Restless legs syndrome (RLS) and mirtazapine
Hi,
I recently started mirtazapine and have had a good initial reaction to the drug - my energy is better, my mood. The one rather major problem is it seems to trigger or exacerbate my RLS. I had been on tramadol (for back pain) about a week before starting mirtazapine and I have read that they can interfere with each other and cause RLS. My question is should I look for another antidepressant or is it possible that this will improve with time. Right now I am awake all night until about 5 AM when I catch a few hours of sleep. It is pretty rough.
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Research your RLS online http://www.rls.org before you get on any benzodiazepines (Diazepam). 15 years ago I started Lorazepam my Doctor prescribed and it was a God Sent, slept all night all the while I was not it. My UCSF Psychiatrist told me it is a dangerous drug, you need to get off of it. That was 11 months ago, the withdrawal and then tapering was a nightmare. You need to do all the search you can, first the benzodiazepine drug side effects etc. RLS deprives you of your sleep and your body cannot heal without sleep. My RLS came back and I rub VOLTAREN GEL ON WHICHEVER LEG WONT STOP. The only problem now is they no longer have it as a prescription and the OTC is less potent and takes longer to take affect. I am going to try Living Water I read about on Mayo Connect. Good Luck. P.S. You can research Benzos at https://www.benzoinfo.com/
As someone who has RLS, may I offer a couple of suggestions:
There is a national RLS organization, http://www.rls.org which has an abundance of free information. Most PCPs and many neurologists have thin knowledge about RLS and are regrettably often not good resources for treatment. The RLS Foundation has identified 12 Quality Care Centers throughout the U.S. (of course, the wonderful Mayo Clinic in Rochester, MN, my birthplace, is on the list). These centers are the REAL experts on RLS. One of the first lines of approach to RLS treatment is to check the ferritin level to ensure that it is high enough (for RLS it is recommended to aim for a value of 100 or higher), and take supplemental oral iron to increase it as needed. This in itself may alleviate RLS symptoms totally or to a great extent.
Good morning @tim1028. This is good information but I must say that no one should take these supplements without having blood work first! Taking any supplemental ferritin without needing it can send the entire body out of whack!
Please be careful. Don't you agree?
Thank you for your concern, Merry, with which I absolutely agree. I was likely unclear in my post that the ferritin level should be checked first before taking any oral iron supplement (under a medical provider's guidance).
Part of the problem with restless legs syndrome is this: The majority of doctors do not understand RLS management and do not recognize that a low-but-normal ferritin level is not normal if you have RLS. It needs to be boosted. This is the first line approach, because medications to resolve RLS can in themselves cause problems like amplification.
Thankfully, there are medical providers at the Quality Care Centers such as Mayo who are true experts in treating RLS. The RLS Foundation website is a good place to start. Wrongly treated RLS can be a medical disaster for patients. Been there. Done that.
I understand! The neurologist picked up on mine. I was lucky. I've spent many nights awake because of those awful feelings inside of them until I learned that if I took enough ropinirole (prescribed by my dr.) and took it by 5 PM I was good. I agree that not enough medical professionals know how to treat it.
I have some blood work due soon and will look at my levels. I'm usually low and will check to see what my Neurologist says about that!
Thank you for bringing more very useful and important information to this very bothersome syndrome.
I’m thinking that Primidone could be having an impact on my depression/anxiety, agitation, etc that I thought were all from Paxil withdrawal. Bi just read these can be side effects from Primidone!
Dammit! The neuro didn’t mention any of this.
How did you taper off Primidone? I’m on 50 am and 50 pm
Does anyone take Pramipexole for Restless Legs Syndrome?
I take it, and it helps some. Of course there is no cure for RLS,
but the Pramipexole does help me get some sleep. I've had
this RLS problem for over 30 years, and will probably die with it.
Is anyone out there trying to find a cure for RLS?
Some homeopathic doctors recommend magnesium.
Mirtazpine 7.5 mg is sometimes used for insomnia. Higher doses don’t appear to work for insomnia.
I took magnesium years ago....and it didn't ease the agony of RLS one bit.