View clinical trials related to Apathy.
Filter by:This pilot study will investigate the safety, feasibility, tolerability, and preliminary efficacy of accelerated high-dose repetitive transcranial magnetic stimulation (rTMS) targeting the medial prefrontal cortex (mPFC) to address apathy symptoms in individuals with chronic stroke.
The primary objective of this study is to test the effect of a diet and exercise program in older adults with insulin resistance and a motivation disorder known as apathy. The main questions the study aims to answer are: 1. Does the diet and exercise program improve insulin resistance and apathy? 2. Does the addition of soybean to the diet enhance the effect? Participants will be given all meals for 12 weeks and will exercise under supervision. They will undergo a test of insulin sensitivity and complete questionnaires. Researchers will compare the groups given: 1. A diet to moderate the blood glucose response that contains soybean; and 2. A diet to moderate the blood glucose response that does not contain soybean.
Parkinson's Disease (PD) is often accompanied by non-motor symptoms that make treatment more difficult. One such symptom is apathy (lack of motivation and emotion). There are no treatments for apathy in PD, and this remains a major unmet need in PD patients. One possible way to target apathy in PD patients is listening to music, which has been shown to help improve apathy in older adults. Little work has explored the mechanism in which music targets apathy. Thus, the goal of this study is to understand how music listening can impact the brain towards decreasing apathy in PD patients.
The burden of non-disabling ischemic cerebrovascular events (NICE) is significantly increased. However, few previous studies have focused on affective impairment after transient ischemic attack (TIA) and minor stroke. Stroke survivors are often described as apathetic. Even though post-stroke apathy (PSA) affects one in three stroke patients,it has not hitherto received much attention. NICE-A is a prospective study aimed to explore the association between baseline apathy and probable incident stroke in a population-based sample of TIA and minor stroke adults.
The aim of this study is to test a therapeutic intervention to reduce negative symptomatic among schizophrenia patients. Since the intervention can take place within an inpatient stay, it is a short intervention. Three appointments are made with the patients within two weeks. With an adaptation of the Autobiographical Memory Test (AMT) participants will be asked to recall events from the past and to imagine future events. Patients are additionally asked to complete tasks between the sessions. One pre- and one post-measurement of negative symptoms, motives, level of functioning, hope for recovery and other co-variables are part of the study. A follow-up appointment four weeks later is intended to provide information on the longer-term impact.
Schizophrenia is a mental pathology that concerns 1% of the French population, characterized by heterogeneity of symptoms. One of them, apathy is defined as a multidimensional psychopathological state manifested by a decrease in motivation. This deficit is most common in schizophrenia and impacts the functional outcome of patients. To date, no treatment has shown a significant effect on this symptom. In other pathologies with a motivational deficit, the technique of Mental Contrasting and Implementation Intention (CM-II) showed interesting effects in improving motivation, reducing the effort related to the action. The investigators aim to propose the CM-II technique to individuals with schizophrenia to improve apathy. The investigators expected that the CM-II technique will allow an improvement of apathy which will have beneficial effects on other psychological factors (e.g., depressive symptoms). In addition, the implementation of the CM-II will provide help to global management.
Apathy is defined by quantitative decrease in goal-directed activity in comparison to the person's previous level of functioning. Apathy is a transnosographic symptom, prevalent in many neurological and psychiatric pathologies (specifically in schizophrenia and depression), and almost half of patients suffer from it. It is an important source of burden, affecting both personal and occupational life. Despite its high prevalence and negative consequences, no pharmacological or non-pharmacological treatments exist, the underlying mechanisms of apathy being poorly understood. The main aim of the present study is to advance in our knowledge of cognitive and neural mechanisms of apathy by using a multidimensional model of apathy, distinguishing three forms: executive, emotional and auto-activation/initiative. the investigators hypothesize, independently of the pathology (schizophrenia and depression), the existence of different cognitive deficits underlying each of the 3 subforms of apathy. Indeed, according to the predictions of Levy and Dubois' model (2006), executive disorders underlie the cognitive form of apathy. It may be related to lesions of the dorsolateral prefrontal cortex and the cognitive territory of the basal ganglia. Emotional apathy could be due to motivational disorder. Dysfunctions or lesions in the orbital and medial prefrontal cortex and limbic territories of the basal ganglia may underlie this. Finally, the initiative form, may be a mixed form, with both motivational and executive difficulties. Lesions or dysfunctions may affect both the cognitive and limbic territories of the basal ganglia or the anterior cingulate cortex.
