Neuropsychologist talks about resilience in PD (16 minutes – online audio program)

This post has some tips from a neuropsychologist on developing resilience.  These tips may be of interest to caregivers and those with neurological disorders.

Last year at a July caregivers symposium we helped organize, the keynote speaker focused on resilience.  I think this is a very important topic for us all.  The speaker said that resilience can be learned:  yes, we are born with some basic resilience but we can all learn to expand our resilience.  And the speaker said that social isolation is as deadly to us as smoking is.

Somehow I got put on the email list for Voice Aerobics, which is a Florida-based company that focuses on Parkinson’s Disease (PD).  About a month ago they started using “blog talk radio” as a way to reach a large audience with info about PD and PD organizations.

A recent 30-minute program is on the topic of resilience, with a neuropsychologist, Dr. Jeffrey Wertheimer, speaking.  Though the focus is on Parkinson’s disease (and a survey done with 825 people with PD), I think all of what the neuropsychologist said applies to the four disorders in our support group.  He also believes that we can become more resilience through coping strategies.  One such strategy is not to be isolated.

Here are some highlights of what Dr. Wertheimer said:

  • Resilience is more than a personality trait.  There are tools, strategies, and learned experiences that can help create a sense of resilience.
  • As Parkinson’s progresses, the symptoms may chip away at the feeling of resilience. It’s important that we are aware of this.
  • We need to ask people “did you have your mental health moment today” just as we ask people if they took their medication or did their exercises.
  • Be proactive.  Engage in activities such as exercise.
  • Regard Parkinson’s Disease obstacles as challenges to overcome rather than a hopeless barrier.
  • Learn about illness.
  • Engage in life – hobbies and pleasures.
  • Externalize the distress by sharing it with a psychologist, support group, or friends.

I took a few notes while I was listening, and have copied these below.

Robin

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www.blogtalkradio.com/voice-aerobics/2013/08/23/parkinsons-and-resilience-got-it-get-it

Parkinson’s and Resilience: Got it? Get it!
by Voice Aerobics Talking 2 You
30:13 minute program

Robin’s notes from when Jeffrey Wertheimer, PhD, neuropsychologist, is speaking (from about 10:45 to 27:00):

12:05
Defines resilience as a dynamic process whereby individuals cope with and adapt or adjust to stress, challenge, medical illness, or any sort of adversity.

The usual focus is on “what’s wrong.”  Those with Parkinson’s Disease (PD) and their families focus on debilitating symptoms.  We need to also look at what’s going well.

13:55
Asks “how do we get more resilience?”  How we respond to challenges is influenced by personal strengths and resources.  Do we have a positive attitude?

How can we be proactive in coping?

15:00
He talks about the survey on coping.  Intentionally look for ways to live life fully.  Develop a positive attitude.

15:55
Catchy phrase:  where the attention goes, the emotion flows.  The more we focus on adapting, the more resilient we are.

18:00
Discusses depression in PD.  There can be a biological element to depression and anxiety.

20:00
Resilience is more than a personality trait.  There are tools, strategies, and learned experiences that can help create a sense of resilience.

As PD progresses, the symptoms may chip away at the feeling of resilience. It’s important that we are aware of this.

We need to ask people “did you have your mental health moment today” just as we ask people if they took their medication or did their exercises.

Be proactive.  Engage in activities such as exercise.

Regard PD obstacles as challenges to overcome rather than a hopeless barrier.

Learn about illness.

Engage in life – hobbies and pleasures.

Externalize the distress by sharing it with a psychologist, support group, or friends.

26:00
If people have greater levels of support, they have greater levels of perceived resilience.  If someone is isolated, they may be struggling.

Two PSP/CBD clinical trials beginning in 8 months?

Local support group member Sharon Reichardt and I were on a conference call yesterday with Adam Boxer, MD, neurologist at UCSF’s Memory & Aging Center. Dr. Boxer shared the news that two clinical trials with experimental drugs are in the works for PSP and, hopefully, CBD.  He suggested that they may be announced in 6-8 months.  But all is quite tentative so we shouldn’t hold him to it.  These would both be single-site studies.

