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1.
J Pers Med ; 14(8)2024 Jul 27.
Artículo en Inglés | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-39201987

RESUMEN

Cognitive frailty (CF) is a heterogeneous syndrome that is becoming one of the most serious health problems as the world's population age is increasing. Elucidating its biological mechanisms as well as prevention and treatments is becoming increasingly significant, particularly in view of the associated health costs. We presented the study protocol of a research project funded by the Italian Ministry of Health (grant number RF-2016-02363298) aiming to investigate the cognitive and neuropsychological effects of a 5-week treatment with therapy based on the regenerative properties of ozone (O3) in a cohort of subjects stratified according to CF scores. We also studied the potential effects of O3 on blood-based biomarkers indicative of specific biological systems that may be altered in CF. Seventy-five older persons were recruited and randomly assigned to receive the active treatment (150 cc of oxygen-O2-O3 mixture at the concentration of 30 µg of O3 per cc of O2), O2, or the placebo (air) for 5 weeks. The main endpoints were the change in the scores of clinical scales from baseline (T0) to weeks 3 (T3), 9 (T9), and 15 (T15) after treatment and the change in biomarker levels resulting from transcriptomics, proteomics, and metabolomic patterns at the same times. The positive results from this study could have important clinical implications.

2.
Digit Health ; 10: 20552076241238133, 2024.
Artículo en Inglés | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-38601188

RESUMEN

Introduction: Remote monitoring technologies (RMTs) can measure cognitive and functional decline objectively at-home, and offer opportunities to measure passively and continuously, possibly improving sensitivity and reducing participant burden in clinical trials. However, there is skepticism that age and cognitive or functional impairment may render participants unable or unwilling to comply with complex RMT protocols. We therefore assessed the feasibility and usability of a complex RMT protocol in all syndromic stages of Alzheimer's disease and in healthy control participants. Methods: For 8 weeks, participants (N = 229) used two activity trackers, two interactive apps with either daily or weekly cognitive tasks, and optionally a wearable camera. A subset of participants participated in a 4-week sub-study (N = 45) using fixed at-home sensors, a wearable EEG sleep headband and a driving performance device. Feasibility was assessed by evaluating compliance and drop-out rates. Usability was assessed by problem rates (e.g., understanding instructions, discomfort, forgetting to use the RMT or technical problems) as discussed during bi-weekly semi-structured interviews. Results: Most problems were found for the active apps and EEG sleep headband. Problem rates increased and compliance rates decreased with disease severity, but the study remained feasible. Conclusions: This study shows that a highly complex RMT protocol is feasible, even in a mild-to-moderate AD population, encouraging other researchers to use RMTs in their study designs. We recommend evaluating the design of individual devices carefully before finalizing study protocols, considering RMTs which allow for real-time compliance monitoring, and engaging the partners of study participants in the research.

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