Treatment improves Alzheimer's symptoms
The loss of interest and motivation in daily life experienced with Alzheimer's disease was successfully decreased in patients in a recent trial.
"Apathy is one of the most common effects of Alzheimer's disease (AD). It decreases these patients' quality of life, it has been shown to worsen their ability to carry out activities of daily living, and it is often a key contributing factor to being institutionalized," says Dr. Krista Lanctôt, primary author of a new study and neuropsychopharmacologist at Sunnybrook. "If we can treat the apathy, then we may be able to prevent this downward spiral and really, change the course of illness for someone with Alzheimer's disease."
Study participants randomized to receive treatment were treated for six weeks with the drug methylphenidate, and showed a significant reduction in apathy symptoms, as well as some improvements in "global cognition" which includes attention, memory, language, learning, reasoning, problem solving and decision making.
"This treatment is promising as it appears to be effective and with minor side effects," says Dr. Nathan Herrmann, head of Geriatric Psychiatry at Sunnybrook. "We require further research."
Preliminary data were presented at the Alzheimer's Association International Conference in July 2012, and a manuscript is currently in press with The Journal of Clinical Psychiatry.
"This research aims to understand and treat effects of the disease for those who are diagnosed with it. So that one may have Alzheimer's disease but maximize quality of life for a longer period of time," says Lanctôt.