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The motor impairment produced by Parkinson's disease (PD) is a significant and debilitating part of the condition. Current methods to evaluate this impairment rely on subjective examinations. The investigators seek to develop an objective assessment of motor deficits by monitoring the participants natural interactions with a keyboard (on a computer or smart device). This approach provides a window to how the brain behaves during typical daily use of these devices, i.e. writing a report, sending an email or any other task performed on a digital device and thus has the potential to be used easily and regularly. (Importantly, the data gathered are non-sensitive and based only on timing information).
PD participants will be recruited during outpatient visits to PD clinics throughout the Madrid metropolitan region. General entry criteria will be those patients who are scheduled to begin dopaminergic therapy, and own a home computer or laptop. The study will not impact on participants' standard clinical management other than by asking the participants to type for 15 minutes at each of the clinic visits, and installing the investigators proprietary software on their home computer. This software will collect keystroke data alone. (None of the actual information about what is being typed will be collected.) The keystroke data collected will be analyzed and compared with standard clinical metrics of therapeutic response, as well as the in-clinic typing data.
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Inclusion criteria
Participants between 18 years and 70 years (older subjects will be deemed eligible on an individual basis after review by the study team).
Parkinson's disease (PD) diagnosis according to the United Kingdom Brain Bank Criteria.
PD patients without cognitive or psychiatric disturbances, as measured by the baseline assessment.
Prescription of symptomatic therapy with L-Dopa or dopamine agonists based on functional impairment attributed to PD. This will be based on the participant's physician criteria based on:
Daily computer use > 30 minutes
Exclusion criteria
60 participants in 2 patient groups
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Data sourced from clinicaltrials.gov
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