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Parkinson Disease Dementia clinical trials

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NCT ID: NCT04997642 Recruiting - Parkinson Disease Clinical Trials

Parkinson's Disease and Movement Disorders Clinical Database

Start date: September 30, 2019
Phase:
Study type: Observational [Patient Registry]

The research database contains demographic and family history information, longitudinal information on the clinical symptoms, neuropsychological profile and treatments, stored biological samples, and brain images of patients with Parkinson's disease and related disorders receiving care at the Parkinson's disease and Movement Disorders Center and the Hospital of the University of Pennsylvania.

NCT ID: NCT04831281 Completed - Clinical trials for Dementia With Lewy Bodies

ATH-1017 Treatment in Subjects With Parkinson's Disease Dementia or Dementia With Lewy Bodies (SHAPE Trial)

Start date: January 20, 2022
Phase: Phase 2
Study type: Interventional

This study is designed to evaluate the safety and treatment effects of fosgonimeton (ATH-1017) in subjects with Parkinson's Disease Dementia or Dementia with Lewy Bodies, with a randomized treatment duration of 26 weeks.

NCT ID: NCT04649164 Completed - Clinical trials for Dementia With Lewy Bodies

Learning to PERSEVERE: Peer Mentor Support and Caregiver Education in Lewy Body Dementia

Start date: November 2, 2020
Phase: N/A
Study type: Interventional

The investigators propose to adapt, improve, and implement a peer mentor support and caregiver education (PERSEVERE) program to improve LBD-specific caregiving mastery. Lewy body dementia (LBD) is the second most common dementia, comprising Parkinson's Disease (PD) dementia and Dementia with Lewy Bodies. LBD causes deterioration in multiple cognitive, motor, and neuropsychiatric domains, leading to heavy reliance on family caregivers. Patients with LBD are at a far greater risk of hospitalizations for falls, neuro-psychiatric symptoms, and infections, which are often preventable or treatable at home if recognized. Studies cite a crucial need for education and support of LBD caregivers, who face high rates of caregiver strain and adverse outcomes. Evidence from other chronic conditions supports peer mentoring as a potentially effective intervention to provide education and social support. PERSEVERE builds on our team's ongoing work of creating and testing a peer mentoring program for homebound PD patients' caregivers that has shown promising feasibility and acceptability. In the proposed project, the investigators will convene focus groups of former mentors and mentees, along with current caregivers, to provide formative information to shape the revised PERSEVERE curriculum that will include in-person mentor training and a comprehensive mentoring handbook. The curriculum will focus on key areas of LBD caregiving mastery, including: fall prevention, infections, neuropsychiatric symptoms (particularly hallucinations, delusions, anxiety, and depression), and advance directives. The investigators will enroll and train a new cohort of 36 LBD caregiver peer mentors who will be matched with 30 current LBD caregivers. Each pair will be instructed to speak on a weekly basis, using the 16-week structured curriculum as a framework. The study team will support the mentors with monthly conference calls and day-to-day availability for concerns. The investigators will assess the feasibility and fidelity of the intervention via online study diaries tracking the frequency, duration, and content of calls. During mentor training, the investigators will assess the change in mentors' caregiver mastery and LBD knowledge pre- and post-training. During the PERSEVERE intervention, the investigators will determine the change in mentees' caregiver mastery, LBD knowledge, and loneliness.

NCT ID: NCT04575259 Completed - Clinical trials for Parkinson Disease Dementia

OLE Study for Patients With Parkinson's Disease With Dementia Enrolled in Study ANAVEX2-73-PDD-001

Start date: October 10, 2019
Phase: Phase 2
Study type: Interventional

This is a Phase 2 open-label extension study to evaluate the effects of ANAVEX2-73 on safety and efficacy of daily treatment.

NCT ID: NCT04518917 Completed - Parkinson Disease Clinical Trials

Sing for Your Saunter - Dementia Supplement

SFYS-D
Start date: April 19, 2021
Phase: N/A
Study type: Interventional

Older adults, and particularly those with Parkinson disease (PD), may experience walking difficulties that negatively impact their daily function and quality of life. People that have PD plus dementia are also likely to experience walking difficulties. This project will examine the impact of music and mentally singing on walking performance, with a goal of understanding what types of rhythmic cues are most helpful. Pilot work from the investigators suggests that imagined, mental singing (i.e., singing in head) while while walking helps people walk faster with greater stability, whereas walking to music also helps people walk faster but with reduced stability. In this study, the investigators will recruit people who have PD plus dementia. The investigators will compare walking while mentally singing, walking while singing out loud, and walking while listening to music, using personalized cues tailored to each person's walking performance. The investigators hypothesize temporal variability of gait will be lower in the mental singing and singing conditions compared to listening to music; and that mental singing, singing, and listening to music will elicit similar improvements in stride length.

