Everyday Memory Impairment in PD-related Cognitive Decline (PMT2)
Parkinson Disease, Mild Cognitive Impairment
About this trial
This is an interventional treatment trial for Parkinson Disease
Eligibility Criteria
Inclusion Criteria:
- Males and females over age 50 who meet criteria for typical idiopathic PD
- Hoehn & Yahr stage I-III,
- Treated with levodopa/carbidopa
- Have subjective memory complaints (as identified in phone screen),
- Have an informant to complete relevant ratings,
- Have usable rs-fcMRI data.
- Medications should be stable for 4 weeks prior with no changes planned during the treatment portion of the study (Pre to Post); changes over the follow-up period will be tracked and accounted for as appropriate.
Exclusion Criteria:
- Dementia according to MDS criteria or MoCA score <21.
- Other neurological disorders (e.g. stroke, seizures), brain surgery, severe systemic diseases, major psychiatric disorder or history of psychotic symptoms (e.g. schizophrenia, bipolar disorder, delusions, hallucinations), or drug abuse.
- Contraindications or inability to participate in MRI.
- Treatment with medications that interfere with cognition (e.g. anticholinergics).
- Any other condition that would interfere with participation (e.g., non-English speaking, significant current depression).
- Psychiatric conditions/ symptoms that are common in PD (e.g. anxiety, depression) are allowed if they are deemed insufficient to interfere with participation.
Sites / Locations
- Washington University School of Medicine
Arms of the Study
Arm 1
Arm 2
Experimental
No Intervention
Strategy Training
Process Training
Consists of 8-90 minute sessions over 4 weeks. In sessions 1 and 2, in addition to teaching about event- and time-based tasks, the therapist teaches the participant specific strategies for each type of task (implementation intentions for event-based and strategic clock-checking for time-based) and instructs in their use before and during the training games. In sessions 3-8, the tester tells the participant s/he will be practicing both types of tasks in the training games and can support the participant's strategy use if needed. Feedback on accuracy and strategy use are provided after each training game. After completing the training games, the therapist and participant discuss how the strategies can be applied to the participant's real-life prospective memory goals, and the therapist helps the participant develop written action plans to do so. Plans and goals are reviewed and modified, if necessary, at each session.
Consists of 8, 90 minute sessions over 4 weeks. In sessions 1 and 2, the therapist teaches the participant about event- and time-based prospective memory tasks, respectively. In sessions 3-8, the tester tells the participant that s/he will be practicing both types of tasks in the training games. In all sessions, the participant completes the training games with no strategy instruction from the therapist. Feedback on accuracy is provided after each training game. This is typical of a process training approach and expects that practice of the training tasks will improve prospective memory ability per se or that participants will develop effective strategies for completing prospective memory tasks on their own. At the end of each session, the therapist reminds the participant of his/her real-life prospective memory goals, provides a handout that lists the goals, and instructs the participant to try to complete them as intended. Goals are reviewed and modified if necessary.