View clinical trials related to Parkinsonian Disorders.
Filter by:Approximately 60% of the patients with Parkinson's Disease (PD) that receive Levodopa therapy eventually develop response fluctuations in motor symptoms, such as rigidity, freezing and akinesia. Patients experience an 'off'-period just before the next dose of dopaminergic medication is needed, called the 'wearing-off'-phenomena. Wearing-off is also accompanied by non-motor symptoms such as depression, anxiety, pain and thinking disability. Together, these motor and non-motor symptoms have a major impact on the quality of life of patients and their partner or caregiver. Patients with wearing-off often experience severe anxiety and panic symptoms that are incongruent with the severity of the motor symptoms during an 'off' period. These symptoms include stress, dizziness, pounding/racing of the heart, dyspnoea and hyperventilation. This type of anxiety is called wearing-off related anxiety (WRA) and might be a consequence of the hypersensitivity towards somatic manifestations and effects of a wearing-off period. This bodily misperception can have major consequences for the patient's feelings and behaviour. The experienced anxiety is often not consciously linked to the wearing-off and is therefore not well recognized by neurologists. Treatment as usual in response fluctuations is physiotherapy, consisting of physical exercises for mobility problems, freezing, dyskinesias, etc. This kind of training hardly touches upon the mental aspects and the role of anxiety as integral element of the response fluctuations. Cognitive behaviour therapy (CBT, including exposure in vivo) is sometimes used to treat WRA, but seems to have unsatisfactory results since the changed body awareness is not sufficiently addressed. Also, the methods used in cognitive therapies focus on the elimination of WRA which is often not realistic since wearing-off symptoms will remain or even increase during disease progression. As of yet, there are no known alternative intervention options. This study focuses on a new intervention by integrating elements from physiotherapy, mindfulness, CBT (mainly exposure), Acceptance and Commitment Therapy (ACT) and psycho-education. Objective: The current proposal aims at investigating the effect of a multidisciplinary non-verbal intervention on the awareness and modulation of WRA to improve self-efficacy, mobility, mood, and quality of life as compared to usual care. Study design: Randomized controlled clinical trial. Study population: Thirty-six PD patients who experience WRA. Intervention: Patients with PD are randomly allocated into one of two groups (n= 18 each). One group receives the experimental 'body-awareness therapy', while the second group receives regular group-physiotherapy (treatment as usual). Both interventions will take 6 weeks in which 2 sessions per week with a duration of 1,5 hour will be performed. Main study parameters/endpoints: The General Self-Efficacy Scale is the primary outcome measure and will be assessed prior to, directly after and 18 weeks after the intervention.
Excessive daytime sleepiness (EDS) is observed in 30 to 50 % of patients with Parkinson's disease (PD) patients, Dementia with Lewy Bodies (DLB) and Multiple System Atrophy (MSA). It is a major complain and represents a socially relevant problem as unintended episodes of sleep can also occur while driving for example. Arterial hypotension is frequently observed in patients with PD, DLB and MSA and considered as a marker of autonomic failure. Sleepiness is known to occur preferentially when patients are having arterial hypotension whatever the cause (i.e. postprandial period, administration of hypotensive medication such as dopamine agonists). We hypothesize that arterial hypotension is associated with abnormal sleepiness. We have observed this association in an on-going epidemiological survey Hyperglycaemia induced by oral glucose load - a standardized model simulating food intake during a meal - provokes arterial hypotension in the majority of Parkinson's disease patients with dysautonomia. It can be hypothesised that sleep attacks in these patients could be mediated by this fall in blood pressure.
