View clinical trials related to Parkinson's Disease.
Filter by:Anxiodepressive symptoms are frequently observed in Parkinson's disease patients. These non motor psychiatric charateristics of the disease negatively impairs quality of life, and may impair well-being or therapeutical observance. The objective of this study is to determine if psychological ressources are associated to anxiodepressive symptoms, to parkinson well-being and therapeutical observance. It will be interesting to determine if the presence of some - or multiple- psychological ressources could prevent patients from anxiety, depression, impaired well-being and impaired observance. This study will analyse retrospectively psychological scalescompleted by 30 parkinson's disease patients through previous psychological interviews. The scales investigate anxiety, depression, well-being, psychological ressources, and therapeutical observance. The results will highlight the importance of working on psychological ressources with Parkinson's disease patients through psychotherapy, in order to improve their well-being, positive emotions and maybe contribute to better therapeutical observance.
The primary study objective is to establish the safety and tolerability of MT101-5 after a single and multiple dose administrations in healthy volunteers. The safety and overall tolerability of MT101-5 will be evaluated based on: - Incidence of Dose Limiting Toxicities (DLTs) - Incidence of Treatment-Emergent Adverse Events (TEAEs). - Incidence of withdrawals due to Adverse Events (AEs). - Change/shifts in laboratory values. Change in vital signs. - Change in Electrocardiogram (ECG) parameters. - Changes in physical examination findings
The study is a multi-center, observational study to evaluate the feasibility of α-synuclein-related biomarkers and imaging data in the disease diagnosis and prognosis evaluation in Synucleinopathies and healthy subjects.
The primary aim of the study will be to examine Social Cognitive Theory (SCT) correlates, of physical activity (PA) participation and health-related quality of life (HRQoL) in Parkinson's disease participants.
This study is an open-label of single transdermal dose of DSP-9632P to evaluate the dopamine release derived from levodopa in brain, and a randomized, double-blind, placebo-controlled, 2-way crossover of multiple transdermal doses of DSP-9632P to evaluate the safety and tolerability in patients with levodopa-induced dyskinesia in Parkinson's disease.
Parkinson's disease (PD) is a neurological condition, which means it affects the brain. This study will evaluate how ABBV-951 is absorbed under the skin of participants with PD when administered to arm, thigh and flank compared to the abdomen. ABBV-951 is an investigational drug being developed for the treatment of PD. Study doctors randomly assign participants to 1 of 4 groups, called treatment arms. Each treatment arm receives ABBV-951 administered in a different order in the arm, high, flank and abdomen. Approximately 12 adult participants over 30 years with a diagnosis of PD will be enrolled in approximately 10 sites in the United States. Participants will receive continuous (24hours/day) subcutaneous infusion of ABBV-951 for 2 consecutive days for each infusion site (arm, thigh, flank and abdomen), for a total duration of treatment up to 12 days. There may be higher treatment burden for participants in this trial compared to their standard of care. Participants will be confined at a hospital or clinic. The effect of the treatment will be checked by medical assessments, blood tests, checking for side effects and completing questionnaires. Adverse events will be monitored throughout the study.
The AETIONOMY project will generate a refined taxonomy and testable mechanisms underlying the derived stratification of patients.
The aim of this pilot/feasibility study is to test if delivering rhythmic vibration cues to the lower legs, specifically in response to gait defects (rather than continuously), can improve walking quality and overcome gait freezing in Parkinson's disease. During the study, people with Parkinson's disease that suffer from regular (daily) gait freezing will undertake a series of walking/activity circuits, receiving continuous cueing, responsive cueing (delivered in response to gait freezing), no cueing and no device. Vibration cueing is provided by a non-invasive wearable device prototyped at the University of Oxford, worn on the lower legs during 3 circuits. A series of walking metrics will be analysed.
Subthalamic nucleus deep brain stimulation (STN-DBS) has become a choice treatment for fluctuating Parkinson's disease (PD) patients, inducing remarkable improvement in motor symptoms. However, as PD is a complex neuropsychiatric disease, it has been hypothesized that in some patients, non-motor features, i.e. dysfunctional expectations for the result of neurosurgery, could interfere with postoperative result of DBS, even in case of motor improvement. Recent literature highlights the necessity to take these preoperative expectations into account, but to our knowledge, no specific scale investigating these cognitions in this PD-specific condition is available. So, the investigators developped the DBS-PS, a self-scale constructed to measure preoperative expectations for DBS, with 11 questions and visuo-analogical responses (1 to 10), theorically divided in three domains investigating the expectations concerning symptoms of PD, postoperative social-life and leisures, and postoperative familial and marital sphere. The investigators would like to validate this new-developped scale in the preoperative subthalamic nucleus deep brain stimulation population through patients recruited in the Predistim study, whereas the investigators did not recruite sufficiently patients through the PsyParkinson study, the one in which the DBS-PS scale was developed. The DBS-PS constitutes an interesting basis for the consideration of these cognitive and affective factors in preoperative PD patients.
The purpose of the study is to evaluate the safety and tolerability after administration of multiple doses and the pharmacokinetics (PK) of single and multiple doses of UCB0599 in healthy study participants and participants with Parkinson's Disease (PD).