Summary

Eligibility
for people ages 40-80 (full criteria)
Location
at UCSD UCSF
Dates
study started
completion around
Principal Investigator
by Ece Bayram,, MD, PhD (ucsd)Jill Ostrem, MD (ucsf)
Headshot of Ece Bayram
Ece Bayram
Headshot of Jill Ostrem
Jill Ostrem

Description

Summary

The purpose of this study is to test the performance of the AID-P across 21 sites in the Parkinson Study Group. Each site will perform imaging, clinical scales, diagnosis, and will upload the data to the web-based software tool. The clinical diagnosis will be blinded to the diagnostic algorithm and the imaging diagnosis will be compared to the movement disorders trained neurologist diagnosis.

Keywords

Parkinson Disease, Multiple System Atrophy, Parkinson Variant, Progressive Supranuclear Palsy, Multiple System Atrophy, Shy-Drager Syndrome, Parkinsonian Disorders, AIDP, Multiple System Atrophy, Parkinsonian variant

Eligibility

You can join if…

Open to people ages 40-80

  • Parkinson's disease diagnosis within 5-9 years of baseline date
  • MSAp diagnosis
  • PSP diagnosis

You CAN'T join if...

  • metal implants in the body that preclude an MRI (pacemaker, metallic clip, neurostimulator, etc)
  • claustrophobia
  • pregnancy

Locations

  • University of California San Diego accepting new patients
    La Jolla California 92037 United States
  • University of California San Francisco accepting new patients
    San Francisco California 94158 United States

Lead Scientists at University of California Health

  • Ece Bayram,, MD, PhD (ucsd)
    Assistant Project Scientist, Neurosciences, Vc-health Sciences-schools. Authored (or co-authored) 41 research publications. Research interests: movement disorders · neurodegeneration · cognition
  • Jill Ostrem, MD (ucsf)
    Professor, Neurology, School of Medicine. Authored (or co-authored) 177 research publications

Details

Status
accepting new patients
Start Date
Completion Date
(estimated)
Sponsor
University of Florida
ID
NCT05913687
Study Type
Observational
Participants
Expecting 315 study participants
Last Updated