Cardiology Clinical Trial
Official title:
Develop and Rehabilitation Effects of the Safety Aerobic Exercise Prescription on Cognition, Depression and Quality of Life in Traumatic Brain Injury Patients- Taking the Cerebral Blood Circulation as a Mediator
NCT number | NCT04243226 |
Other study ID # | 30988 |
Secondary ID | |
Status | Recruiting |
Phase | N/A |
First received | |
Last updated | |
Start date | January 1, 2020 |
Est. completion date | August 31, 2026 |
The aim of this study is to develop exercise prescription of TBI patients and then to evaluate the effectiveness of programmed aerobic walking exercise to improve cognitive performance, depression relief, motivation, symptom, resilience and quality of life with improvement of CBF. This will be a randomized controlled clinical trial, using a mixed method to explore the feasibility and validity of such a safety exercise prescription. Then, a randomized clinical control trial will be applied in TBI patients to evaluate the effectiveness of programmed aerobic exercise to promote psysical-psycho-social health such as cognitive status, 6 minutes walk test, depression relief, motivation, symptom, resilience and quality of life.
Status | Recruiting |
Enrollment | 120 |
Est. completion date | August 31, 2026 |
Est. primary completion date | August 31, 2026 |
Accepts healthy volunteers | Accepts Healthy Volunteers |
Gender | All |
Age group | 20 Years and older |
Eligibility | Inclusion Criteria: 1. Patients who have been diagnosed with mild traumatic brain injury at the emergency department 2. GCS score of 14-15 at the emergency department or patients with moderate brain injury (GCS score of 8-13 3. Brain injury Patients more than three months after discharge 4. Can communicate in Chinese and Taiwanese 5. Patients who have good audio-visual ability to complete tests and data filling 6. Patients are willing to sign a consent form to participate in the research. 7. Each subject was able to walk on their own, communicate freely and live in Taipei or Greater Taipei. Exclusion Criteria: 1. Exclude those with severe impairment of cognition, emotions and executive function caused by prefrontal lobe injury 2. Exclude patients with brain injury due to head puncture. 3. Regularly perform moderate-intensity aerobic exercise. |
Country | Name | City | State |
---|---|---|---|
Taiwan | TSGH | Taipei city |
Lead Sponsor | Collaborator |
---|---|
National Defense Medical Center, Taiwan | Ministry of Science and Technology, Taiwan |
Taiwan,
Churchill JD, Galvez R, Colcombe S, Swain RA, Kramer AF, Greenough WT. Exercise, experience and the aging brain. Neurobiol Aging. 2002 Sep-Oct;23(5):941-55. doi: 10.1016/s0197-4580(02)00028-3. — View Citation
Devine JM, Wong B, Gervino E, Pascual-Leone A, Alexander MP. Independent, Community-Based Aerobic Exercise Training for People With Moderate-to-Severe Traumatic Brain Injury. Arch Phys Med Rehabil. 2016 Aug;97(8):1392-7. doi: 10.1016/j.apmr.2016.04.015. Epub 2016 May 20. — View Citation
Hassett LM, Moseley AM, Tate R, Harmer AR. Fitness training for cardiorespiratory conditioning after traumatic brain injury. Cochrane Database Syst Rev. 2008 Apr 16;(2):CD006123. doi: 10.1002/14651858.CD006123.pub2. — View Citation
Snyder HR, Kaiser RH, Warren SL, Heller W. Obsessive-compulsive disorder is associated with broad impairments in executive function: A meta-analysis. Clin Psychol Sci. 2015 Mar;3(2):301-330. doi: 10.1177/2167702614534210. — View Citation
Taylor JM, Montgomery MH, Gregory EJ, Berman NE. Exercise preconditioning improves traumatic brain injury outcomes. Brain Res. 2015 Oct 5;1622:414-29. doi: 10.1016/j.brainres.2015.07.009. Epub 2015 Jul 9. — View Citation
Vanderbeken I, Kerckhofs E. A systematic review of the effect of physical exercise on cognition in stroke and traumatic brain injury patients. NeuroRehabilitation. 2017;40(1):33-48. doi: 10.3233/NRE-161388. — View Citation
Type | Measure | Description | Time frame | Safety issue |
---|---|---|---|---|
