F wave in restless legs syndrome, as an electrophysiological response of clinical relief

Neurol Res. 2022 Aug;44(8):719-725. doi: 10.1080/01616412.2022.2042123. Epub 2022 Feb 20.

Abstract

Objective: The study aimed to evaluate the impact of postural changes on the F wave-related parameters and whether those changes were associated with clinical relaxation, which was achieved in restless legs syndrome patients with standing up.

Methods: F wave duration (FWD), compound muscle action potential duration (CMAPD), and FWD/CMAPD ratio were evaluated in supine and upward positions in 18 restless legs syndrome patients and compared with 18 age and gender-matched healthy volunteers.

Results: FWD/CMAPD was significantly higher for the tibial nerve at supine position (p = 0.043) but not at upright position (p = 0.206) and for ulnar nerve, both at supine (p = 0.007) and upright positions (p = 0.023) in RLS patients compared to controls. Ulnar FWD decreased significantly at the upright position in both control and RLS patients (p = 0.035, p = 0.028, respectively). CMAPD decreased only in the control group with standing up for both ulnar and tibial nerves (p = 0.048, p = 0.017, respectively).

Discussion: Ulnar and tibial FWD/CMAPD ratios increased in RLS patients compared to controls. However, FWD/CMAPD was not affected by the posture within the groups. Postural change seems to be a factor that decreased ulnar FWD both in RLS patients and the control group. Ulnar and tibial CMAPD reduced only in healthy controls with an upright position. Tibial and ulnar FWD/CMAPD ratios are favorable electrophysiological parameters diagnosing RLS. The tibial FWD/CMAPD ratio loses its significance only when the patient stands up, reflecting the clinical relief achieved with the postural change.

Keywords: F wave; Restless legs syndrome; electrophysiology; nerve conduction study.

MeSH terms

  • Humans
  • Restless Legs Syndrome*