| Literature DB >> 33919244 |
Stefano Lasaponara1,2, Fabio Marson3,4, Fabrizio Doricchi1,5, Marco Cavallo6,7.
Abstract
Most prevalent neurodegenerative diseases such as Alzheimer's disease, frontotemporal dementia, Parkinson's disease and multiple sclerosis are heterogeneous in their clinical profiles and underlying pathophysiology, although they typically share the presence of cognitive impairment that worsens significantly during the course of the disease. Viable pharmacological options for cognitive symptoms in these clinical conditions are currently lacking. In recent years, several studies have started to apply Computerized Cognitive Training (CCT) and Virtual Reality (VR) tools to try and contrast patients' cognitive decay over time. However, no in-depth literature review of the contribution of these promising therapeutic options across main neurodegenerative diseases has been conducted yet. The present paper reports the state-of-the-art of CCT and VR studies targeting cognitive impairment in most common neurodegenerative conditions. Our twofold aim is to point out the scientific evidence available so far and to support health professionals to consider these promising therapeutic tools when planning rehabilitative interventions, especially when the access to regular and frequent hospital consultations is not easy to be provided.Entities:
Keywords: Alzheimer’s disease; Parkinson’s disease; cognitive impairment; frontotemporal dementia; multiple sclerosis; neuropsychology
Year: 2021 PMID: 33919244 PMCID: PMC8143131 DOI: 10.3390/brainsci11050528
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Brain Sci ISSN: 2076-3425
Figure 1Flow-chart of the studies considered for the present scoping review.
Main information of the reviewed CCT experimental studies.
| Number, Authors, Published Year | Sample ( | Diagnosis | Mean Age | Duration | Study Type | Control | Cognitive Training Used | Main Results | Duration Post-Treatment |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Alescio-Lautier et al. (2019) [ | 12 | AD | 81 | 15 sessions | RCT | Control group | Memory, attention and semantic tasks | Increased memory recall and verbal fluency | Not tested |
| Cavallo et al. (2016) [ | 80 | AD | 76.5 | 3 d × 12 w | RCT | Control group | Memory, attention, EF and language tasks | Improvement in different neuropsychological domains | 6 months |
| Rodriguez-Mora et al. (2020) [ | 39 | AD | 76.31 | 5 d × 12 months | Pilot study | None | Different cognitive trainings, ADL and motor tasks | Arrested decline in all tested functions | Not tested |
| Imbeault et al. (2018) [ | 1 | AD | 65 | 2 d × 8 w + 23 sessions | Single-case | None | Prospective memory task on tablet (telerehabilitation) | Improved ADL and memory abilities | Not tested |
| Lizio et al. (2019) [ | 15 | AD | 69.7 | 7 d × 2 w | Pilot study | None | Spatial abilities, EF and memory tasks on tablet (telerehabilitation) | Increased accuracy and reduced reaction times in all domains | Not tested |
| Savulich et al. (2017) [ | 42 | aMCI | 75.2 | 8 sessions | RCT | Control group | Memory and visuospatial game on iPad | Increased episodic memory and visuospatial abilities | Not tested |
| Barban et al. (2016) [ | 348 | AD, MCI and HE | 77 | 2 d × 3 months | Crossover RCT | Control group | Different cognitive functions + RT | Increased MMSE scoring | None |
| Newhart et al. (2009) [ | 2 | lvFTD, svFTD | 65/60 | ~25 sessions | Proof-of-concept study | None | Cueing hierarchy naming treatment | Increased naming performances on treated items in both subjects and also in untreated items in lvFTD one | Not tested |
| Evans et al. (2016) [ | 1 | svFTD | 72 | 24 sessions (20 months) | Single-case | None | Flashcard naming task (telerehabilitation) | Increased naming performances | Not tested |
| Croot et al. (2019) [ | 8 | Various PPA | 64.8 | 2 w + 2 w + 26 w | Single-Case Experimental Design | None | Repetition and reading with cueing pictures (telerehabilitation) | Mixed results, 3 subjects showed increased picture naming performances | Up to 6 months |
