Change of iron content in brain regions after intravenous iron therapy in restless legs syndrome: quantitative susceptibility mapping study

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Abstract

Study Objectives: The pathomechanism of restless legs syndrome (RLS) is related to brain iron deficiency and iron therapy is effective for RLS; however, the effect of iron therapy on human brain iron state has never been studied with magnetic resonance imaging. This study aimed to investigate the change of brain iron concentrations in patients with RLS after intravenous iron therapy using quantitative susceptibility mapping (QSM). Methods: We enrolled 31 RLS patients and 20 healthy controls. All participants underwent initial baseline (t0) assessment using brain magnetic resonance imaging, serum iron status, and sleep questionnaires including international RLS Study Group rating scale (IRLS). RLS patients underwent follow-up tests at 6 and 24 weeks (t1 and t2) after receiving 1000 mg ferric carboxymaltose. Iron content of region-of-interest on QSM images was measured for 13 neural substrates using the fixed-shaped method. Results: RLS symptoms evaluated using IRLS were significantly improved after iron treatment (t0: 29.7 ± 6.5, t1: 19.5 ± 8.5, t2: 21.3 ± 10.1; p

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Kim, T. J., Kim, M. H., Kim, J. H., Jun, J. S., Byun, J. I., Sunwoo, J. S., … Jung, K. Y. (2023). Change of iron content in brain regions after intravenous iron therapy in restless legs syndrome: quantitative susceptibility mapping study. Sleep, 46(8). https://doi.org/10.1093/sleep/zsad154

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