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Mild Traumatic Brain Injury clinical trials

View clinical trials related to Mild Traumatic Brain Injury.

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NCT ID: NCT06314464 Enrolling by invitation - Clinical trials for Mild Traumatic Brain Injury

Portable Mixed Reality-based Platform for Assessment of Progress in Multisensory Rehabilitation Strategies Post-TBI

Praxis
Start date: February 12, 2024
Phase: N/A
Study type: Interventional

The goal of this comparative pilot study is to provide evidence that Praxis, a portable testbed with low-cost wearable sensors and a mixed reality environment, can deliver effective multisensory rehabilitation exercises with military face-validity in a military service member (SM) population after mild Traumatic Brain Injury (mTBI). The main questions this comparative pilot study aims to answer are: - Can the Praxis testbed provide feasible/acceptable 4-week multisensory rehabilitation for SMs with post-acute mTBI? - Can Praxis detect and influence measurable changes in readiness performance during mTBI recovery? Fifteen SMs with post-acute mTBI from the Center for the Intrepid's Special Operations Performance and Recovery (SPaR) Program will participate in the multisensory vestibular rehabilitation regimen. These SMs will go through 4 weeks of multisensory vestibular rehabilitation including: - gaze stabilization - dual-task balance training - spatial navigation - agility training Data from another fifteen SMs, who will not go through the multisensory rehabilitation regimen and will receive supervised cardiovascular exercise, will be used as the control group. Researchers will compare the Praxis and Control group to determine if the Praxis group shows improvement over the control group with respect to the military-relevant behavioral performance outcomes and patient-reported symptom scores after the end of the rehabilitation.

NCT ID: NCT05825027 Enrolling by invitation - Clinical trials for Mild Traumatic Brain Injury

Risk Stratification in Children With Concussion

RSiCC
Start date: May 23, 2023
Phase:
Study type: Observational

This project will measure concussion symptoms, biological markers, and academic and social factors across the first year postconcussion to develop a model that enables early identification of and symptom management for children at higher risk for persistent postconcussive symptoms. Findings will provide novel insights into the longer-term effects of concussion on children's physical, psychological, and social well-being and support the development of personalized healthcare and school-based plans to reduce disparities in children's ability to return-to-learn and -play and improve postconcussion quality of life.

NCT ID: NCT05527041 Enrolling by invitation - Clinical trials for Mild Traumatic Brain Injury

A Highly Portable Device for Assessment of Mild Traumatic Brain Injury in Deployed and Far-Forward Settings

Start date: July 1, 2023
Phase:
Study type: Observational

The purpose of this study is to develop a highly portable, ruggedized diagnostic tool for concussion, EyeBOX Lens (EBLens), that can be utilized in deployed field and far-forward settings. The EBLens will be based on a concussion diagnostic algorithm from the FDA cleared EyeBOX device, developed by Oculogica, and eye-tracking data collected from a wearable set of eye-tracking glasses, developed by Adhawk Microsystems. Once the EBLens is prototyped, an algorithm for diagnosing concussion will be developed that is specifically appropriate for the EBLens via a case-control clinical study comparing 100 concussed to 100 non-concussed subjects (Phase I). Participants, age 18-35 years, will be recruited from the KACH research team and affiliated providers and clinical sites. Concussed individuals will be assessed within 72 hours of concussion. Demographics, basic medical history, symptom severity, a visio-vestibular exam and the EBLens scan will be collected on both injured cases and uninjured controls at a single time point. The algorithm and the EBLens will be validated in a subsequent, prospective cohort validation study (Phase II) designed for FDA submission. The correlation of the EBLens output with resolution of symptoms will also be observed in longitudinal follow-up of concussed participants in the validation study. The participant population for this study will be cadets recruited from the USMA and young athletes recruited from affiliated sites during baseline concussion testing. Participants will be assessed at baseline at the start of their academic year or sports season. Those participants who experience a concussive injury will be assessed again at three time points; 1) within 72 hours of injury, 2) weekly until and at the time of initiation of a graded return to activity protocol, and 3) upon clearance for unrestricted RTP/RTD.