In 2015, °µĶųTV Langoneās division for the treatment and research of Parkinsonās and movement disorders gained a new name and an international presence. Last June, the center was ofļ¬cially renamed the , after a $25 million gift from the Paolo and Marlene Fresco Foundation. In carrying on °µĶųTV Langoneās renowned Parkinsonās programādesignated a National Parkinson Foundation Center of Excellence since 2009āthe Fresco Instituteās clinical operations will be led by Alessandro Di Rocco, MD, Founders Professor of Neurology and chief of movement disorders, who serves as the instituteās executive director. The institute will also be opening a fully integrated operation in Italy, and will continue to expand its research programs under the guidance of its scientiļ¬c director, , Druckenmiller Professor of Neuroscience and chair of .
āThe Fresco Institute will establish stronger bridges between clinical science and basic science of movement disorders, particularly Parkinsonās disease,ā notes Dr. Tsien, who is also director of the at °µĶųTV Langone. āIt will also build vibrant connections between scientists in the United States and in Italy, working on disorders of the brain.ā
The instituteās branch in Italy will be a medical, research, and educational center that will act as a centralized hub, coordinating efforts with movement disorder programs in that nation. āThrough fellowships and clinical and scientiļ¬c collaborations with Italian Parkinsonās institutions, our aim is to develop better treatments and understanding of the disease,ā says Dr. Di Rocco.
Studying Exercise and Bringing Telemedicine to Homebound Parkinsonās Patients
One research project now underway is a study to better understand the potential beneļ¬ts of exercise and repetitive transcranial magnetic stimulation (rTMS) for Parkinsonās patients. The project will study differences in how brain-derived neurotrophic factor (BDNF)āa protein factor that can induce the growth of new neurons and synapses and prevent the death of existing brain cellsāimpacts brain function in people with and without Parkinsonās, as well as how exercise and noninvasive rTMS affect this marker and brain function in general in Parkinsonās patients.
The study is one of several that Fresco Institute researchers are now conducting on the ability of rTMS to control the motor symptoms of Parkinsonās. Previous trials at °µĶųTV Langone have demonstrated that the technology can reduce levodopa-induced dyskinesias. The Fresco Instituteās currently utilizes three state-of-the-art TMS machines along with a neuroĀnavigation system that allows speciļ¬c brain regions to be stimulated with high accuracy.
In another important advance, the Fresco Institute has spent the past year working with °µĶųTV Langoneās IT group to develop a telemedicine component for its pioneering home care program. In the program, launched in 2014 for patients with advanced Parkinsonās who have difļ¬culty traveling, Fresco Institute physicians evaluate patients in their homes, and a social worker and nurse make regular follow-up visits. The telemedicine element, scheduled to launch in January 2016, will enable Fresco Institute physicians to confer with the patients remotely during these follow-up visits, using a laptop and mobile Wi-Fi connection provided to the home care team.
āThis capability will allow me to join the team virtually to perform Parkinsonās-speciļ¬c neurological and cognitive examinationsāboth of which have been validated for telemedicine,ā says the Fresco Instituteās Jori E. Fleischer, MD, assistant professor of and . āIāll also be able to ask questions of the patient and the family, answer questions they may have, provide counseling, and observe the social workerās psychosocial evaluation and counseling, the nurseās medication reconciliation and counseling, and the home safety assessment.ā
In addition, she notes, the team will have the ability to document the visit in real time on °µĶųTV Langoneās electronic medical records system, create an after-visit summary for the patient and the family, and print out the summary for the family on the spot.