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Review
. 2006 Jun;10(3):185-96.
doi: 10.1016/j.smrv.2006.01.004.

Dopamine and the spinal cord in restless legs syndrome: does spinal cord physiology reveal a basis for augmentation?

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Review

Dopamine and the spinal cord in restless legs syndrome: does spinal cord physiology reveal a basis for augmentation?

Walter Paulus et al. Sleep Med Rev. 2006 Jun.

Abstract

The pathophysiology of restless legs syndrome (RLS) is incompletely understood. L-DOPA, as the precursor of dopamine, as well as dopamine agonists, plays an essential role in the treatment of RLS leading to the assumption of a key role of dopamine function in the pathophysiology of RLS. Periodic limb movements in sleep are a key feature of RLS. They are generated in the spinal cord. Here we review RLS phenomenology on the basis of known dopaminergic influence on spinal control, which has been studied a great deal in recent decades in animals. In particular, we propose that the differential effects of l-DOPA and opioids on early and late flexor reflexes may be linked to the phenomenon of augmentation.

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