Quote:
Originally Posted by skywalker1988
I noticed tonight when I was trying to lay down and go to sleep, my body is certain parts started to jerk really bad. It would happen a couple minutes a part, then there was once were my entire body jerked really hard. When I'm walking around or sitting, it doesn't happen though. Any ideas how to get it to stop?
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I too get these problems - have been for a month and a half straight. Consult a doctor as I am not one, but trazadone has helped me get to sleep, but not with the twitching/jerks.
It is most likely something related to myclonic jerking. Myclonic jerking is normal in most people, although as I have experienced it can get very bad to the point of causing sleep deprivation. The worst part is the catch 22 of the jerks - they get worse when you sleep less, which in turn makes you jerk more, and so on and so forth. One thing I am pursuing is a special version of them called hygonic jerks. Same jerks as before, but happen EXACTLY the moment you begin to fall asleep.
Not sure how severe your problem is but two posts that explain a bit:
http://neurotalk.psychcentral.com/sh...ht=sleep+jerks
http://neurotalk.psychcentral.com/sh...ht=sleep+jerks
Lastly, depending on where in your body it is coming from you may be able to help with a couple of different meds:
DISCLOSURE: do a sleep study and talk to doctor to figure out exact underlying problem and best course of action BUT -
pramiprexole and/or requip are used often to treat Restless leg syndrome. Restless leg syndrome can occure anywhere in the body, even your abdomine trunk, and torso. Pramiprexole is an anti-parkensen's med and requip is anti-seizure. THIS DOES NOT MEAN YOU HAVE PARKENSEN'S OR SEIZURE DISORDER but they do help some.
Also, I know many have had success with klonopen, although it can cause dependency and lose it's effectiveness over time. Lastly, another med, not exactly sure how it works is Keppra. I believe it is an anti-seizure as well.
In any case, talk to your general practitioner, and consider a sleep study to see if you have restless leg syndrome or another disorder that is similar called periodic limb momvement. Again, with periodic limb movement you may have symptoms in abs, trunk, neck, or head/ combo of them all.
One other thing (SORRY LONG POST), if these things do not help or if you don't want the $$, time, and worry of a sleep study a simple vitamin deficency may be to blame. Simple blood test would tell.
Best of luck, and let me know if I can help answer more questions.