Other | depression status-(T1) | Depression will be measured by Beck depression index (BDI). The BDI scale is a brief self-report scale designed to measure self-reported symptoms associated with depression experienced in the past. The items of the scale are symptoms associated with depression which have been used in previously validated longer scales. A score is assigned by totaling all items (after reversing the positive mood items]. The possible range for the 21-item scale is 0 to 63, and a cut off score of 16 or higher indicates the presence of significant depressive symptoms. | T1-Baseline | |
Other | depression status-(T2) | Depression will be measured by Beck depression index (BDI). The BDI scale is a brief self-report scale designed to measure self-reported symptoms associated with depression experienced in the past. The items of the scale are symptoms associated with depression which have been used in previously validated longer scales. A score is assigned by totaling all items (after reversing the positive mood items]. The possible range for the 21-item scale is 0 to 63, and a cut off score of 16 or higher indicates the presence of significant depressive symptoms. | T2-1 month later | |
Other | depression status-(T3) | Depression will be measured by Beck depression index (BDI). The BDI scale is a brief self-report scale designed to measure self-reported symptoms associated with depression experienced in the past. The items of the scale are symptoms associated with depression which have been used in previously validated longer scales. A score is assigned by totaling all items (after reversing the positive mood items]. The possible range for the 21-item scale is 0 to 63, and a cut off score of 16 or higher indicates the presence of significant depressive symptoms. | T3-2 months later | |
Other | depression status-(T4) | Depression will be measured by Beck depression index (BDI). The BDI scale is a brief self-report scale designed to measure self-reported symptoms associated with depression experienced in the past. The items of the scale are symptoms associated with depression which have been used in previously validated longer scales. A score is assigned by totaling all items (after reversing the positive mood items]. The possible range for the 21-item scale is 0 to 63, and a cut off score of 16 or higher indicates the presence of significant depressive symptoms. | T4-3 months later | |
Other | depression status-(T5) | Depression will be measured by Beck depression index (BDI). The BDI scale is a brief self-report scale designed to measure self-reported symptoms associated with depression experienced in the past. The items of the scale are symptoms associated with depression which have been used in previously validated longer scales. A score is assigned by totaling all items (after reversing the positive mood items]. The possible range for the 21-item scale is 0 to 63, and a cut off score of 16 or higher indicates the presence of significant depressive symptoms. | T5-6 months later | |
Other | depression status-(T6) | Depression will be measured by Beck depression index (BDI). The BDI scale is a brief self-report scale designed to measure self-reported symptoms associated with depression experienced in the past. The items of the scale are symptoms associated with depression which have been used in previously validated longer scales. A score is assigned by totaling all items (after reversing the positive mood items]. The possible range for the 21-item scale is 0 to 63, and a cut off score of 16 or higher indicates the presence of significant depressive symptoms. | T6-12 months later | |
Other | Quality of life-(T1): WHOQOL-BREF | Quality of life will be measured by World Health organization quality of life (WHOQOL) instrument. The WHOQOL-BREF is a 26-item instrument consisting of four domains: physical health (7 items), psychological health (6 items), social relationships (3 items), and environmental health (8 items); it also contains QOL and general health items.The WHOQOL-BREF is a shorter version of the original instrument that may be more convenient for use in large research studies or clinical trials. | T1-Baseline | |
Other | Quality of life-(T2): WHOQOL-BREF | Quality of life will be measured by World Health organization quality of life (WHOQOL) instrument. The WHOQOL-BREF is a 26-item instrument consisting of four domains: physical health (7 items), psychological health (6 items), social relationships (3 items), and environmental health (8 items); it also contains QOL and general health items.The WHOQOL-BREF is a shorter version of the original instrument that may be more convenient for use in large research studies or clinical trials. | T2-1 month later | |
