View clinical trials related to Alzheimer Disease.
Filter by:The aim of this study is to investigate the effect of a physical exercise program with cognitive tasks to be applied with telerehabilitation in Alzheimer's disease, on cognitive and physical function, ability to perform daily living activities, depression and anxiety. Secondary aim is to examine the effect of the exercise application on the care burden and well-being of caregivers.
The primary purpose of this study is to evaluate the safety and tolerability of SAGE-718 and its effects on cognitive and neuropsychiatric symptoms in participants with mild cognitive impairment (MCI) or mild dementia due to Alzheimer's disease (AD).
This study aims at exploring patients' ability to monitor their own memory performance depending on their primary deficit and the type of memory involved in the criterion task. The goal is to evaluate if semantic dementia (SD) and Alzheimer's disease (AD) differently affect patients' awareness of their memory abilities.
This research will test the WeCareAdvisor tool for family caregivers of military veterans with dementia to help caregivers assess, manage and track behavioral symptoms and their contributing factors (e.g., pain, sleep disturbance), and that provides tailored strategies for in-home, medication-free behavior management. 60 caregiver-person with dementia dyads will be recruited (30 Treatment Group, 30 Wait-List Control Group).
Phase 1, single-center, open-label, non-randomized, sequential single dose 4-period study in 12 healthy subjects to assess the pharmacokinetics of ALZ-801, tramiprosate and the primary metabolite of tramiprosate, NRM5074, from prototype drug product formulations of ALZ-801, and to assess effect of food on the bioavailability of ALZ-801 and tramiprosate of the prototype tablet formulation.
This study aims at the assessment of eye movement during autobiographical retrieval (i.e., retrieval of personal memories) in patients with Alzheimer's Disease.
Induction of neural oscillations by flickering light is a well established method used for diagnostic of various neural diseases. Recent studies in mice have shown promising results indicating that induction of gamma oscillation at 40 Hz leads to a reduction in amyloid-β and tau in mice models of Alzheimer's disease. This study will use flickering light to induce 40 Hz gamma oscillation as the previously mentioned studies. In the study subject will be exposed to invisible spectral flickering light (active setting) or continuous non-flickering white light (sham setting) for 1 hour each day. The sham setting is a high quality sham intervention as subjects will be blinded to the setting, both appears as white light. As this is the first trial, the focus will be on 1) safety of the intervention 2) feasibility of the proposed intervention time and method 3) indication of efficacy. In stage 1 of the trial 4 age-matched subjects with no Alzheimer's disease will be recruited and be exposed for 1 week. In stage 2 10 patients with Alzheimer's disease will be recruited and exposed for 6 consecutive weeks.
This study aims to assess the effectiveness of serious EUREKOI gambling on the anxiety of family caregivers of patients with newly diagnosed Alzheimer's disease.
The purpose of the study is to compare the risk of dementia in participants diagnosed with rheumatoid arthritis (RA) exposed to anti-tumor necrosis factor (TNF) therapy versus those exposed to methotrexate.
This is a randomized, open-label, cross-over, pharmacokinetic and pharmacodynamic PK/PD study. (Part A)The PK portion of the study is designed to evaluate the pharmacokinetics of ALZT-OP1 (a combination drug therapy) designated as ALZT-OP1a and ALZT-OP1b, in both plasma and CSF, following co-administration of the two active investigational products, in healthy volunteers and Alzheimer subjects aged 55-79 and in good health. (Part B) The PD portion of the study will evaluate the pharmacodynamics of ALZT- OP1, using both plasma and CSF biomarkers, following 60 days of consecutive daily treatment, in AD subjects only.