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Background:
Parkinson Disease (PD) is a nervous system disorder that affects movement. Dopamine is an important neurotransmitter in the brain. As PD progresses, there is less and less dopamine in the brain. Researchers think there may be a relationship between differences in attention and dopamine in people with PD.
Objective:
To learn if people with PD that is worse on one side also have differences in how much attention they pay to the two sides of space on their left and right.
Eligibility:
English-speaking, right-handed people age 35-80 with PD.
Design:
Participants will be screened with medical and neurological history and exam, and medicine review.
Participants will have 1 study visit. It will last 7-8 hours. They will stop taking their Parkinson medicine 12 hours before the visit.
Participants will complete questionnaires.
Participants will do tasks on a computer screen. They will judge the middle of lines, react to stimuli, and search and identify items that appear on the screen.
Participants may have functional and structural magnetic resonance imaging (MRI). MRI uses a strong magnetic field and radio waves to take pictures of the brain. During the MRI, participants will lie on a table that slides in and out of the MRI scanner. While inside the scanner, they will look at a cross on a screen, relax, and think about nothing.
Participants will undergo prism adaptation. They will sit in front of a board while their chin rests on a support. They will point to 1 of 2 dots on the board while they wear prism glasses that shift their vision to the left or right....
Full description
Study Description:
We will investigate the relationship between Dopamine (DA) function and attention in patients with asymmetric Parkinson Disease (PD). We hypothesize that the direction of asymmetry in dopamine (DA) depletion predicts the asymmetry in visual attention.
Objectives:
Primary Objective:
Secondary Objectives:
Endpoints:
Primary Endpoint: visuospatial performance on the Landmark Task
Secondary Endpoints: performance on:
Functional connectivity measured with resting state fMRI.
Study Population:
Sixty patients with asymmetric PD. Any gender, aged 35-80 (inclusive), able to give consent and without a diagnosis of significant illness affecting the central nervous system other than PD.
Sex
Ages
Volunteers
Inclusion and exclusion criteria
INCLUSION CRITERIA:
EXCLUSION CRITERIA:
Any current major neurological or psychiatric disorder other than Parkinson s disease, such as, (but not limited to) stroke, dementia, Alzheimer disease, Schizophrenia or Major Depression Disorder
Inability to provide consent
Members of the Behavioral Neurology Unit, NINDS
Left-handed per the Edinburgh Handedness scale
Primarily axial motor symptoms or symmetrical limb involvement
Pregnancy
Exclusion criteria for MRI
INCLUSION OF VULNERABLE PARTICIPANTS:
Because the goals of the study can be accomplished without involving vulnerable population, we will not include individuals without consent capacity.
Since the goal is to characterize visuospatial attention deficits in idiopathic PD which is a disease of late adulthood, we will not include children.
The effects of MRI on fetal development and the health of pregnant women is unknown.
Therefore, women who are pregnant and breast-feeding will be excluded and women who can become pregnant will be excluded following a positive pregnancy test, if the optional MRI is under consideration.
The study requires fluency in English in order to completely understand tasks instructions, thus non-English speakers/readers will be excluded.
0 participants in 1 patient group
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Data sourced from clinicaltrials.gov
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