I asked Dr. Boxer if one of the trials would be for Rember.  He said “no.”  The experimental agents are both new.

The Davunetide trial started out at UCSF’s MAC, and then expanded worldwide. Both the Davunetide and Nypta clinical trials ended in failure last year.  So this is good news that researchers are still actively interested in research with PSP and CBD.

One reason pharmaceutical companies are interested in studying tau-related drugs in PSP (rather than in Alzheimer’s) is because those with the Richardson’s Syndrome type of PSP experience faster declines and more brain atrophy than Alzheimer’s patients in the same timeframe.

Stay tuned….

Robin

PSP Association International Medical Workshop- Notes

The PSP Association is based in the UK.  It focuses on PSP and CBD throughout Europea.  They have a blog section on their website.  I occasionally find items there of interest.

In this recent blog post, Tim Rittman, a clinical research fellow in neurology, offered some notes after attending The PSP Association’s International Medical Workshop in July 2013.  You can find a link to the blog post here:

www.pspassociation.org.uk/2013/08/psp-association-international-medical-workshop/#more-6877

And the full text is copied below.

Robin


From Tim Rittman
Posted to the PSP Association’s Blog

On the 25th of July around 40 doctors and scientists from the UK and around the world met at Queen Square in London. I went along with Sian Alexander – Academic neurology trainee, researcher on clever cellular stuff and an accomplished baker of cakes (catch her on twitter @siankalexander). This meeting was a poignant echo of the diseases under discussion, coming 50 years after the first description of ‘Richardson’s syndrome’, or Progressive Supranuclear Palsy (PSP) as we know it today. The meeting covered cutting edge research in PSP and its cousin Corticobasal Degeneration (CBD). Below are some thoughts from me and Sian on the day.

At the end of the day I was left encouraged, but with a touch of disappointment. There was a hint of disappointment that two big trials in PSP had failed to show any impact on the disease. However, this is not a field where people shrug their shoulders and sit back. There was a palpable sense of optimism. The two trials had shown that it can be done. Yes, the first bites at the cherry have failed, but doing it all again is not so daunting, partly thanks to a newly formed national network of centres in the UK studying PSP and CBD. The PSP Association should take credit for raising the profile of the disease, not only amongst the general public but also for cajoling, arm twisting and, more importantly, funding researchers to take on the challenge. I overheard an American visitor who was astonished how much money the PSP Association had managed to put together to fund research and care, far outstripping their American counterparts per head of population.

To take a more in-depth view, we’ll break the sessions down and give you a feel for the main headlines from each. The range of talks and work show-cased impressed me. Although a few themes recurred throughout the day, each talk was unique and the cast was stellar in terms of reputation and quality.

The first session covered ‘basic science’, although as my brother continually reminds me there is nothing basic about it. The day kicked off with two household names from the world of dementia research. Michel Goedert takes an interest in how proteins build up in the brain, and particularly the tau protein that causes problems in PSP and CBD. He is firmly of the opinion that tau is responsible for the disease rather than being a by-stander, showing compelling evidence that tau protein travels from cell to cell through the brain causing mischief. John Hardy followed with an update on the genetics of the tau protein. He also talked about Genome Wide Association studies in PSP, trawling genetic information from people with the disease to look for clues that might push someone a few percent towards or away from getting the disease. The results so far point to 3 processes where damage occurs: integrity of nerve connections (synapses), the electrical insulation of nerves (myelin sheath)  and brain cells’ response to damage (the so-called ‘stress’ response). An intriguing talk from Steve Gentleman discussed dementia pugilistica, something that hit the news in the past week in rugby players. Although the link between head injury and PSP/CBD is far from certain and dementia pugilistica is quite different from either disease, there are similarities in how the brain appears under the microscope. This line of research promises to throw up some intriguing clues in the future.

