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Dive into the research topics where Marc-André Bédard is active.

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Featured researches published by Marc-André Bédard.


Journal of Clinical and Experimental Neuropsychology | 1991

Obstructive Sleep Apnea Syndrome: Pathogenesis of Neuropsychological Deficits

Marc-André Bédard; Jacques Montplaisir; Francois Richer; Isabelle Rouleau; Jacques Malo

Neuropsychological deficits have been documented in patients with obstructive sleep apnea syndrome (OSAS). Both nocturnal hypoxemia and impairement of daytime vigilance have been suggested as the pathogenesis of these deficits, yet it remains difficult to find good correlations between cognitive deficits and either of these physiological parameters. In the present study, 10 normal controls were compared to 10 moderately and 10 severely apneic patients, all recorded in a sleep laboratory for two consecutive nights, with a vigilance and neuropsychological assessment made during the intervening day. Relative to the controls, moderate and severe OSAS showed differences in many cognitive functions, although the severely affected showed the greater differences. Moreover, severe apneics were also worse than moderate apneics on tests that were found to be normal in the latter group. This suggests a discontinuity in the appearance of neuropsychological deficits as OSAS progresses. Further analyses revealed that reductions in general intellectual measures, as well as in executive and psychomotor tasks were all attributable to the severity of hypoxemia, while other attention and memory deficits were related to vigiance impairment. Therefore, both vigilance impairment and nocturnal hypoxemia may differentially contribute to the cognitive dysfunctions found in OSAS.


Journal of Clinical and Experimental Neuropsychology | 1993

Persistent neuropsychological deficits and vigilance impairment in sleep apnea syndrome after treatment with continuous positive airways pressure (CPAP)

Marc-André Bédard; Jacques Montplaisir; Jacques Malo; Francois Richer; Isabelle Rouleau

The obstructive sleep apnea syndrome is characterized by nocturnal sleep disturbance, excessive daytime sleepiness and neuropsychological deficits in the areas of memory, attention, and executive tasks. In the present study, these clinical manifestations were assessed in apneic patients before and 6 months after treatment with nasally applied continuous positive airway pressure (CPAP). CPAP treatment was found to restore normal respiration during sleep and to normalize sleep organization. Daytime vigilance greatly improved with treatment but some degree of somnolence as compared to normal controls persisted. Similarly, most neuropsychological deficits normalized with treatment. The exception was for planning abilities and manual dexterity, two neuropsychological deficits that have been found to be highly correlated with the severity of nocturnal hypoxemia. These results raise the possibility that anoxic brain damage is a pathogenic factor in severe obstructive sleep apnea syndrome.


Clinical Neuropharmacology | 1986

Restless legs syndrome and periodic movements in sleep: physiopathology and treatment with L-dopa

Jacques Montplaisir; Roger Godbout; G. Poirier; Marc-André Bédard

Seven patients suffering from restless legs syndrome (RLS) and periodic movements in sleep (PMS) were investigated before and after treatment with L-Dopa. The effect of treatment was evaluated by polysomnography, structured interviews, and daily questionnaires. Sleep organization and subjective complaints improved during treatment with 100 to 200 mg of L-Dopa. Polysomnographic recordings also revealed a significant decrease of periodic leg movements during the first third of the night and a rebound during the last third. These results and previous biochemical findings raise the hypothesis that RLS and PMS may both result from reduced dopaminergic activity in the CNS, perhaps resulting from decreased sensibility of postsynaptic receptors.


Schizophrenia Research | 2004

Assessment of executive dysfunction during activities of daily living in schizophrenia

Maria Semkovska; Marc-André Bédard; Lucie Godbout; Frédérique Limoge; Emmanuel Stip

Many neuropsychological studies have described deficits of memory and executive functions in patients with schizophrenia, and the severity of these deficits seems to be determinant in predicting the community outcome of these patients [Schizophr. Bull. 26 (2000) 119]. However, neuropsychological evaluation does not provide valuable information about how the cognitive deficits directly affect daily living, that is, which cognitive deficit affects which behavior. The present study aimed at determining whether executive dysfunction in schizophrenia could be directly measured by analyzing three activities of daily living (ADL), in addition to assessing the ecological validity of commonly used neuropsychological tests. Within specific ADL (choosing a menu, shopping the ingredients, cooking a meal), the sequences of behaviors that have been performed by 27 control subjects and 27 patients with schizophrenia were both analyzed by using a preset optimal sequence of behavior. When compared with control subjects, patients with schizophrenia showed more omissions when choosing the menu, more sequencing and repetitions errors during the shopping task, and more planning, sequencing, repetition and omission errors during the cooking task. These behavioral errors correlated significantly with negative, but not with positive symptoms of the patients. Furthermore, they also correlated with the poor performances on executive neuropsychological tests, especially those sensitive to shifting and sequencing abilities, but not with memory tests. These results suggest that executive deficits in schizophrenia may specifically affect ADL and that such deficits can be quantitatively assessed with a behavioral scale of action sequences.


