## Abstract The syndrome of painful legs and moving toes consists of continuous or semicontinuous involuntary writhing movements of the toes associated with pain in the affected extremity. We report a 57βyearβold man with a 33βyear history of painless and semicontinuous involuntary movements of the
The syndrome of painful legs and moving toes
β Scribed by D. Dressler; P. D. Thompson; R. F. Gledhill; Dr. C. D. Marsden
- Publisher
- John Wiley and Sons
- Year
- 1994
- Tongue
- English
- Weight
- 845 KB
- Volume
- 9
- Category
- Article
- ISSN
- 0885-3185
No coin nor oath required. For personal study only.
β¦ Synopsis
Abstract
The clinical presentation, symptoms, and signs in 20 new patients with the painful legs and moving toes syndrome are presented. Painful legs and moving toes may develop in the setting of spinal cord and cauda equina trauma, lumbar root lesions, injuries to bony or soft tissues of the feet, and peripheral neuropathy. In 4 of the 20 cases in the present study, no definite cause was found. Pain preceded the onset of toe movements in 18 cases, but in 2 the reverse sequence occurred. The pain had many of the characteristics of causalgia, but none of the patients exhibited the full picture of reflex sympathetic dystrophy, and peripheral trauma was the trigger in only 5 cases. Several patients reported that the occurrence of toe movements was closely related to the pain, although abolition of pain with lumbar sympathetic blocks was not necessarily associated with disappearance of the movements. Several features suggest a central origin for the movements. Symptoms may begin one side and become bilateral; movements may be momentarily suppressed by voluntary action or exacerbated by changing posture; and electromyography reveals complex patterns of rhythmic activity with normal recruitment of motor units involving several myotomes. Three other patients with similar moving toes but no pain are also described. The occurrence of similar movements in the absence of pain raises the possibility that these cases represent examples at one end of a spectrum of disorders, with pain alone (causalgia) at the other end and the syndrome of painful legs and moving toes in between. Common precipitating factors are peripheral tissue, nerve, or root injury, which may lead to alterations in afferent sensory information with subsequent reorganisation of segmental or suprasegmental efferent motor activity. The altered sensory input may result in pain, abnormal efferent motor activity, or both via segmental or suprasegmental sensorimotor circuits.
π SIMILAR VOLUMES
## Abstract This case report presents a patient with painful legs and moving toes on the right side followed by the development of involuntary movements in his right hand. The frequencies of the semirhythmic muscle activities in both extremities were different. This finding excludes one central pac
I read with great interest the article by Alvarez et al. 1 In their review, they confirmed that Painful Legs and Moving Toes (PLMT's) etiology is diverse although the majority of patients had evidence of peripheral nerve involvement or radiculopathy. However, in some patients, namely in patients wit