Litcius/Paper detail

Towards multimodal cognition-based treatment for cognitive impairment in Parkinson's disease: drugs, exercise, non-invasive brain stimulation and technologies

Elisa Mantovani, Miriana Maria Bressan, Michèle Tinazzi, Stefano Tamburin

2024Current Opinion in Neurology14 citationsDOI

Abstract

PURPOSE OF REVIEW: Cognitive impairment is one of the most challenging non-motor symptoms of Parkinson's disease (PD) and may occur during all PD stages. There are no established pharmacological treatments for PD-related cognitive impairment, which may be improved by cognition-based interventions (i.e., cognitive stimulation, cognitive training, cognitive rehabilitation). Multimodal cognition-based interventions by adjunctive drugs, exercise, non-invasive brain stimulation and technologies may be effective in PD. RECENT FINDINGS: Exercise combined with cognitive training may enhance global, memory, visuospatial and executive functioning, transcranial direct current stimulation delivered alongside cognitive training may improve attention and executive functioning, and exergames, semi-immersive virtual reality (VR) and telerehabilitation plus non-immersive VR combined with cognitive training may ameliorate global and executive functioning in PD patients. SUMMARY: The evidence reviewed here, despite preliminary, is very encouraging and suggests strong rationale for combining pharmacological and non-pharmacological interventions with cognition-based treatments in PD. To overcome limitations of current studies, we propose some recommendations for future trials on drugs, exercise, non-invasive brain stimulation and technologies combined with cognition-based treatments for cognitive impairment in PD.

Topics & Concepts

CognitionTranscranial direct-current stimulationCognitive trainingCognitive rehabilitation therapyPhysical medicine and rehabilitationBrain stimulationParkinson's diseaseExecutive functionsPsychologyPsychological interventionCognitive remediation therapyRehabilitationNeuroscienceTelerehabilitationMedicineDiseaseStimulationTelemedicinePsychiatryHealth carePathologyEconomicsEconomic growthNeurological disorders and treatmentsParkinson's Disease Mechanisms and TreatmentsTranscranial Magnetic Stimulation Studies