Clinical Neuropsychologist | 2004

Practice Effect and Test-Retest Reliability of Attentional and Executive Tests in Middle-Aged to Elderly Subjects

Simon Lemay; Marc-André Bédard; Isabelle Rouleau; Pierre-Luc Tremblay

There is a lack of data about the practice effect and test-retest reliability(TRR)on many attentional and executive tests in neuropsychology. In this study, 37 subjects aged 52 to 80 were tested three times with an inter-assessment interval of 14 days. The battery included the Rey Auditory Verbal Learning Test, the Stroop interference test, the Letter-Number Sequencing test, Wechsler Adult Intelligence Scale-III(WAIS-III), the Ruff 2 and 7 Selective Attention Test, the Tower of London, the Verbal Fluency test, and simple, choice, and sequential reaction time tests. The results showed that tasks were generally subject to a practice effect, except for those with alternate forms. In all tests, there were a number of scores demonstrating good TRR, but others, although largely used in clinical practice, failed to reach acceptable TRR standards. Usually, time derived scores were associated with the best TRR.


Progress in Neuro-psychopharmacology & Biological Psychiatry | 2004

Lack of efficacy of a nicotine transdermal treatment on motor and cognitive deficits in Parkinson's disease

Simon Lemay; Sylvain Chouinard; Pierre J. Blanchet; Hélène Masson; Valérie Soland; Anne Beuter; Marc-André Bédard

UNLABELLED Studies assessing the efficacy of nicotine in Parkinsons disease (PD) have generated contradictory results. The controversy seems to stem from uncontrolled factors including the lack of objective measures, the practice effect in a test-retest design, and the absence of plasmatic dosage. This study aimed at further controlling these factors using transdermal nicotine in PD. METHODS Twenty-two nonsmoking PD patients received a transdermal nicotine treatment over 25 days in increasing titrated doses. Motor and cognitive assessments were carried out on days 11 and 25 (low-dose and high-dose assessments, respectively) and after a 14-day washout period. RESULTS Patients tolerated nicotine poorly. Thirteen (59%) withdrew, mostly because of acute side effects. In the remaining nine patients, nicotine neither improved nor worsened motor or cognitive functioning in comparison with 10 age, gender and education matched controls. CONCLUSIONS Transdermal nicotine is not effective in treating motor and cognitive deficits in PD. The results obtained with our objective measures confirm a recent double-blind, placebo-controlled study that used clinical measures. It is possible that nicotine lacks specificity in targeting critical nicotinic receptors that might be involved in PD pathophysiology. The low tolerability may be related to such a lack of specificity of nicotine, which would directly stimulate the autonomic nervous system.


Brain and Cognition | 1999

Acute and Long-Term Administration of Anticholinergics in Parkinson's Disease: Specific Effects on the Subcortico-Frontal Syndrome

Marc-André Bédard; Bernard Pillon; Bruno Dubois; N. Duchesne; H. Masson; Y. Agid

Parkinsons Disease (PD) is often associated with a subcortico-frontal syndrome (SCFS) that is mainly characterized by executive dysfunctions. The complete biochemistry of these dysfunctions remain misunderstood. Most studies have focused on the well-known nigro-striatal dopaminergic degenerations of PD, but a more satisfying understanding of the SCFS has come from the study of the cholinergic systems. We present here two new experiments carried out with long-term and acute anticholinergic treatments in PD. In the first experiment, the effects of a 2-week treatment with trihexyphenidyl were compared to those observed under placebo on a neuropsychological battery. Results showed that anticholinergic-induced deficits in PD were exclusively concerned with executive functions. In the second experiment, the effects of an acute subclinical dose of scopolamine were compared between normal controls and PD patients who were devoid of cognitive deficit on a subset of executive tasks. Results indicates that PD patients but not normal controls developed a transient SCFS for the duration of the drug action. In contrast to other populations with cholinergic depletions-such as Alzheimers disease-cholinergic blockade in PD exacerbates specifically the SCFS. Such a discrepancy between these two neuropsychological profiles are discussed in terms of the specificity of the underlying cholinergic lesions.


