| Literature DB >> 27688923 |
Daniel Glizer1, Penny A MacDonald2.
Abstract
Cognitive deficits are prevalent among patients with Parkinson's disease (PD), in both early and late stages of the disease. These deficits are associated with lower quality of life, loss of independence, and institutionalization. To date, there is no effective pharmacological treatment for the range of cognitive impairments presented in PD. Cognitive training (CT) has been explored as an alternative approach to remediating cognition in PD. In this review we present a detailed summary of 13 studies of CT that have been conducted between 2000 and 2014 and a critical examination of the evidence for the effectiveness and applicability of CT in PD. Although the evidence shows that CT leads to short-term, moderate improvements in some cognitive functions, methodological inconsistencies weaken these results. We discuss several key limitations of the literature to date, propose methods of addressing these questions, and outline the future directions that studies of CT in PD should pursue. Studies need to provide more detail about the cognitive profile of participants, include larger sample sizes, be hypothesis driven, and be clearer about the training interventions and the outcome measures.Entities:
Year: 2016 PMID: 27688923 PMCID: PMC5027302 DOI: 10.1155/2016/9291713
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Parkinsons Dis ISSN: 2042-0080
Classification of studies of CT in PD according to design.
| Single group, uncontrolled studies | Waitlist-controlled studies | Studies comparing CT to standard treatments | Comparing different CT interventions |
|---|---|---|---|
| Sinforiani et al., [ | Nombela et al., [ | Sammer et al., [ | Reuter et al., [ |
Summary of studies of CT in PD.
| Article by | Participants | Description of training intervention | Outcome measures | Results on outcome measures | Description of setting | Combined intervention or only CT | Standardized intervention | Assessed QOL |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Sinforiani et al., 2004 [ | 20 PD-MCI | TNP software, focus on attention, abstract reasoning, visuospatial abilities, different level of complexity. | MMSE | Pre-post improvement: 3/8 | Computerized, hospital program | CT and motor rehabilitation | Yes, TNP software. | No |
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| Sammer et al., 2006 [ | 12 PD CT |
| BADS, rule shifting | Pre-post improvement: 2/5 | Noncomputerized, hospital program | Only CT in hospital versus standard treatment | Not standardized intervention. Additionally, task difficulty was adjusted according to each participant's performance level. | Yes. |
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| Nombela et al., 2011 [ | 5 PD CT |
| UPDRS | Posttraining PD CT versus PD untrained: | Noncomputerized, at home with weekly meetings to discuss progress, Sudoku table 1/day, for 6 months | Only CT | No, Sudoku plus weekly meetings, much longer duration than traditional CT. | No |
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| Mohlman et al., 2011 [ | 16 PD | Attention Process Training II (APT-II), audio CDs, pen and paper worksheets, response clickers. | Acceptability | Pre-post improvement. | Computerized + daily practice, in lab, assisted | Only CT but not assessing effectiveness | Yes, APT-II. | Not reported |
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| París et al., | 16 PD CT |
| MMSE | SmartBrain group improved on 10/23 measures compared to PD control group. | Computerized and noncomputerized plus homework tasks, in lab and at home | Only CT versus speech therapy | No, selection of tasks plus SmartBrain, individualized for each participant. | Yes. |
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| Pompeu et al., 2012 [ | 16 PD General balance |
| UPDRS-II (activities of independent living) | WiiFit and general balance exercise groups both showed improvement in UPDRS II | Computerized-sessions led by an instructor | Combined with global exercises. Computerized but not cognitive focused. | Yes, WiiFit games. | Yes. |
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| Reuter et al., 2012 [ | 71 PD CT (group A) |
| ADAS- Cog SCOPA – Cog BADS- six element | No detailed statistics, all groups improved. The more involved groups (groups B and C) improved more. | Computerized and noncomputerized, hospital and at home, at least 14 sessions, 4/week, 60 minutes, then at home, 3/week, 45 minutes each. | Only CT versus CT + transfer training versus CT + transfer training + psychomotor training | No | Yes. |
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| Disbrow et al., 2012 [ | 14 PD CT impaired |
| Motor sequence learning task | Posttraining, the impaired PD group showed significant improvement in time for sequence initiation, time for sequence completion, and number of errors in the internally represented condition of the task. | Computerized, adaptive difficulty, completed at home | Only CT | Yes, but adaptive difficulty. | Yes. |
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| Naismith et al., 2013 [ | 35 PD CT + psychoeducation |
| Wechsler Memory Scale III: | CT > waitlist improvement on 2/7 measures: | Computerized, in lab group sessions | CT combined with psychoeducation | No | Yes |
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| Edwards et al., 2013 [ | 44 PD Speed of Processing Training (SOPT) |
| UFOV | SOPT > waitlist improvement on 1/3 measures: | Computerized, self-administered, at home | Only CT | Standardized program (InSight), individually adaptive difficulty levels. | Yes |
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| Petrelli et al., 2014 [ | 22 PD NeuroVitalis (NV) |
| DemTect | NV > waitlist improved on 2/12: | Computerized, pen and paper and activities, in lab group sessions | Only CT | NV group standardized intervention. | Yes. |
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| Zimmermann et al. 2014 [ | 19 PD CogniPlus | CogniPlus-focused attention; N-Back; planning and action; response inhibition. | Tests of Attentional Performance-Alertness | No overall test of improvement for each group separately. | Computerized, in lab supervised by assistant | Only CT versus pure Wii sports | Yes, both interventions. | No |
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| Peña et al., 2014 [ | 22 PD REHACOP | REHACOP, group sessions including focus on attention, memory (visual and verbal, recall and recognition), language and verbal processing, executive functions (planning and logical reasoning), social cognition and Theory of Mind. |
| REHACOP > occupational therapy improved on 4/9 measures. | Noncomputerized, psychologist led group sessions | Only CT | Yes, REHACOP modules. | Yes. |
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| Cerasa et al., 2014 [ | 8 PD RehaCom | RehaCom, computer assisted training of attention and information processing. | ROCFT | RehaCom > control tapping group improved on 2/20 measures. | Computerized, group sessions with weekly meetings | Only CT | Yes, RehaCom training. | Yes. |
P value indicators:
∗: <0.05.
∗∗: <0.01.
∗∗∗: <0.001.