NCT ID: NCT03840837 Completed - Parkinson Disease Clinical Trials

Cholinergic Neurotransmission in Mobility and Cognition in Parkinson Disease

Start date: May 2, 2019
Phase: Phase 4
Study type: Interventional

This is a single-site non-randomized open label pilot study. The investigators will use accelerometer-based instrumented gait analysis and computerized cognitive testing to study the interaction of motor and cognitive dysfunction in Parkinson disease dementia (PDD), and the effect of rivastigmine on motor and cognitive performance. All study participants will be tested for motor and cognitive performance at baseline (arm 1). A subgroup of study participants will then be treated with rivastigmine for 12 weeks (arm 2), and the effect of this treatment on gait measures and cognitive measures will be analyzed at the follow-up visit 12 weeks after the baseline visit. Specifically, we will determine which components of motor and cognitive impairment are associated with each other, and which components of the two domains respond to rivastigmine-mediated stimulation of cholinergic neurotransmission.

NCT ID: NCT03550131 Completed - Alzheimer Disease Clinical Trials

Innovations in Dementia Empowerment and Action

IDEA
Start date: December 5, 2018
Phase: N/A
Study type: Interventional

The lack of efficacious research-based interventions for such vulnerable older adults with Alzheimer's disease and related dementias (AD/RD) and their caregivers (CGs) is a significant public health problem. Caregiving of sexual/gender minority older adults with AD/RD is of concern due to social stigma, marginalization, and isolation, which may be barriers to sustaining caregiving. It is necessary and timely to translate evidence-based culturally adaptable interventions for this underserved and stigmatized population. Reducing Disability in Alzheimer's Disease (RDAD) has been evaluated in a randomized controlled trial and has shown to successfully train community-dwelling CR (care receiver)-CG dyads to increase the physical activity and functioning of individuals with AD/RD and their CGs and to teach CGs techniques for managing behavioral symptoms of CRs. RDAD consequently decreases stress of CGs, delays institutionalization of CRs, and increases health related quality of life (HRQOL) of CRs and CGs. Thus, this study will evaluate the effect of the standard RDAD among lesbian, gay, bisexual, and transgender (LGBT) CRs with AD/RD and their CGs, and this study will test a personalized intervention tailored to better respond to distinct risks experienced by CGs and LGBT CRs with AD/RD, addressing unique sexual/gender minority CG risk factors (e.g., identity management, stigma-related adverse or traumatic life events, and lack of social support).

NCT ID: NCT01465360 Completed - Clinical trials for Mild Cognitive Impairment

Performance of AclarusDx™, a Blood-Based Transcriptomic Test for AD, in US Patients Newly Referred to a Memory Center

Start date: November 2011
Phase: N/A
Study type: Observational

The purpose of this study is to assess the performance of AclarusDx™, an investigational blood test detecting gene expression information, and intended to help physicians in making an Alzheimer's Disease diagnosis in patients having memory impairments.

NCT ID: NCT01113242 Completed - Clinical trials for Parkinson Disease Dementia

Neuropsychological Assessment of Cognitive Decline in Patients With a Definite Parkinson's Disease

Start date: June 2010
Phase:
Study type: Observational

Cognitive disorders in Parkinson's disease (PD) are not as obvious as cognitive disorders in Alzheimer disease and their diagnosis tends to be delayed. If neuropsychological assessment of cognitive decline in Parkinson's disease is well established, the thresholds of cognitive testing corresponding to a dementia are unknown. Recently, new diagnosis criteria of dementia associated with PD have been proposed by the movement disorder society. In this study two groups of patients with idiopathic PD will be separated and compared according to their Mini Mental State Examination (MMSE) score (upper or lower than 26). Included patients will have clinically idiopathic PD, will be over 65 years old and will present cognitive complain. Cognitive and mood disorders as well as motor symptoms will be assessed using validated scales and a neuropsychological assessment dispatched in two visits will be performed . Differences in the distribution of data from the two groups of patients will be assessed in statistically analysis with non parametric tests. The purpose of this study is to determine the most effective tests and their threshold value corresponding to a pathological cognitive decline.