Human disease biology came before lunch covering lumbar puncture, new brain imaging techniques and brain pathology. At the moment these tests remain very much in the research arena and for the moment do not add much to the diagnosis, but are starting to show promise in tracking the changes of disease over time. A promising new tool on the near horizon is a dye injected in the blood stream that clings to tau protein in the brain making it visible with a PET brain scanner. The usefulness of this sort of scan will need to be tested, but it sounds like we are getting close to something usable.

The most eagerly anticipated session came just after lunch, discussing therapeutics. I’ve previously written about Davunetide, and unfortunately both Tideglusib and Sodium Valproate disappointed in their results. Although, as one Alzheimer’s researcher pointed out, at least they didn’t make people worse as many of the recently tried drugs have for that disease. David Burn took us through a post-mortem of these trials. Reassuringly, the researchers involved in these studies were keen to share their data with him and are due to publish their results soon. This will help greatly in working out what went wrong and planning future studies. Hugh Nutall from the drug company Eli Lily had the trickiest talk of the day, trying to predict where PSP/CBD therapies will be in 5 years’ time. He talked about a number of promising compounds in development, many attacking the tau protein but in a different manner to previous efforts. It remains to be seen which will make it through to full blown clinical trials.

A particular step forward in clinical trials design has been the PSP rating scale, developed by the legendary Larry Golbe who was at the meeting. It is being widely used, enabling better assessments of how individuals with PSP respond to trial medicines.

The final session started with talks covering some good old-fashioned clinical questions of diagnosis and syndromes. The Queen Square Neurology department have been at the fore-front of sub-classifying PSP, CBD and similar diseases. It was a particular pleasure to have John Rohrer talk,  a neurologist and researcher in frontotemporal dementia – another disease where the tau protein builds up in brain cells. Even though us doctors might make a diagnosis of one or the other disease in the comfort of our clinic rooms, real life teaches us that under the bonnet there may be something very different going on. This is a challenge that will become increasingly important to solve if the treatments we develop only address a single disease process. In addition, picking up the earliest signs of PSP or CBD is extremely difficult, and other than spreading information about these diseases among GPs and neurologists, perhaps that is one challenge that no one came up with a good answer for.

To conclude the day, Larry Golbe led a discussion about funding priorities in PSP, who funds what research, and whether the research priorities are the right ones. The mission statement of the PSPA “Working for a World Free of PSP” was undisputed, but there was lots of ground for discussion about the best way to go about doing this. It was a thought-provoking way to end an enjoyable and educational day.

Caution against unproven stem cell therapies (Parkinson’s, MSA, etc)

This may be of interest to everyone in our support group, regardless of diagnosis.

The Movement Disorder Society (MDS) issued a position paper this week on the use of stem cell therapies for Parkinson’s Disease (PD).  The lay summary of the position paper concludes as follows:

“[Until] such treatments are proven to be of benefit and published in recognized scientific journals that objectively scrutinize their procedures, the Society encourages patients to participate only in cell therapy studies that are part of a research program affiliated with a recognized academic institution.”

A section of the paper was about stem cell treatment for “parkinsonian syndromes.” This term applies to PD, MSA, PSP, CBD, and DLB.  That section reads:

“Present publicly offered stem cell therapies for clinical use
There are several organizations world-wide which offer stem cell therapy for clinical application in patients. There is no detailed scientific information available on the outcome of these therapies. In a recent case series, data from patients with parkinsonism who underwent these procedures were collected retrospectively(31). … The report describes 17 patients with Parkinsonian syndromes who received intrathecal application of autologous unsorted bone marrow cells. There were no changes in motor function, activities of daily living, global clinical impression or antiparkinsonian medication after a median observation period of 10 months. Two patients (12%) reported a worsening of Parkinsonian symptoms, but the intervention was otherwise safe and well tolerated. Intrathecal application of autologous bone marrow cells in such uncontrolled conditions did not produce clinical benefit in these patients.”

