| Literature DB >> 26955265 |
José Carlos Millán-Calenti1, Laura Lorenzo-López1, Begoña Alonso-Búa1, Carmen de Labra2, Isabel González-Abraldes1, Ana Maseda1.
Abstract
Many patients with Alzheimer's disease will develop agitation at later stages of the disease, which constitutes one of the most challenging and distressing aspects of dementia. Recently, nonpharmacological therapies have become increasingly popular and have been proven to be effective in managing the behavioral symptoms (including agitation) that are common in the middle or later stages of dementia. These therapies seem to be a good alternative to pharmacological treatment to avoid unpleasant side effects. We present a systematic review of randomized controlled trials (RCTs) focused on the nonpharmacological management of agitation in Alzheimer's disease (AD) patients aged 65 years and above. Of the 754 studies found, eight met the inclusion criteria. This review suggests that music therapy is optimal for the management of agitation in institutionalized patients with moderately severe and severe AD, particularly when the intervention includes individualized and interactive music. Bright light therapy has little and possibly no clinically significant effects with respect to observational ratings of agitation but decreases caregiver ratings of physical and verbal agitation. Therapeutic touch is effective for reducing physical nonaggressive behaviors but is not superior to simulated therapeutic touch or usual care for reducing physically aggressive and verbally agitated behaviors. Melissa oil aromatherapy and behavioral management techniques are not superior to placebo or pharmacological therapies for managing agitation in AD. Further research in clinical trials is required to confirm the effectiveness and long-term effects of nonpharmacological interventions for managing agitation in AD. These types of studies may lead to the development of future intervention protocols to improve the well-being and daily functioning of these patients, thereby avoiding residential care placement.Entities:
Keywords: behavioral and psychological symptoms; dementia; nonpharmacological
Mesh:
Year: 2016 PMID: 26955265 PMCID: PMC4769004 DOI: 10.2147/CIA.S69484
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Clin Interv Aging ISSN: 1176-9092 Impact factor: 4.458
Figure 1Flowchart of systematic literature search.
Abbreviation: AD, Alzheimer’s disease.
Studies included in the review (n=8)
| Study | Country | Study design | Level of cognitive impairment | Sample | Therapy | Agitation scale | Main findings |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Ancoli-Israel et al | USA | RCT | MMSE =5.7±5.6 | Institutionalized patients with severe AD (n=92; 63 women; mean ± SD =82.3±7.6, range 61–99) | Light therapy | CMAI | CMAI: Caregiver ratings of agitation significantly decreased after treatment in all groups |
| Burns et al | UK | Multicenter RCT | CDR =3 | Institutionalized AD patients (n=94; 56 women; age range 63–98) | Aromatherapy | PAS | No significant differences between aromatherapy, donepezil, and placebo groups at week 4 and 12 |
| Dowling et al | USA | RCT | MMSE =7.0±7.0 | Institutionalized AD patients (n=70; 57 women; mean age ± SD =84.0±10.0, range 58–98) | Light therapy | NPI-NH | Significant but possibly potentially not clinically relevant worsening on agitation/aggression after treatment |
| Hawraniket al | Canada | RCT | MMSE =5.5±6.6 | Residents of a long-term care facility with AD (n=51) | Therapeutic touch | CMAI | Physical nonaggressive behaviors decreased in E1 (therapeutic touch) |
| Narme et al | France | RCT | Music group: MMSE =9.6±5.3 | Nursing home AD patients (n=37; 32 women) | Music therapy | CMAI | Music decreased severity of agitated behaviors during the treatment (fourth session) but not at the end (eighth session) or at follow-up |
| Sakamoto et al | Japan | RCT | CDR =3 | Patients with severe AD from group homes and a special dementia hospital (n=39) | Music therapy | BEHAVE-AD | Reduction in behavioral and psychological symptoms following interactive music intervention. |
| Svansdottir and Snaedal | Iceland | Case-control study | GDS =5–7 | Nursing home patients with moderate or severe AD (n=38; age range 71–87) | Music therapy | BEHAVE-AD | Significant reduction in activity disturbances in the music therapy group |
| Teri et al | USA | Multicenter RCT | BMT group: MMSE =12.0±7.0 | AD outpatients (n=148) | Behavioral Management Training (BMT) | CMAI | No significant differences on agitation across groups. |
Abbreviations: AD, Alzheimer’s disease; ABID, Agitated Behavior Inventory for Dementia; ABRS, Agitated Behavior Rating Scale; BEHAVE-AD, Behavioral Pathology in Alzheimer’s Disease Rating Scale; BMT, Behavior Management Techniques; C, Control group; CDR, Clinical Dementia Rating Scale; CMAI, Cohen-Mansfield Agitation Inventory; E, Experimental group; GDS, Global Deterioration Scale; MMSE, Mini–Mental State Examination; NPI, Neuropsychiatric Inventory; NPI-NH, Neuropsychiatric Inventory-Nursing Home; PAS, Pittsburgh Agitation Scale; RCT, Randomized Controlled Trial; N sessions, Number of sessions.