Other | Quality of life-(T3): WHOQOL-BREF | Quality of life will be measured by World Health organization quality of life (WHOQOL) instrument. The WHOQOL-BREF is a 26-item instrument consisting of four domains: physical health (7 items), psychological health (6 items), social relationships (3 items), and environmental health (8 items); it also contains QOL and general health items.The WHOQOL-BREF is a shorter version of the original instrument that may be more convenient for use in large research studies or clinical trials. | T3-2 month later | |
Other | Quality of life-(T4): WHOQOL-BREF | Quality of life will be measured by World Health organization quality of life (WHOQOL) instrument. The WHOQOL-BREF is a 26-item instrument consisting of four domains: physical health (7 items), psychological health (6 items), social relationships (3 items), and environmental health (8 items); it also contains QOL and general health items.The WHOQOL-BREF is a shorter version of the original instrument that may be more convenient for use in large research studies or clinical trials. | T4-3 months later | |
Other | Quality of life-(T5): WHOQOL-BREF | Quality of life will be measured by World Health organization quality of life (WHOQOL) instrument. The WHOQOL-BREF is a 26-item instrument consisting of four domains: physical health (7 items), psychological health (6 items), social relationships (3 items), and environmental health (8 items); it also contains QOL and general health items.The WHOQOL-BREF is a shorter version of the original instrument that may be more convenient for use in large research studies or clinical trials. | T5- 6 months later | |
Other | Quality of life-(T6): WHOQOL-BREF | Quality of life will be measured by World Health organization quality of life (WHOQOL) instrument. The WHOQOL-BREF is a 26-item instrument consisting of four domains: physical health (7 items), psychological health (6 items), social relationships (3 items), and environmental health (8 items); it also contains QOL and general health items.The WHOQOL-BREF is a shorter version of the original instrument that may be more convenient for use in large research studies or clinical trials. | T6- 12 months later | |
Other | resilience status-(T1) | Resilience will be measured by Resilience scale for adult scale. The Resilience Scale for Adults (RSA) (Friborg et al., 2003) is a 37-item scale that measures resilience as healthy adaptation and personal competence during exposure to significant adversity, trauma, or stress. | T1-Baseline | |
Other | resilience status-(T2) | Resilience will be measured by Resilience scale for adult scale. The Resilience Scale for Adults (RSA) (Friborg et al., 2003) is a 37-item scale that measures resilience as healthy adaptation and personal competence during exposure to significant adversity, trauma, or stress. | T2-1 month later | |
Other | resilience status-(T3) | Resilience will be measured by Resilience scale for adult scale. The Resilience Scale for Adults (RSA) (Friborg et al., 2003) is a 37-item scale that measures resilience as healthy adaptation and personal competence during exposure to significant adversity, trauma, or stress. | T3-2 month later | |
Other | resilience status-(T4) | Resilience will be measured by Resilience scale for adult scale. The Resilience Scale for Adults (RSA) (Friborg et al., 2003) is a 37-item scale that measures resilience as healthy adaptation and personal competence during exposure to significant adversity, trauma, or stress. | T4-3 months later | |
Other | resilience status-(T5) | Resilience will be measured by Resilience scale for adult scale. The Resilience Scale for Adults (RSA) (Friborg et al., 2003) is a 37-item scale that measures resilience as healthy adaptation and personal competence during exposure to significant adversity, trauma, or stress. | T5-6 months later | |
Other | resilience status-(T6) | Resilience will be measured by Resilience scale for adult scale. The Resilience Scale for Adults (RSA) (Friborg et al., 2003) is a 37-item scale that measures resilience as healthy adaptation and personal competence during exposure to significant adversity, trauma, or stress. | T6-12 months later | |
