CORRESPONDENCE INFORMATION
Submitted for publication April, 2016
Submitted in final revised form May, 2016
Accepted for publication May, 2016
Address correspondence to: Michael Howell MD, FAASM, 717 Delaware
St SE Suite 516 , Minneapolis, MN 55414; Tel: (612) 624-9025; Fax: (612)
624-8111
DISCLOSURE STATEMENT
The author has indicated no financial conflicts of interest.
7. Provini F, Antelmi E, Vignatelli L, et al. Association of restless legs
syndrome with nocturnal eating: a case-control study. Mov Disord
2009;24:871–7.
8. Provini F, Antelmi E, Vignatelli L, et al. Increased prevalence of
nocturnal s (...truncated)