Experimental Brain Research | 2010

Movement chunking during sequence learning is a dopamine-dependant process: a study conducted in Parkinson's disease

Pierre-Luc Tremblay; Marc-André Bédard; Dominic Langlois; Pierre J. Blanchet; Martin Lemay; Maxime Parent

Chunking of single movements into integrated sequences has been described during motor learning, and we have recently demonstrated that this process involves a dopamine-dependant mechanism in animal (Levesque et al. in Exp Brain Res 182:499–508, 2007; Tremblay et al. in Behav Brain Res 198:231–239, 2009). However, there is no such evidence in human. The aim of the present study was to assess this question in Parkinson’s disease (PD), a neurological condition known for its dopamine depletion in the striatum. Eleven PD patients were tested under their usual levodopa medication (ON state), and following a 12-h levodopa withdrawal (OFF state). Patients were compared with 12 healthy participants on a motor learning sequencing task, requiring pressing fourteen buttons in the correct order, which was determined by visual stimuli presented on a computer screen. Learning was assessed from three blocks of 20 trials administered successively. Chunks of movements were intrinsically created by each participant during this learning period. Then, the sequence was shuffled according to the participant’s own chunks, generating two new sequences, with either preserved or broken chunks. Those new motor sequences had to be performed separately in a fourth and fifth blocks of 20 trials. Results showed that execution time improved in every group during the learning period (from blocks 1 to 3). However, while motor chunking occurred in healthy controls and ON-PD patients, it did not in OFF-PD patients. In the shuffling conditions, a significant difference was seen between the preserved and the broken chunks conditions for both healthy participants and ON-PD patients, but not for OFF-PD patients. These results suggest that movement chunking during motor sequence learning is a dopamine-dependent process in human.


Clinical Neuropharmacology | 1989

Nocturnal γ-hydroxybutyrate. Effect on periodic leg movements and sleep organization of narcoleptic patients

Marc-André Bédard; Jacques Montplaisir; Roger Godbout; Odile Lapierre

Periodic leg movements during sleep (PMS) is a disorder frequently encountered in narcolepsy. In the present study, 12 narcoleptic patients (six with PMS and six without) were recorded in a sleep laboratory for 2 consecutive nights before and after treatment with gamma-hydroxybutyrate (GHB) taken at bedtime for 1 month. Treatment resulted in decreased rapid eye movement (REM) sleep latency and increased REM efficiency without change in the total duration of REM sleep. GHB was associated with the appearance of pathological levels of PMS in patients who were unaffected before treatment. These results are discussed in relation to the role of dopamine in the physiopathology of narcolepsy and PMS.


Brain and Cognition | 2001

Pattern of intrusions in verbal recall: Comparison of Alzheimer's disease, Parkinson's disease, and frontal lobe dementia

Isabelle Rouleau; H. Imbault; Martine Laframboise; Marc-André Bédard

Although some researchers have suggested that intrusions in word list learning are more frequent in Alzheimers disease, recent studies have shown that this might not be true. In fact, intrusions are common in many neurological degenerative diseases. The goal of the present study was to examine the types of intrusions made by three groups of patients, namely patients with Parkinsons disease (PD), Alzheimers disease (AD), and dementia with prominent frontal lobe semiology (FD). Although PD patients learned more words (trials 1 to 5 on the RAVLT) than the two other groups, there was no significant difference in the total number of intrusions. However, significant differences between groups were observed for nonrelated intrusions, the proportion of PD patients (15.4%) being lower than the proportion of AD (45.5%) and FD (45.8%) patients with this type of intrusions. No other type of intrusions (same category, recurring, phonemic) significantly differentiated between the three groups. The proactive interference effect (PI), measured as the difference between first recall of list A and list B recall, was stronger in PD than in the two other groups, reflecting the strong positive correlation between total number of words recalled on the RAVLT and severity of the PI effect. Prior list intrusions (intrusions from list A while recalling list B items) were significantly more pronounced in FD than in the two other groups. Finally, free associations (series of intrusions related to one another but not to the target items) were observed almost exclusively in FD patients. These findings illustrate some qualitative differences between various neurological degenerative diseases. They also stress the marked similarities between AD and FD with regards to verbal learning.

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Emmanuel Stip

Université de Montréal

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Jean-Paul Soucy

Montreal Neurological Institute and Hospital

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Francois Richer

Université du Québec à Montréal

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Alexey Kostikov

Montreal Neurological Institute and Hospital

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Antonio Aliaga

Montreal Neurological Institute and Hospital

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Isabelle Rouleau

Université du Québec à Montréal

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