Other | Post-concussion symptom-(T1) | post-concussion will be measured by the Rivermead post-concussion symptom scale. | T1-Baseline | |
Other | Post-concussion symptom-(T2) | post-concussion will be measured by the Rivermead post-concussion symptom scale. | T2-1 month later | |
Other | Post-concussion symptom-(T3) | post-concussion will be measured by the Rivermead post-concussion symptom scale. | T3-2 months later | |
Other | Post-concussion symptom-(T4) | post-concussion will be measured by the Rivermead post-concussion symptom scale. | T4-3 months later | |
Other | Post-concussion symptom-(T5) | post-concussion will be measured by the Rivermead post-concussion symptom scale. | T5-6 months later | |
Other | Post-concussion symptom-(T6) | post-concussion will be measured by the Rivermead post-concussion symptom scale. | T6-12 months later | |
Other | Self-efficacy-(T1) | Self-efficacy will be measured by the self-efficacy scale. | T1- Baseline | |
Other | Self-efficacy-(T2) | Self-efficacy will be measured by the self-efficacy scale. | T2- 1 month later | |
Other | Self-efficacy-(T3) | Self-efficacy will be measured by the self-efficacy scale. | T3- 2 months later | |
Other | Self-efficacy-(T4) | Self-efficacy will be measured by the self-efficacy scale. | T4- 3 months later | |
Other | Self-efficacy-(T5) | Self-efficacy will be measured by the self-efficacy scale. | T5- 6 months later | |
Other | Self-efficacy-(T6) | Self-efficacy will be measured by the self-efficacy scale. | T6- 12 months later | |
Other | Sleep quality-(T1) | Sleep quality will be measured by the Pittsburgh sleep quality scale and the Garmin vivosmart sleep records and its physiological recording. | T1- Baseline | |
Other | Sleep quality-(T2) | Sleep quality will be measured by the Pittsburgh sleep quality scale and the Garmin vivosmart sleep records and its physiological recording. | T2- 1 month later | |
Other | Sleep quality-(T3) | Sleep quality will be measured by the Pittsburgh sleep quality scale and the Garmin vivosmart sleep records and its physiological recording. | T3- 2 months later | |
Other | Sleep quality-(T4) | Sleep quality will be measured by the Pittsburgh sleep quality scale and the Garmin vivosmart sleep records and its physiological recording. | T4- 3 months later | |
Other | Sleep quality-(T5) | Sleep quality will be measured by the Pittsburgh sleep quality scale and the Garmin vivosmart sleep records and its physiological recording. | T5- 6 months later | |
Other | Sleep quality-(T6) | Sleep quality will be measured by the Pittsburgh sleep quality scale and the Garmin vivosmart sleep records and its physiological recording. | T6- 12 months later | |
Other | Sport motivation Scale-(T1) | Sport motivation will be measure by the Sport Motivation Scale II (SMS-II)and exercise motivation interview. The 18-item SMS-II consists of six subscalesmeasuring amotivation, external regulation, introjected regulation, identified regulation, integrated regulation, and intrinsic motivation. Each subscale has three items. Participants were asked to respond to all the items on a 7-point Likert scale ranging from 1 (not true at all) to 7 (very true). | T1- baseline | |
Other | Sport motivation Scale-(T2) | Sport motivation will be measure by the Sport Motivation Scale II (SMS-II)and exercise motivation interview. The 18-item SMS-II consists of six subscalesmeasuring amotivation, external regulation, introjected regulation, identified regulation, integrated regulation, and intrinsic motivation. Each subscale has three items. Participants were asked to respond to all the items on a 7-point Likert scale ranging from 1 (not true at all) to 7 (very true). | T2- 1 month later | |
Other | Sport motivation Scale-(T3) | Sport motivation will be measure by the Sport Motivation Scale II (SMS-II)and exercise motivation interview. The 18-item SMS-II consists of six subscalesmeasuring amotivation, external regulation, introjected regulation, identified regulation, integrated regulation, and intrinsic motivation. Each subscale has three items. Participants were asked to respond to all the items on a 7-point Likert scale ranging from 1 (not true at all) to 7 (very true). | T3- 2 month later | |