The spinocerebellar ataxias (SCAs) are a genetically heterogeneous group of dominantly inherited progressive ataxia disorders. More than 30 different gene loci have been identified so far. The most common SCAs, which together account for more than half of all affected families, are SCA1, SCA2, SCA3, and SCA6. Each of these disorders is caused by a translated CAG repeat expansion mutation. SCA1, SCA2, and SCA3 usually have an onset between 30 and 40, and SCA6 usually begins at the age of 50 to 60. In addition to progressive ataxia, SCA1, SCA2, and SCA3 frequently present with additional non-ataxic symptoms, including parkinsonism. Carbidopa/levodopa was found to have a good therapeutic effect on parkinsonism. The SCA6 used to be considered a pure cerebellar disorder. However, a recent large study on natural history of SCAs found that patients with SCA6 often had nonataxia symptoms, an observation that challenges the view that SCA6 is a purely cerebellar disorder. Parkinsonism in SCA6 was rarely reported, except in a case serial, or a small size study in Korean patients. Dopamine transporter (DAT) is a very reliable dopaminergic neuronal marker. Reduction in DAT density detected by I123 SPECT DaTscanTM in the dopaminergic neuron terminal striatum was reported in one small size study consisting of eight SCA6 patients in Korea. There was also a PET study using different radioligand for DAT in a small group of SCA6 patients in Germany, which found sub-clinical change in DAT density in some patients with SCA6. There has been no study so far in the US on parkinsonism and other non-ataxia spectrum and striatal dopaminergic damage in SCA6, probably because non-ataxia feature of SCA6 hasn't received much attention, and also because DaTscanTM hasn't been clinically available in US until recently. The only two published studies on SCA6 and DAT were from Korea and Germany, which were of small subject size. There has been no treatment available for SCA6 so far. Our hypothesis is that parkinsonism and other non-ataxia spectrum and striatal dopaminergic neurodegeneration are part of the SCA6 disease spectrum.
This study is designed to determine if magnetic resonance imaging (MRI) measures can be used to diagnose and monitor the progression of Parkinson's disease (PD) while distinguishing between PD and parkinsonisms [conditions that are PD look-a-like diseases such as progressive supranuclear palsy (PSP) or multiple system atrophy (MSA)] when combined with changes in certain proteins in body fluids that are related to iron (Fe).
The purpose of clinical trials is to evaluate safety and tolerability of Fetal Mesencephalic Dopamine Neuronal Precursor Cells as a treatment for Patients with Parkinson's disease.
Freezing of gait (FOG) means that patients cannot walk without any known causes, other than parkinsonism, which is very disabling symptom. Patients descirbe their feeling of the feet suddenly being glued to the floor. Transcranial magnetic stiumation is a noninvasive procedure using electromagnetic induction to stimulate brain. Transcranial magnetic stiumation (rTMS) can selectively change brain activity to enhance desired effects. The aim of this study is to the therapeutic effect of rTMS for the FOG.
The objective of this protocol is to analyze the sensitivity and specificity of 18F-DTBZ PET to the differential diagnosis of Parkinson's disease (PD) and other parkinsonism disorders, including multiple system atrophy (MSA), corticobasal degeneration (CBD), and progressive supranuclear palsy (PSP).
The primary objective of this protocol is to access the utility of 18F-DTBZ PET imaging as an in vivo biomarker to monitor neurodegeneration of both PD mouse models and PD patients. Secondary, the investigators will analyze progression rate of genetic-proving PARK8 and PARK6 patients who have homogeneous phenotype and genotype by 18F-DTBZ PET imaging.
This is a double-blind, placebo-controlled, Phase IV trial , comparing HMS 90® versus placebo (soy protein) as add-on (adjuvant) therapy in subjects with idiopathic Parkinson's Disease. The principal objective is to evaluate the changes in biomarkers of oxidative stress and,plasma amino acids, as well as improvement of clinical symptoms and brain function
This study is being conducted this study to determine whether injections of Xeomin®, a type of botulinum toxin into the glands that produce saliva (one pair just below and in front of the ear and the other just under the jaw line) are safe and effective to treat excessive saliva, or drooling in patients with Parkinson's Disease (PD)/parkinsonism.