I’ve copied the abstract to reference #31 below.

Of the 17 patients studied, 7 have a clinical diagnosis of PD, 7 have a clinical diagnosis of MSA, and 3 have other clinical diagnoses.  This break-down fits with my experience as well:  I’ve heard more about MSA patients trying out the various stem cell treatments available around the world than I’ve heard about those with PSP, CBD, or DLB diagnoses.  The reason may be that those with MSA are younger than those with the other diagnoses, on average, so there may be more desperation on the part of the patient and family.

We have had at least one person with MSA in our local support group who went to China for stem cell treatment.  And the medical advisor to our support group, Dr. Neng Huang, also reports that he knows of someone who went to China for stem cell treatment.  Neither patient seemed to have benefitted from the treatment.

I haven’t read the full article but presumably the 7 MSA patients don’t include those who participated in a South Korean study of autologous bone marrow cells (since clinical data was available in that case).

The MDS position paper can be found here:

www.movementdisorders.org/about/committees/stem-cell.php

There is a short lay summary in the position paper, and then a scientific summary that is three times as long.  I think most of you won’t have a problem reading the scientific summary!

Finally, here’s a link to the Movement Disorder Society’s short press release about the position paper:

www.movementdisorders.org/about/newsroom/release.php?contentid=1157

Robin

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Abstract

Movement Disorders. 2012 Oct;27(12):1552-5.  Epub 2012 Feb 23.

Intrathecal application of autologous bone marrow cell preparations in Parkinsonian syndromes.

Storch A, Csoti I, Eggert K, Henriksen T, Plate A, Lorrain M, Oertel WH, Antonini A.
Division of Neurodegenerative Diseases, Department of Neurology, Dresden University of Technology, Dresden, Germany.

BACKGROUND:
A growing number of patients is treated with intrathecal application of autologous bone marrow cells (aBMCs), but clinical data are completely lacking in movement disorders. We provide first clinical data on efficacy and safety of this highly experimental treatment approach in parkinsonian syndromes.

METHODS:
Retrospective data collection from patients with parkinsonism who spontaneously sought cell treatment. The application procedure was neither recommended nor performed by the authors.

RESULTS:
We report 17 patients with parkinsonian syndromes (Parkinson’s disease [PD], n = 7; multiple system atrophy [MSA], n = 7; various, n = 3) who received intrathecal application of aBMCs. We did not observe any changes in motor function, activities of daily living, global clinical impression, or antiparkinsonian medication after a median observation period of 10 months. Two patients reported a worsening of parkinsonian symptoms, but the intervention was otherwise safe and well-tolerated.

CONCLUSIONS:
Intrathecal application of aBMCs in uncontrolled conditions produces no clinical benefit in parkinsonian syndromes.

Copyright 2012 Movement Disorder Society.

PubMed ID#: 22362657

“When Aggression Follows Dementia” (NYT 7-12-13)

This post may be of interest to those dealing with dementia — all of the LBD caregivers, the majority of PSP caregivers, and some unknown percentage of CBD caregivers.  (Presumably no MSA caregiver is dealing with dementia.)

This article from Friday’s (July 12, 2013) “New Old Age” blog in the New York Times points out that a “sizable minority” of those with dementia — nearly 29 percent, according to a German study — have physically aggressive behavior.

Approaches mentioned in the article include:

  • placement in a suitable care facility
  • treatment of pain, infection, and depression
  • using “behavioral approaches to soothe aggressive responses,” such as letting the person with dementia have his/her way (and not arguing over tasks)
  • reduce stimulation in the environment
  • “adapt the way you communicate”
  • medication (the need for which should be re-assessed every so often)

Here’s a link to the article:

newoldage.blogs.nytimes.com/2013/07/12/when-aggression-follows-dementia/

The New Old Age: Caring and Coping 
New York Times
When Aggression Follows Dementia
By Paula Span
July 12, 2013, 4:38 pm

Robin