View clinical trials related to Multiple Sclerosis.
Filter by:This study is a case-control study, involving persons with progressive multiple sclerosis and healthy controls. The study contains 1 descriptive and 3 experimental sessions. In the descriptive session, participant's clinical motor and cognitive functions are collected. In the first experimental session, participant's beat perception and synchronisation abilities is examined within a finger tapping paradigm. In the following experimental sessions participants synchronsiation abilities is examined during walking paradigms, to music and metronomes, with period and phase auditory manipulations. In the latter twp sessions, apart from outcome measures of synchronization the following will be collected as well: brain activity using EEG recordings, spatio-temporal gait parameters, perceived fatigue, perceived motivation and perceived speed of walking.
The purpose of this research study is to evaluate the usefulness of a wearable robotic exoskeleton device (Ekso-GT), to improve learning and memory, and gait therapy in persons with walking disability due to Multiple Sclerosis. The study will evaluate the mobility, learning and memory, and walking abilities of individuals with multiple sclerosis who went through the traditional as compared to others who used the robotic exoskeleton as part of their therapy.
The central hypothesis is that lutein supplementation will improve MPOD and cognition. Accordingly, the specific aims are to 1) to determine the process feasibility associated with participating in 4-month lutein supplementation trial; and 2) to investigate the scientific feasibility of 4-month daily lutein supplementation on biological markers of lutein status and cognitive function among persons with MS.
Multiple Sclerosis (MS) is a chronic, autoimmune, neurodegenerative disease; clinical events are mainly attributed to myelin destruction and inflammatory of the central nervous system. The diagnosis resides in clinical and radiological criteria according to 2017 McDonald criteria. Once the diagnosis of MS has been made, treatment should be initiated promptly, in order to delay the onset of severe disability in the long-term, even more ocrelizumab are a treatment of high efficacy. Ocrelizumab is used as a first-line or second-line treatment in Relapsing Remitting MS (RRMS) It is an anti-CD20 monoclonal antibody that provides rapid depletion of circulating CD20+ B lymphocytes by complement-dependent cytotoxicity and antibody-dependent cellular cytotoxicity. The main objective is the retrospective evaluation of the impact of ocrelizumab on the outcome of MS. The secondary objective is the search of predictive factors of response to treatment.
The study involves MS patients with and without neuropsychological disorders. The patient will benefit from: - A routine neuropsychological assessment, including a cognitive and emotional assessment - A clinical examination - A three-dimensional analysis of movement
The goal of this study is to assess the role of sociocognitive and interpersonal factors in the therapeutic adherence of multiple sclerosis patients. This study will provide a better understanding of the socio-psychological issues associated with different types of non-adherence to treatment, and identify the risk factors and vulnerability of each patient.
Introduction: Fetal exposure to glucocorticoids (GCs) used to induce fetal lung maturation in women threatened by premature labour is known to induce aberrations in brain development and stress sensitivity, cognitive dysfunction and neuro-psychiatric disorders in later life which all predict early brain ageing. Another common source of fetal GC exposure is the treatment of relapses in multiple sclerosis (MS), the most common neurological disease in young women. Despite the lack of studies, the 300-fold higher dosage of GCs for MS relapse treatment compared to obstetric indications is considered harmless for the fetus . Objectives: To examine the effects of GCs for MS relapse treatment during pregnancy on offspring structural and functional brain development, stress sensitivity, and cognitive and behavioural performance. Methods: Epidemiological multi-centre cohort study in 80 children and adolescents aged 8 to 18 years whose mothers received GCs to treat a MS relapse during pregnancy compared to unexposed participants. Expected Impact: Creating a guideline-changing evidence-based risk-benefit assessment regarding benefits of the MS relapse therapy for the mother and potential harm to the child.
The main objective of the project is therefore to study and thus better understand the immunomodulatory / anti-inflammatory effects of cladribine during multiple sclerosis. Most current and developing therapies targeting the immune system have no effect on the progressive phase of MS, during which neurodegeneration plays a predominant role. As mentioned above, the very promising results of clinical trials with cladribine tablets for the early and progressive phase of the disease have revealed immunomodulatory properties and suggested potential neuroprotective effects. It therefore plans to further dissect one of these two parameters by designing in vitro studies with peripheral blood mononuclear cells (PBMC) from healthy donors and MS patients.
This study is to evaluate the sensitivity and intra-/inter-observer agreement of the averaged magnetization inversion recovery acquisitions (AMIRA) in spinal cord (SC) Multiple sclerosis (MS) lesion detection and to evaluate the additional clinical value of this sequence in clinical settings.
Botulinum toxin type A injections into the detrusor at a dose of 200 units (U) of BOTOX® are a recognized second-line treatment for the treatment of adult neurogenic lower urinary tract disorders. Anticholinergics are established as the usual first-line treatment for neurogenic detrusor hyperactivity, but are oft not sufficiently effective and have significant side effects. In patients with multiple sclerosis (MS) suffering from overactive bladder, the 200 U dose of BOTOX® is very effective but induces a risk of urinary retention in 30% of patients requiring the temporary use of self-catheterization1. At 100 U, a recent study shows the efficacy and very good tolerance of botulinum toxin A in terms of probing risk in MS patients with overactive bladder and failure of anticholinergics. Furthermore, the efficacy of anticholinergics in MS has been little studied and is also disputed. The investigators plan to test the therapeutic alternative as the first line of treatment in two groups of randomized MS patients from a homogeneous population suffering from overactive bladder: - a group testing the effectiveness of low doses of botulinum toxin type A (100 U, BOTOX®), - the other group receiving the standard anticholinergic treatment (solifenacin succinate, Vesicare®). During this pilot study, the efficacy and side effects profile of each treatment will be analyzed in order to determine the amplitudes of effect and the safety profiles in this population and in order to establish the statistical hypotheses for a subsequent randomized multicenter study. The aim of this study will be to establish the benefit of botulinum toxin at a dose of 100 U as a first-line treatment instead of anticholinergics