1. Nighttime Agitation in Persons with Dementia as a Manifestation of Restless Legs Syndrome.
- Author
-
Richards, Kathy C., Allen, Richard P., Morrison, Janet, Fry, Liam, Kovach, Christine R., Rangel, Angelica, Loera, Ana, Wang, Yanyan, Hanlon, Alexandra L., Lozano, Alicia J., and Bliwise, Donald L.
- Subjects
- *
SCIENTIFIC observation , *TRANSFERRIN , *TIME , *IRON , *AGE distribution , *SEROTONIN uptake inhibitors , *AGITATION (Psychology) , *COGNITION , *ACTIGRAPHY , *REGRESSION analysis , *ANTIHISTAMINES , *DEMENTIA patients , *SLEEP disorders , *SEVERITY of illness index , *PSYCHOLOGICAL tests , *QUALITY of life , *RESTLESS legs syndrome - Abstract
Nighttime agitation or "sundowning" is challenging for clinicians and caregivers to manage in older adults in the dementia stage of Alzheimer's disease (AD-D). Our research previously revealed that nighttime agitation might be a manifestation of restless legs syndrome (RLS). The current study aims to describe the characteristics of older adults with AD-D, nighttime agitation, and RLS, and to evaluate sleep disturbance and iron status in relation to nighttime agitation severity. An observational study with baseline descriptive and correlational data from a clinical trial. Long-term care (n = 69) and independent living (n = 7); age 82.91 ± 9.46 years, with AD-D, nighttime agitation, and RLS. Trained observers counted nighttime agitation behaviors. Independent variables were age; cognition measured by the Mini-Mental State Examination; minutes slept from actigraphy; transferrin saturation percentage (TS%) and transferrin from fasting blood samples; and illness severity using the Cumulative Illness Rating Scale for Geriatrics. Bivariate and multivariable linear regression models were generated. In the multivariable model, sleep minutes (P =.002) and TS% (P =.003) were negatively associated with frequency of nighttime agitation behaviors, and they explained 20% of the variance. Seventy-nine percent received 1 or more medications that worsen RLS symptoms, such as antihistamines and serotonin reuptake inhibitors. We encourage clinicians to consider nighttime agitation as a manifestation of RLS. Treatment of iron deficiency indicated by low TS% and deprescribing medications that exacerbate RLS may decrease nighttime agitation, improve sleep, and enhance quality of life in older adults with AD-D. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2021
- Full Text
- View/download PDF