2013
DOI: 10.2147/jprls.s40358
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Sleep improvement for restless legs syndrome patients. Part III: effect of treatment assignment belief on sleep improvement in restless legs syndrome patients. A mediation analysis

Abstract: Two parallel-design, randomized, sham-controlled clinical trials were conducted to study the safety and efficacy of vibratory stimulation (VS) on restless legs syndrome (RLS) patients (Part I of this series of articles). Pooled data from the two studies was retroactively analyzed to compare the relative effects of actual pad assignment with therapeutic pad assignment belief on sleep improvement for patients with RLS. Patients and methods: One hundred fifty-eight patients with at least moderately severe RLS, as… Show more

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Cited by 4 publications
(6 citation statements)
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References 41 publications
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“…Sound and light shams performed comparably and may have exerted primary therapeutic effects on some patients (Part III). 43 However, vibration therapy failed to significantly improve scores on the RLS-QoL or IRLS scales. It is possible that vibration is a general aid to sleep that has no specific or unique therapeutic benefit for RLS patients.…”
Section: Resultsmentioning
confidence: 99%
See 1 more Smart Citation
“…Sound and light shams performed comparably and may have exerted primary therapeutic effects on some patients (Part III). 43 However, vibration therapy failed to significantly improve scores on the RLS-QoL or IRLS scales. It is possible that vibration is a general aid to sleep that has no specific or unique therapeutic benefit for RLS patients.…”
Section: Resultsmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…The contribution of assignment belief (the patient's belief that he was receiving treatment) to the results is further explored in Part III of this series. 43 …”
Section: Vibrating Padsmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…As previously demonstrated, 9 once RLS patients develop a belief about the type of treatment they received (active versus control), their sleep inventory scores are strongly influenced. Patients who believed they had been given a placebo reported little sleep improvement.…”
Section: Journal Of Parkinsonism and Restless Legsmentioning
confidence: 97%
“…Pad assignment (treatment pad versus sham pad) and pad assignment belief (patient belief that a treatment or sham pad was assigned) both influenced improvement in Medical Outcomes Study Sleep Problems Index II (MOS-II) 6-8 sleep scores; however, pad assignment belief was more influential. 9 Others have similarly reported the influence of patient belief on RCT outcomes. 10 Thus, we now examine inactive (control) effect sizes, comparing sham effect sizes in VS trials to placebo effect sizes in RLS drug trials.…”
Section: Rationalementioning
confidence: 99%
“…These patients could have focused attention on light or sound, tuned light or sound to an intensity that they felt was comforting, and diverted their attention away from RLS sensations (Part III of this report). 66 Light can be an effective counterstimulus to extremity pain. 26 Similarly, sound has been demonstrated to modulate pain, [67][68][69][70] and has been used as a counterstimulus for patients with conditions such as tinnitus and auditory hallucinations.…”
Section: Limitationsmentioning
confidence: 99%