View clinical trials related to Multiple Sclerosis.
Filter by:This study is a randomized multicentre, multinational, treatment interventional study of RRMS patients with breakthrough inflammatory disease activity in spite of ongoing standard immunomodulatory medication. The study has two treatment arms; arm A: HSCT (hematopoietic stem cell transplantation) and arm B: alemtuzumab, cladribine or ocrelizumab. A pre-planned 3-year follow-up extension period will be performed depending on future funding. The aim of the study is to assess the effectiveness and side effects of a new treatment intervention in RRMS; HSCT, and, thereby, the value of HSCT in clinical practice. Data from recently published patient series indicate that HSCT may have a significantly higher treatment effect than currently registered RRMS immunomodulatory treatments. This study will determine the relative role of HSCT versus alemtuzumab, cladribine or ocrelizumab.
Cognitive impairment is nowadays more and more recognized as an important feature of the multiple sclerosis (MS) disease. Cognitive disorders frequency in MS is estimated between 40 and 60%. Cognitive impairment affects quality of life and vocational status in MS patients. Until recently, little information was available on the cognitive dysfunction and their evolution that occur in primary progressive multiple sclerosis (PPMS) as compared with relapsing-remitting MS (RRMS). In PPMS pathological studies have shown the importance of cortical demyelination and meningeal inflammation suggesting that the GM alteration could play a major role in the cognitive impairment in this phenotype. The cognitive evolution and the brain tissue alteration at the origin of these difficulties remain poorly understood in PPMS. The use of new techniques for morphological and functional MRI can study the contribution of diffuse White Matter (WM) alteration (probably through disconnexion of relevant network) and diffuse Grey matter (GM) alterations in the cerebral cortex and other structures (the hippocampi, the cerebellum, and the thalami) in cognitive impairment in PPMS patients and on their evolution.
The goal of this study is to establish that a memory retraining protocol, originally developed for English-speakers, and translated into Spanish, is effective.
Some of the most common side effects of the multiple sclerosis drug Plegridy (pegylated interferon beta-1a) include flu-like symptoms and injection site reactions. Physicians often advise patients to take Tylenol or aspirin prior to injection, but in this study the investigators evaluated whether using a low dose of oral steroid in combination with Tylenol reduced flu-like symptoms and injection site reactions.
The aim of this study is to measure the difference in the walking performance when functional electrical stimulation (FES) is on and off in people with MS that present foot drop under different 'real life' conditions, i.e. walking while doing another task that requires your attention and after been physically tired
Multiple sclerosis (MS) affects approximately 2.3 million patients worldwide, with a global median prevalence of 33 per 100,000. MS is diagnosed at an average of 30 years and affects twice as many women as men. MS is traditionally diagnosed by the presentation of lesions of the central nervous system, disseminated in time and in space, proven by clinical examination and magnetic resonance imaging. Several anatomical parameters in the eye, both vascular and neural, have been found to be altered in MS patients. Because of its unique optical properties, the eye offers the possibility of the non-invasive assessment of both structural and functional alterations in neuronal tissue. As the neuro-retina is part of the brain, it does not come as a surprise that neuro-degenerative changes in the brain are accompanied by structural and possibly also functional changes in the neuro-retina and the ocular vasculature. The current study seeks to test the hypothesis that beside the known anatomical changes, also functional changes can be detected in the retina of patients with MS. For this purpose, flicker light induced hyperemia will be measured in the retina as a functional test to assess the coupling between neural activity and blood flow. Further, structural parameters such as retinal nerve fiber layer thickness and function parameters such as ocular blood flow and retinal oxygenation will be assessed and compared to age and sex matched controls.
Pain is a common symptom experienced by people with MS and can significantly interfere with participation in the activities of daily living and adversely affect health-related quality of life. Pain in people with MS has the potential to become chronic, as a consequence of neuronal reorganization. Transcranial Direct Current Stimulation (tDCS) promotes the modulation of brain activity and its prolonged and continuous application can effect plastic modification. Combining tDCS with rehabilitation treatment may have effect in reducing pain in people with MS. This is a pilot randomized control trial to test the effects of tDCS in MS-related pain rehabilitation, its efficacy on pain (intensity, quality, interference with physical functioning), catastrophizing, emotional functioning and quality of life. Furthermore, we will explore the effects on pressure pain threshold and EEG recording. Correlations between sample characteristics and pain features will be investigated. Considering role of tDCS on neuropsychological functions, selective attention will be assessed.
The main reason for RelevarEM project is the creation of a registry based on a web platform to facilitate the collection of epidemiological data of multiple sclerosis patients from multiple sources in Argentina. The platform will provide the data in a global way that will show the frequency and distribution of the disease in our environment at low cost.
Background: Optic neuritis is a frequent cause of vision loss encountered by ophthalmologists in the Caribbean. The diagnosis is made on clinical grounds. Optic neuritis can occur either in an isolated manner or, most often, as the first symptom of multiple sclerosis (MS) or neuromyelitisoptica (NMO). These 2 demyelinating disorders differ by many means, including treatment and prognosis. MS can cause severe long-term disability while NMO is a short-term sight- and life-threatening condition causing potential relapses, which may require plasma exchanges. Furthermore, disease-modifying therapies used in NMO are different from those used in MS, which can worsen the natural history of NMO. Early differential diagnosis of these diseases is thus crucial for preventing severe visual loss and disability.
The purpose of the study is to develop a detailed pregnancy registry of patients with Multiple Sclerosis in the New England states. Women with a diagnosis of MS that are either pregnant or actively planning to become pregnant are eligible to participate. The study will solely take place through phone interviews. One of the study coordinator at the Partners MS Center will contact the participant for an intake phone interview where general information about the individual, their pregnancy and their MS will be collected. Thereafter the coordinator will contact the participant every 3 months for 20 minutes follow up interviews. After birth, the coordinator will collect information on the growth and development of the participant's baby. Pediatric interviews will be conducted at 2, 4, 6, 9, 12, 18, 24, 36 months. Information from the participant's neurologist and obstetrician, as well as information from the baby's pediatrician, will be made available to the study staff at regular intervals throughout the duration of the study. Through this study, the investigators hope to learn more about the effects of MS on pregnancy and pediatric development, and about the effects of pregnancy on the course of MS.