Other | Sport motivation Scale-(T4) | Sport motivation will be measure by the Sport Motivation Scale II (SMS-II)and exercise motivation interview. The 18-item SMS-II consists of six subscalesmeasuring amotivation, external regulation, introjected regulation, identified regulation, integrated regulation, and intrinsic motivation. Each subscale has three items. Participants were asked to respond to all the items on a 7-point Likert scale ranging from 1 (not true at all) to 7 (very true). | T4- 3 month later | |
Other | Sport motivation Scale-(T5) | Sport motivation will be measure by the Sport Motivation Scale II (SMS-II)and exercise motivation interview. The 18-item SMS-II consists of six subscalesmeasuring amotivation, external regulation, introjected regulation, identified regulation, integrated regulation, and intrinsic motivation. Each subscale has three items. Participants were asked to respond to all the items on a 7-point Likert scale ranging from 1 (not true at all) to 7 (very true). | T5- 6 month later | |
Other | Sport motivation Scale-(T6) | Sport motivation will be measure by the Sport Motivation Scale II (SMS-II)and exercise motivation interview. The 18-item SMS-II consists of six subscalesmeasuring amotivation, external regulation, introjected regulation, identified regulation, integrated regulation, and intrinsic motivation. Each subscale has three items. Participants were asked to respond to all the items on a 7-point Likert scale ranging from 1 (not true at all) to 7 (very true). | T6- 12 month later | |
Primary | cerebral blood flow (CBF)-(T1) | Hemoencephalography (HEG) will be measure by Bioland, the unit is ratio A/B and the brain SPECT | T1_Baseline | |
Primary | cerebral blood flow (CBF)-(T2) | Hemoencephalography (HEG) will be measure by Bioland, the unit is ratio A/Band | T2_1 month later | |
Primary | cerebral blood flow (CBF)-(T3) | Hemoencephalography (HEG) will be measure by Bioland, the unit is ratio A/B | T3_2 months later | |
Primary | cerebral blood flow (CBF)-(T4) | Hemoencephalography (HEG) will be measure by Bioland, the unit is ratio A/B | T4_3 months later | |
Primary | cerebral blood flow (CBF)-(T5) | Hemoencephalography (HEG) will be measure by Bioland, the unit is ratio A/B and the brain SPECT | T5_6 months later | |
Primary | cerebral blood flow (CBF)-(T6) | Hemoencephalography (HEG) will be measure by Bioland, the unit is ratio A/B | T6_12 months later | |
Primary | 6 minutes walk test-(T1) | The 6 Minute Walk Test is a sub-maximal exercise test used to assess aerobic capacity and endurance. The distance covered over a time of 6 minutes is used as the outcome by which to compare changes in performance capacity.The 6MWT can be used in preschool children (2-5 years), children (6-12 years) adults (18-64 years), elderly adults (65+) with a wide range of diagnoses including. The test was initially designed to help in the assessment of patient with cardiopulmonary issues. Gradually, it was introduced in numerous other conditions. It evaluates the functional capacity of the individual and it provides valuable information regarding all the systems during physical activity, including pulmonary and cardiovascular systems, blood circulation, neuromuscular units, body metabolism, and peripheral circulation. | T1-Baseline | |
Primary | 6 minutes walk test-(T2) | The 6 Minute Walk Test is a sub-maximal exercise test used to assess aerobic capacity and endurance. The distance covered over a time of 6 minutes is used as the outcome by which to compare changes in performance capacity.The 6MWT can be used in preschool children (2-5 years), children (6-12 years) adults (18-64 years), elderly adults (65+) with a wide range of diagnoses including. The test was initially designed to help in the assessment of patient with cardiopulmonary issues. Gradually, it was introduced in numerous other conditions. It evaluates the functional capacity of the individual and it provides valuable information regarding all the systems during physical activity, including pulmonary and cardiovascular systems, blood circulation, neuromuscular units, body metabolism, and peripheral circulation. | T2-1 month later | |
