12 research outputs found

    Neuropsychologische behandeling

    No full text
    Item does not contain fulltext408 p

    Treatment effect modifiers for the patient education programme for Parkinson's disease

    No full text
    AIM A recent randomised controlled trial showed significant benefits for Parkinson's disease (PD) caregivers' psychosocial problems and need for help and a trend towards significant improvement of patients' quality of life after participation in the Patient Education Programme for Parkinson's disease (PEPP). Large variations in change scores were found, indicating variation in benefit. The aim of this study was to search for treatment effect modifiers. METHODS Outcome measures were patients' quality of life [Parkinson's Disease Questionnaire (PDQ)-39] and caregivers' psychosocial burden [Belastungsfragebogen Parkinson Angehörigen kurzversion (BELA-A-k)]. Candidate treatment effect modifiers were participants' characteristics and baseline scores on psychological questionnaires (BELA-P/A-k, PDQ-39, EQ-5D, Self-rating Depression Scale) and patients' neuropsychological test scores (Mini Mental State Examination, National Adult Reading Test, Dutch version, Word Test, Behavioural Assessment of the Dysexecutive Syndrome rule shift, Trail Making Test, Stroop). Secondary analyses of data from a randomised controlled trial with 64 patients and 46 caregivers were performed using regression analyses with treatment group interaction terms. RESULTS No significant modifiers were found for the patients. In the caregiver group, a higher MMSE score of the patient at baseline was found to be a significant predictor of a lower BELA-A-k Bothered by score post-intervention of the caregiver. CONCLUSIONS A potential predictor of treatment benefit was found for caregivers of PD patients with better cognitive functioning. This study did not find treatment effect modifiers for PD patients: demographics, disease stage and time of diagnosis, cognitive functioning, level of baseline psychosocial burden, participating with or without a caregiver, and caregiver changes did not influence treatment outcome. The PEPP seems suitable for the majority of patients.Development and application of statistical models for medical scientific researc

    The benefits of a standardized patient education program for patients with Parkinson's disease and their caregivers

    No full text
    The Patient Education Program Parkinson (PEPP) is a standardized psychosocial intervention aiming at improving the health-related quality of life (Hr-Qol) of patients with Parkinson's disease (PD) and caregivers. A randomized controlled trial was performed to assess its effectiveness. Sixty-four PD patients and 46 caregivers were allocated to either the intervention group (PEPP) or the control group (usual care). The intervention consisted of eight weekly sessions of 90-minute duration. Assessments were performed on psychosocial problems (BELA-P/A-k), Hr-Qol (PDQ-39/EQ-5D) and depression (SDS) at baseline and one week after the end of the PEPP. Participants rated their mood on a visual analogue scale before and after each session. A significant effect for the caregivers on psychosocial problems and need for help was found and a trend for significance for patients' quality of life. Patients' and caregivers' mood improved significantly after each session. This study provides indications that PD patients and caregivers benefit from the PEPP.Neurological Motor Disorder

    The Coping with Attention and Memory Complaints Questionnaire (CAMQ): psychometric evaluation of an instrument in suspected chronic solvent-induced encephalopathy (CSE)

    No full text
    Long-term occupational exposure to organic solvents may induce chronic solvent-induced encephalopathy (CSE), leading to neuropsychological impairments. We developed the Coping with Attention and Memory Complaints Questionnaire (CAMQ), an instrument for the assessment of coping strategies in patients suspected of CSE with neuropsychological complaints. Items for the CAMQ were based on existing coping dimensions and constructed by experts. The psychometric properties of the CAMQ were evaluated in a sample of 307 workers suspected of CSE. Factor analysis revealed four coping subscales: active coping, avoidance, acceptance, and seeking social support, all with good internal consistency (alphas .71-.78) and good test-retest reliability (ICCs .67-.82). The subscales demonstrated moderate correlations with related external constructs such as anxiety and depression, locus of control, meta-memory, mastery and generic coping styles. In conclusion, this study: (1) shows that the newly developed CAMQ is a reliable instrument, and (2) provides evidence for its validity in assessing coping with complaints of memory and attention in CSE-suspected patients. These results may serve for further study on coping with complaints of memory and attention, psychological adjustment and well-being in CSE patients

    Polymorphisms in type 2 deiodinase are not associated with well-being, neurocognitive functioning, and preference for combined thyroxine/3,5,3′- triiodothyronine therapy

    No full text
    Introduction: Some patients on levothyroxine replacement display significant impairment in psychological well-being, compared with sex- and age-matched controls. Levothyroxine-treated patients can be assumed to derive T3 exclusively from deiodination of T4, which, in the central nervous system, is regulated by type II deiodinase (DII). Objective: We investigated whether two recently identified polymorphisms in the DII gene (DII-ORFa-Gly3Asp and DII-Thr92Ala) are determinants of well-being and neurocognitive functioning and associated with a preference for replacement with a combination of T3 and T4. Methods: Genotypes for both polymorphisms were determined in 141 patients with primary autoimmune hypothyroidism, adequately treated with levothyroxine monotherapy and participating in a randomized clinical trial comparing T4 therapy with T4/T3 combination therapy. Questionnaires on well-being and neurocognitive tests were performed at baseline. Results: Allele frequencies in patients with primary hypothyroidism were similar to those of healthy blood bank donors (32.0 vs. 33.9% for DII-ORFa-Gly3Asp and 40.4 vs. 38.8% for DII-Thr92Ala). DII polymorphisms were not associated with measures of well-being, neurocognitive functioning, or preference for combined T 4/T3 therapy. Conclusion: The DII-ORFa-Gly3Asp and DII-Thr92Ala polymorphisms do not explain differences in well-being, neurocognitive functioning, or appreciation of T4/T3 combination therapy in patients treated for hypothyroidism. Copyrigh
    corecore