| Henry et al. (2019) [ | 18 | lvFTD, svFTD | 65.2 | 1 d × 4–8 w/2 d × 4–8 w | Clinical Trial | None | LRCT | Increased naming on trained and untrained items | 1 year for trained and 6 months for untrained items |
| Beeson et al. (2011) [ | 1 | lvPPA | 77 | 6 d × 2 w | Single-case | None | Generative naming task | Improved word retreival on trained and untrained items | 6 months |
| Macoir et al. (2015) [ | 1 | svFTD | 72 | 5 d × 2 w | Single-case | None | Video-cued action naming task | Increased naming on trained actions | 4 weeks |
| Dial et al. (2019) [ | 31 | lvFTD, svFTD, nfvFTD | ~65 | (not clearly reported) | Clinical Trial | None | LRCT or VISTA (telerehabilitation or face-to-face) | Increased primary outcomes (word retrieval or fluency); no differences between telerehabilitation and face-to-face interventions | 12 months |
| Lavoie et al. (2019) [ | 5 | lvFTS, svFTD | 72.2 | 4 d × 4 w | Single-case | None | Functional Vocabulary Treatment (telerehabilitation) | Increased naming for trained items and reduced anomia in natural conversation | 2 months |
| Walton et al. (2018) [ | 65 | PD | ~68 | 2 d × 7 w | RCT | Active control group | Battery with different cognitive trainings | Reduced FoG and increased processing speed | Not tested |
| Sinforiani et al. (2004) [ | 20 | PD | 68.9 | 2 d × 6 w | Pilot study | None | Attention, abstract reasoning and visuospatial training | Increased verbal fluency, logic memory and Raven’s matrices | 6 months |
| Petrelli et al. (2015) [ | 47 | Non-demented PD | ~69 | 2 d × 6 w | RCT | Control group | Attention, memory and EF tasks | Reduced cognitive decline | 12 months |
| Diez-Cirarda et al. (2017) [ | 15 | PD | 66.07 | 3 d × 13 w | Clinical Trial | None | Attention, memory and EF tasks | Increased cognitive performances and increased functional connectivity | 18 months |
| Perez-Martin et al. (2017) [ | 62 | MS | 44.9 | 12 sessions | RCT | Control group | Training of several cognitive domains (telerehabilitation) | Increased memory, verbal fluency and reduced anxiety | Not tested |
| Charvet et al. (2017) [ | 135 | MS | 50 | 5 d × 12 w | RCT | Active control group | Training of several cognitive domains (telerehabilitation) | Increased cognitive functions | Not tested |
| Brissart et al. (2013) [ | 20 | MS | 42.5 | 13 sessions | RCT | Control group | Training of several cognitive domains | Increased verbal, working memory and verbal fluency performances | Not tested |
| Mattioli et al. (2010) [ | 150 | MS | 41–53 | 3 d × 12 w | RCT | Control group | Attention, Information Processing, EF trainings | Increase in all cognitive functions and reduced depression | Not tested |
| Fink et al. (2010) [ | 50 | MS | 44.8 | 4–5 d × 6 w | RCT | Control group | EF or visual CCT trainings | Increased EF and verbal learning | 12 months |
| Cerasa et al. (2013) [ | 23 | MS | 31.7 | 2 d × 6 w | RCT | Control group | Different attentional trainings | Increased attentional abilities and SPL activity | Not tested |
| Filippi et al. (2012) [ | 20 | MS | 46.7 | 3 d × 12 w | RCT | Control group | Attention, Information Processing, EF trainings | Increased cognitive functions and increased activity in fronto-parietal regions | Not tested |
| Parisi et al. (2014) [ | 18 | MS | 43.6 | 12 weeks | RCT | Control group | Attention, Information Processing, EF trainings | Increased cognitive functions and changes in FC | 6 months |
| Sandroff et al. (2017) [ | 8 | MS | 43.5 | 3 d × 12 w | Pilot RCT | Control group | Treadmill walking | Increased learning and memory abilities and related changes in hippocampal viscoelastic properties | Not tested |
AD = Alzheimer’s Disease; ADL = Activities on Daily Living; aMCI = amnestic Mild Cognitive Impairments; CCT = Computerized Cognitive Training; EF = Executive Functions; FC = Functional Connectivity FoG = Freezing of Gait; HE = Healthy Elderly; LRCT = Lexical Retrieval Cascade Treatment; lvFTD = logopenic variant of frontotemporal dementia; MS = Multiple Sclerosis; PD = Parkinson’s Disease; PPA = Primary Progressive Aphasia; RT = reminiscence therapy; SPL = Superior Parietal Lobule; svFTD = semantic variant of frontotemporal dementia; VISTA = Video Implemented Script Training for Aphasia.
