Are Restless Legs a Joke?
What the hell is going on with my legs?
It took me about 10 years before I googled something like, “what’s a strange feeling in the legs at night?”
The first result, “Restless Legs Syndrome (RLS),” which I’d never heard of, matched exactly what I was feeling.
The Mayo Clinic website said, “RLS is a neurologic disorder that affects sensation and movement in the legs and causes the legs to feel uncomfortable. This results in an irresistible feeling of wanting to move your legs to make them comfortable.” [mayoclinic.org]
While visiting a few dedicated RLS forums, it seemed almost everyone was recommending a ‘miracle’ drug called pramipexole. It was even one of the criteria for determining if you had Restless Legs Syndrome RLS or not. If it worked, you had RLS. I went straight to the doctor and got a prescription. It was readily available, often used for Parkinsons Diseases patients. For RLS they recommended a micro dose.
The first night I took it I was expecting some kind of psychodelic experience, but I didn’t really feel any different, until I woke up the next morning after 8 hours of deep sleep. I was completely convinced — it’s a miracle! — along with everyone else on the forums.
I was on pramipexoles for 4 years… the first year I slept like a baby, and then things started falling apart, horribly, until I knew I had to get off that insidiously addictive drug. I even looked forward to taking it at 10pm every night, even though I knew it had stopped working. Stupidly, I tried going ‘cold turkey.’ (Now I know it should be done gradually, weaning off over many months.) It took three attempts — each time 5 consecutive days without sleep. On the 6th day of the third attempt, I got a few hours sleep. I felt like myself again for the first time in years.
It took several more years before I really felt ‘normal.’ Pramipexole is a dopamine agonist, which means it boosts your brain’s production of dopamine — the pleasure/reward hormone, which also controls movement. Apparently pramipexoles make you impulsive, like a gambler. But dangerously, it burns out the dopamine receptors in your brain. The drug also masks the real cause of RLS.
With that monkey off my back, my RLS gradually became milder. And without the masking effects of drugs, I was able to do some serious experimenting on myself to get to the route cause of this monster. After many trial and errors, I stumbled upon something interesting, which seems to explain a lot about what’s going on. That’s why I’ve started this blog, to share what I’ve learned. Hopefully, this will help someone else too.