Apathy is a neurocognitive syndrome characterized by reduced goal-directed behaviors, contributing to decreased patient and caregiver quality of life. Apathy pathophysiology involves disruption of cortico-striato-thalamo-cortical loops, modulated by several neurotransmitter systems including dopamine and acetylcholine, thus complexifying pharmacological management. Post-stroke apathy (PSA) can provide a proper in vivo model to study the underlying neurochemical substrates of apathy as a syndrome. The present project aims to provide a better characterization of the cholinergic and dopaminergic functioning in apathy as a syndrome. In order to precise the respective alterations of these two systems, investigators will use a positron emission tomography (PET) molecular imaging of dopaminergic (with [18F]-FDOPA, a marker of the decarboxylating enzyme of dopamine) and - for the first time in apathetic patients - cholinergic (with [18F]-FEOBV, a marker of the vesicular acetylcholine transporter) transmissions in 15 apathetic and 15 unapathetic patients 3 months after stroke, without overlapping depression. This dual imaging study may provide help in guiding therapeutic management of PSA. The functional network analysis allowed by functional MRI is crucial to complement regional neurotransmitter deficits observed with PET. Altogether, a multimodal approach in apathy, combining PET and MRI, can allow identifying which circuits of the cortico-striato-thalamo-cortical loops are disrupted and how these circuits are modulated by other neurotransmitters.
Apathy, a profound loss of initiative and motivation, is often seen in older Veterans with memory problems. Apathy leads to serious health problems, increases dependency, and caregiver burden. If untreated, apathy hastens the progression to frank dementia. In a pilot study, the investigators found that apathy, working memory, and function can be restored using magnetic stimulation in some but not all older Veterans. The reason for this variation is unknown. The investigators propose a three-phase study in 125 older Veterans with mild memory problems. Their motivation, memory, and function will be measured periodically. Veterans with apathy that are eligible for treatment will receive either real or sham magnetic stimulation to the front part of their brain over 20 sessions. Genetic testing and biomarkers will be used to differentiate those who respond to magnetic stimulation from those who do not. Impact on function, quality of life, and rates of progression to dementia will also be studied. A project modification was obtained to conduct a cross-sectional study, the COVID Dementia study. The cross-sectional study will examine the effect of the pandemic on MCI and AD patients and their caregivers ("individual COVID-related factors" such as, personally infected, death of a friend/family member, economic hardship, disruption in care, isolation), barriers to telehealth, caregiver distress, NPS, cognition (including onset of delirium), and function. Our goal is to develop a multi-pronged, remotely deliverable intervention to address consequences of healthcare disruptions in older Veterans with cognitive impairment. Aim 1. To explore the association between COVID-related factors and neuropsychiatric symptoms in individuals with MCI and AD. Hypothesis: The number of COVID-related factors endorsed by caregivers will be positively correlated with the severity of NPI-Q in individuals with MCI and AD. Aim 2. To assess cognition (telephonic version of the Montreal Cognitive Assessment; tMoCA12, and daily function (Functional Activities Questionnaire; FAQ13). Hypothesis: The number of COVID-related factors will be positively correlated with the severity of cognitive and functional deficits in individuals with MCI and AD. Aim 3. To explore the associations among COVID-related factors and caregiver distress. Hypothesis: Caregiver resilience and perceived social support will modify the association between COVID-related factors and severity of distress in caregivers.
We want to determine if patients with dementia show any kind of emotion while they look at a defined selection of photos. These are photos taken from a international image-platform and mixed with photos (biographic) that show personal objects, personal events, etc. While the photos will be presented each a few seconds the skin conductance and the heart rate will be measured. We want to find out if there is any emotion measurable while showing the photos.