Main information of the reviewed VR experimental studies.
| Number, Authors, Published Year | Sample ( | Diagnosis | Mean Age | Duration | Study Type | Control | Virtual-Reality Training Used | Main Results | Duration Post-Treatment |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Manera et al. (2016) [ | 57 | MCI/AD | 75.6 | 1 session | Feasibility study | VR task vs. Paper-pencil task | Attentional task (Selective and sustained attention) | Increased satisfaction and preference to VR-task | Not tested |
| White and Moussavi (2016) [ | 1 | AD | 74 | 1 d × 7 w | Case study | None | Virtual Reality Navigation environment | Improved navigation skill | 5 weeks/28 weeks |
| Serino et al. (2017) [ | 20 | AD | 87.6 | 3 d × 3/4 w | Development-of-Concept Trial | Control | VR-training for spatial abilities | Improved long-term Spatial memory | Not tested |
| Caggianese et al. (2018) [ | - | - | - | - | Project study | - | VR for realistic enviroment | - | Not tested |
| Quintana and Favela (2012) [ | 6 | Healthy subjects | 28 | 1 session | Project study | None | Ambient aNnotation System (ANS) | Improved recognition of tags with audio notifications | Not tested |
| Rohrbach et al. (2019) [ | 10 | AD | 71.8 | 1 session | Crossover study | AR condition vs. Natural condition | Therapy Lens (Microsoft HololensTM) | Trend in diminished sequencing errors | Not tested |
| Aruanno and Garzotto (2019) [ | 11 | MCI | 84.1 | 1 session | Feasibility study | None | MemHolo (Mixed Reality HoloLensTM) | Positive evaluation of MemHolo | Not tested |
| Burdea et al. (2015) [ | 1 | PPA | 51 | 2 d × 8 w | Single-case study | None | BrightBrainerTM | Improved verbal skills | Not tested |
| Robles-Garcia et al. (2016) [ | 16 | PD | 66.6 | 4 w | Randomized controlled pilot-study | Active-control group | VR-Motor imitation | Decreased hypometria | Not tested |
| de Melo et al. (2018) [ | 37 | PD | 62.2 | 3 d × 4 w | Randomized, controlled clinical study | Control group, Treadmill group | VR-Gait training | Improved gait | 30 days |
| Janeh et al. (2019) [ | 15 | PD | 67.6 | 1 session | Pilot study | Natural gait vs. VR-gait | VR-Gait training (GAITRiteTM; CIR Systems, Inc., Franklin, NJ, USA) | Improved gait | Not tested |
| de Menezes Sanguinet et al. (2016) [ | 14 | PD | 64 | 6 m | Uncontrolled clinical study | None | Non-immersive virtual reality games with KinectTM (One Microsoft Way, Redmond, WA, USA) | Improved PDQ-39 scores and mobility/cognitive skills | Not tested |
| Maggio et al. (2018) [ | 20 | PD | 69.4 | 3 d × 8 w | Randomized Clinical study | Control group | BTS Nirvana (BTS-N) | Improved cognitive function | Not tested |
AD = Alzheimer’s disease; AR = Augmented reality; MCI = Mild Cognitive Impairment; PD = Parkinson’s disease; PPA = primary progressive aphasia; VR = Virtual Reality.