Status
Conditions
Treatments
About
The specific aim of this study is to investigate rod, cone and melanopsin driven pupillary light response in individuals with progressive supranuclear palsy (PSP), age-matched healthy controls and individuals with other neurodegenerative diseases using chromatic pupillometry, with special interest in assessing melanopsin-driven post-illumination pupil response (PIPR) as an identifier for PSP.
The study addresses the following hypotheses:
If these hypotheses are upheld, chromatic pupillometry to measure the PIPR promises to be a reliable in vivo, non-invasive, convenient and inexpensive technique to detect asymptomatic pupillomotor impairment in advance of diagnostic oculomotor signs and deterioration of cognitive function.
Full description
In 1963, Richardson, Steele and Olszewski published a landmark clinical report on 8 cases of supranuclear ophthalmoplegia, pseudobulbar palsy, nuchal dystonia and dementia and established the syndrome of heterogeneous system degeneration as a clinicopathological entity now known as PSP. The disease has a characteristic onset in the sixth decade (range 45 to 75 years) with some combination of impaired balance, abrupt falls, visual disturbances, slurred speech, dysphasia and vague changes in personality.
Slowing of voluntary vertical saccades, either down, up or both are a diagnostic marker of PSP and later impairment of voluntary horizontal saccades are characteristic in more than half of the cases. However, a proportion of PSP patients do not demonstrate these eye signs for a year or more after the onset of the disease.
This pilot study will use chromatic pupillometry to determine whether such a novel methodology may be used as an objective in vivo identifier of PSP. The rationale for the study is based in part on:
Enrollment
Sex
Ages
Volunteers
Inclusion criteria
Individuals that meet the clinical criteria for PSP. Core features include:
Individuals that fit the criteria for the second PSP phenotype (which resembles PD) that has asymmetric findings, tremors and poor responses to treatment with Levodopa,
Individuals that meet the clinical criteria for PD with:
Individuals who carry a diagnosis of Alzheimer' disease who present with progressive impairment of memory and cognitive domains such as language and visuospatial perception.
Diagnoses will be confirmed by the review of health/medical records of patients recruited from the Frontotemporal Disorders Unit clinic. In the case of participants recruited from research studies, diagnoses will be confirmed by the review of the research diagnoses indicated on the individuals' research records.
Exclusion criteria
56 participants in 1 patient group
Loading...
Central trial contact
Shirley H Wray, MD, PhD
Data sourced from clinicaltrials.gov
Clinical trials
Research sites
Resources
Legal