Primary | 6 minutes walk test-(T3) | The 6 Minute Walk Test is a sub-maximal exercise test used to assess aerobic capacity and endurance. The distance covered over a time of 6 minutes is used as the outcome by which to compare changes in performance capacity.The 6MWT can be used in preschool children (2-5 years), children (6-12 years) adults (18-64 years), elderly adults (65+) with a wide range of diagnoses including. The test was initially designed to help in the assessment of patient with cardiopulmonary issues. Gradually, it was introduced in numerous other conditions. It evaluates the functional capacity of the individual and it provides valuable information regarding all the systems during physical activity, including pulmonary and cardiovascular systems, blood circulation, neuromuscular units, body metabolism, and peripheral circulation. | T3-2 months later | |
Primary | 6 minutes walk test-(T4) | The 6 Minute Walk Test is a sub-maximal exercise test used to assess aerobic capacity and endurance. The distance covered over a time of 6 minutes is used as the outcome by which to compare changes in performance capacity.The 6MWT can be used in preschool children (2-5 years), children (6-12 years) adults (18-64 years), elderly adults (65+) with a wide range of diagnoses including. The test was initially designed to help in the assessment of patient with cardiopulmonary issues. Gradually, it was introduced in numerous other conditions. It evaluates the functional capacity of the individual and it provides valuable information regarding all the systems during physical activity, including pulmonary and cardiovascular systems, blood circulation, neuromuscular units, body metabolism, and peripheral circulation. | T4-3 months later | |
Primary | 6 minutes walk test-(T5) | The 6 Minute Walk Test is a sub-maximal exercise test used to assess aerobic capacity and endurance. The distance covered over a time of 6 minutes is used as the outcome by which to compare changes in performance capacity.The 6MWT can be used in preschool children (2-5 years), children (6-12 years) adults (18-64 years), elderly adults (65+) with a wide range of diagnoses including. The test was initially designed to help in the assessment of patient with cardiopulmonary issues. Gradually, it was introduced in numerous other conditions. It evaluates the functional capacity of the individual and it provides valuable information regarding all the systems during physical activity, including pulmonary and cardiovascular systems, blood circulation, neuromuscular units, body metabolism, and peripheral circulation. | T5-6 months later | |
Primary | 6 minutes walk test-(T6) | The 6 Minute Walk Test is a sub-maximal exercise test used to assess aerobic capacity and endurance. The distance covered over a time of 6 minutes is used as the outcome by which to compare changes in performance capacity.The 6MWT can be used in preschool children (2-5 years), children (6-12 years) adults (18-64 years), elderly adults (65+) with a wide range of diagnoses including. The test was initially designed to help in the assessment of patient with cardiopulmonary issues. Gradually, it was introduced in numerous other conditions. It evaluates the functional capacity of the individual and it provides valuable information regarding all the systems during physical activity, including pulmonary and cardiovascular systems, blood circulation, neuromuscular units, body metabolism, and peripheral circulation. | T6-12 months later | |
Primary | Cardio force index (CFI)-(T1) | CFI was measured by Bioharness device. The ratio is HR/peak activity. CFI is the index of cardiac force, correlated to VO2 max and can predict the physiological status of physical activity. The heart rate, respiratory rate, distance of walking/ exercise and angular acceleration are also be measured by Bioharness device in the same time to calculate the CFI. | T1-Baseline | |
Primary | Cardio force index (CFI)-(T2) | CFI was measured by Bioharness device. The ratio is HR/peak activity. CFI is the index of cardiac force, correlated to VO2 max and can predict the physiological status of physical activity. The heart rate, respiratory rate, distance of walking/ exercise and angular acceleration are also be measured by Bioharness device in the same time to calculate the CFI. | T2-1 month later | |
