Video

Research on exercise in MS needs to build up some muscle


 

REPORTING FROM THE CMSC ANNUAL MEETING


The picture in MS, Parkinson’s, and spinal cord injury remained almost unchanged, although there has been a very slight increase in these studies since 2010.

“We are way behind the stroke research,” Dr. Thompson said. “We need global collaboration to correct this.”

That may be coming. Dr. Thompson described a newly minted, multinational study sponsored by the Canadian Multiple Sclerosis Society. The four-armed “Improving Cognition in People with Progressive MS” study will determine whether cognitive rehabilitation and exercise are effective treatments for cognitive dysfunction in people with progressive MS. It seeks to enroll 360 patients in six countries. They will be randomized to a wait list, exercise plus cognitive rehabilitation, exercise only, or cognitive rehabilitation only.

The primary investigator is Anthony Feinstein, MBBCh, PhD, a psychiatrist at the University of Toronto.

Dr. Thompson had no disclosures relevant to his discussion.

Pages

Recommended Reading

Third course of alemtuzumab can improve MS outcomes
MDedge Internal Medicine
VIDEO: Managing the alemtuzumab paradox
MDedge Internal Medicine
Nearly half of MS patients treated by primary docs miss out on meds
MDedge Internal Medicine
Physicians often bypass cognition, depression screening in MS
MDedge Internal Medicine
Study identifies characteristics that may constitute the MS prodrome
MDedge Internal Medicine
MS medication withdrawn because of safety concerns
MDedge Internal Medicine
The case for being open-minded about medical marijuana
MDedge Internal Medicine
Siponimod trial ‘first’ to show delayed disability in secondary progressive MS
MDedge Internal Medicine
VIDEO: AAN MS guidelines aim to help clinicians weigh expanding drug choices
MDedge Internal Medicine
Ocrelizumab safety update: Encouraging rates of serious infection, malignancy
MDedge Internal Medicine