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UnknownNCT01914835

Neuropsychological Rehabilitation on Cocaine/Crack Dependents

The Impact of Neuropsychological Rehabilitation on Cocaine/Crack Dependents: a Placebo-controlled Study Using Cognitive Tests and Functional Magnetic Resonance Imaging.

Status
Unknown
Phase
N/A
Study type
Interventional
Enrollment
56 (estimated)
Sponsor
University of Sao Paulo General Hospital · Academic / Other
Sex
All
Age
18 Years – 45 Years
Healthy volunteers
Not accepted

Summary

Cocaine/Crack Dependence has been associated with neuropsychological impairments mainly in executive functions and decision-making, which are predominantly managed by the prefrontal cortex (PFC) in the brain. However, none study in Neuropsychological Rehabilitation (NR) has been done in order to remediate the executive functioning in this population. The aim of this research is to investigate the impact of neuropsychological intervention based on the stimulation of cognitive functions such as attention, planning, organization, logical reasoning, executive functioning, and decision making. For this research it will be proposed interventions through motivational strategies and board games, especially chess because it has been associated with PFC functioning, since it is a game which requires complex cognitive abilities, such as: inhibitory control, mental flexibility, sustained attention, future planning and decision-making. There will be two groups of patients with cocaine/crack dependence (n = 56), one with NR (group A, n = 28) and another without NR (group B, n = 28). Group B will be submitted to the placebo intervention. Both groups will be submitted to an extensive battery of neuropsychological tests and psychopathological rating scales before and after interventions. A sub-group will also be submitted to functional magnetic resonance imaging and biomarkers measures (BDNF and cortisol). The hypothesis is that group A will present a pronounced improvement not only on the neuropsychological test but also on the PFC functioning in neuropsychological functions compared to group B.

Detailed description

Cognitive Stimulation - The Motivational Chess (MC) was designed to stimulate executive cognitive functioning. The idea of combining Motivational Interviewing (25) with chess game was to stimulate discrepancy, motivation, and support self-efficacy. Volunteers will be submitted to 10 sessions of 90 minutes, over three weeks (total 15 hours: 10 hours of chess practice and 5 hours of motivational interviewing). At the beginning of each session the participants will be divided into pairs and received a sheet containing the game rules (that sheet worked as a kind of working memory aid). During the game practice, there will be a therapist (coordinator) observing, helping, and motivating the participants for goal-directed behaviors. The therapist interventions will be focused on patient's behavior, analyzing if they know the game rules, are able to follow the rules, have visual perception of the pieces, and use strategies considering short or long-term consequences. Another relevant role of the therapist will be empathic with the patients and to help them deal with their own resistance to change or to adapt to new situations. The last 30 minutes of MC will be divided into three stages: 1) a short presentation on the cognitive deficits due to CD (Giving Information); 2) participants will report their impressions about their performance in chess linking it to real life situations such as drug-related events, difficulty monitoring and directing behavior, controlling craving and relapse (Developing Discrepancy); 3) discussions encouraging healthy decision making, focusing on future and favorable real-life long-term behaviors, as opposed to immediate and high risk behaviors (Supporting Self-Efficacy). Control Group - The Active Control (AC) group will occur exactly on the same conditions of the MC group. It consists of one hour of recreational activities to stimulate more basic cognitive functions, such as simple attention (for example, to follow a simple sequence of actions), motor coordination and visual functions. Ten activities were structured using cardboard, paper, crayons, among others. In the last 30 minutes, there will be a presentation also based on Motivational Interviewing, but limited to providing information about basic cognitive functions (Giving Information) and promoting motivation to engagement to the activities. Procedures To enroll in this study, the participants must have a positive urine test for cocaine and will answer to semi-structured clinical interviews (SCID and ASI-6) on the first week. When the urine test becomes negative (mean in days: 9.48 ± 3.06), the pre assessment will be applied (Neuropsychological and Psychopathological Assessment, Functional Magnetic Resonance Imaging, Brain-derived neurotrophic factor levels and Cortisol levels) . Then the participants will participate in 10 sessions of MC or AC for approximately 3 weeks. At the end, if the urine test remains negative, the post assessment will be applied (about one month of abstinence of cocaine use). The urine toxicology test will be used to have an objective measure of recent use and abstinence.

Conditions

Interventions

TypeNameDescription
BEHAVIORALMotivational ChessThe Motivational Chess (MC) combines Motivational Interviewing with chess game. Volunteers are submitted to 10 sessions of 90 minutes, over three weeks (total 15 hours: 10 hours of chess practice and 5 hours of motivational interviewing). The Active Control (AC) group consists of ten structured activities using cardboard, paper, crayons, among others. Volunteers are submitted to 10 sessions of 90 minutes, over three weeks (total 15 hours: 10 hours of recreational activities and 5 hours of information about basic cognitive functions).

Timeline

Start date
2011-04-01
Primary completion
2017-04-01
Completion
2017-10-01
First posted
2013-08-02
Last updated
2016-05-26

Locations

1 site across 1 country: Brazil

Source: ClinicalTrials.gov record NCT01914835. Inclusion in this directory is not an endorsement.