Primary | Cardio force index (CFI)-(T3) | CFI was measured by Bioharness device. The ratio is HR/peak activity. CFI is the index of cardiac force, correlated to VO2 max and can predict the physiological status of physical activity. The heart rate, respiratory rate, distance of walking/ exercise and angular acceleration are also be measured by Bioharness device in the same time to calculate the CFI. | T3-2 month later | |
Primary | Cardio force index (CFI)-(T4) | CFI was measured by Bioharness device. The ratio is HR/peak activity. CFI is the index of cardiac force, correlated to VO2 max and can predict the physiological status of physical activity. The heart rate, respiratory rate, distance of walking/ exercise and angular acceleration are also be measured by Bioharness device in the same time to calculate the CFI. | T4-3 months later | |
Primary | Cardio force index (CFI)-(T5) | CFI was measured by Bioharness device. The ratio is HR/peak activity. CFI is the index of cardiac force, correlated to VO2 max and can predict the physiological status of physical activity. The heart rate, respiratory rate, distance of walking/ exercise and angular acceleration are also be measured by Bioharness device in the same time to calculate the CFI. | T5-6 months later | |
Primary | Cardio force index (CFI)-(T6) | CFI was measured by Bioharness device. The ratio is HR/peak activity. CFI is the index of cardiac force, correlated to VO2 max and can predict the physiological status of physical activity. The heart rate, respiratory rate, distance of walking/ exercise and angular acceleration are also be measured by Bioharness device in the same time to calculate the CFI. | T6-12 months later | |
Secondary | Cognitive function-(T1) | Cognitive function will be measured by the Mini-Mental State Exam (MMSE )instrument. The Mini-Mental State Exam (MMSE) is a widely used test of cognitive function ... school (but not a graduate of), a score on the MMSE of 24 or below means cognitive impairment. | T1-Baseline | |
Secondary | Cognitive function-(T2) | Cognitive function will be measured by the Mini-Mental State Exam (MMSE )instrument. The Mini-Mental State Exam (MMSE) is a widely used test of cognitive function ... school (but not a graduate of), a score on the MMSE of 24 or below means cognitive impairment. | T2-1month later | |
Secondary | Cognitive function-(T3) | Cognitive function will be measured by the Mini-Mental State Exam (MMSE )instrument. The Mini-Mental State Exam (MMSE) is a widely used test of cognitive function ... school (but not a graduate of), a score on the MMSE of 24 or below means cognitive impairment. | T3-2month later | |
Secondary | Cognitive function-(T4) | Cognitive function will be measured by the Mini-Mental State Exam (MMSE )instrument. The Mini-Mental State Exam (MMSE) is a widely used test of cognitive function ... school (but not a graduate of), a score on the MMSE of 24 or below means cognitive impairment. | T4-3month later | |
Secondary | Cognitive function-(T5) | Cognitive function will be measured by the Mini-Mental State Exam (MMSE )instrument. The Mini-Mental State Exam (MMSE) is a widely used test of cognitive function ... school (but not a graduate of), a score on the MMSE of 24 or below means cognitive impairment. | T5-6months later | |
Secondary | Cognitive function-(T6) | Cognitive function will be measured by the Mini-Mental State Exam (MMSE )instrument. The Mini-Mental State Exam (MMSE) is a widely used test of cognitive function ... school (but not a graduate of), a score on the MMSE of 24 or below means cognitive impairment. | T6-12months later | |
Secondary | Brain single photon emission computed tomography (SPECT)-(T1) | brain Single Photon Emission Computed Tomography (SPECT) imaging has developed a substantial, evidence-based foundation and is now recommended by professional societies for numerous indications relevant to psychiatric practice. | T1_Baseline | |
Secondary | Brain single photon emission computed tomography (SPECT)-(T4) | brain Single Photon Emission Computed Tomography (SPECT) imaging has developed a substantial, evidence-based foundation and is now recommended by professional societies for numerous indications relevant to psychiatric practice. | T4_6 months later |
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