View clinical trials related to Amnesia.
Filter by:Electroconvulsive therapy (ECT) is recommended for the treatment of severe depression. But, despite the high remission rates the use of ECT is strongly limited by the social stigma and treatment-emergent cognitive side effects in patients. The most relevant is retrograde amnesia (RA), because it can persists for months and years. To measure RA after ECT the short-form of the Autobiographical Memory Interview (SF-AMI) is commonly used. However, the validation of the German SF-AMI has not yet been carried out. Thus, the aim of this study is to validate the German SF-AMI in depressed patient and healthy controls. The investigators hypothesize that the German SF-AMI is reliable and valid to quantify RA.
Studies suggest an association between retinal abnormalities and NCD (Neuro Cognitive Disorders) whether they are linked to proven or prodromal Alzheimer's disease (aMCI : amnestic mild cognitive impairment), or to other neurodegenerative diseases such as frontotemporal dementia or Lewy body diseases. These retinal anomalies objectified by OCT-A (Optical coherence tomography angiography) and adaptive optics (AO) appear different depending on the pathologies and could therefore serve as markers in vivo of the pathophysiological processes underlying NCD. No study to date has studied the retina and its vessels in NCD using adaptive optics. In this pilot study, we are proposing a combination of two new ophthalmological imaging techniques (OCT-A and AO), which allow rapid in vivo analysis in a completely non-invasive way of the morphology of small vessels as well as architecture of the retina to better specify the retinal anomalies associated with NCD. We will compare the parameters in OCT-A and AO between patients with NCD and controls without NCD (with memory complaint or without) and will seek to determine if there are different profiles according to the causes of NCD.
Spinal anesthesia is one of the commonest choices of anesthesia for infraumbilical surgeries.The use of sedation has markedly increased patients' comfort and acceptance towards spinal anesthesia. The aim of this study is to investigate visual, recall, auditory recall, and sedation scores among patients receiving Midazolam for sedation during spinal anesthesia in patients undergoing orthopedic surgeries.
The general purpose of this observational study is to examine biomarkers associated with the pathology of neurodegenerative diseases to potentially develop novel therapeutic approaches.
Reversible cerebral vasoconstriction syndrome (RCVS) is characterized by severe, unusual headaches associated with multifocal segmental vasoconstriction of the intracerebral arteries. In addition to headache, focal neurological deficit and/or seizures are quite frequently described, but anterograde amnesia seems to but extremely rare. Indeed, to date, only one case of RCVS associated with transient global amnesia (TGA) has been published. In case of an atypical presentation of TG, associated with brutal headaches, it is important not to ignore an assocation with RCVS because management, treatment, evolution and prognosis are different. Indeed, TGA is a monophasic phenomenon of less than 24 hours duration, without associated complications, which does not require any particular treatment. On the other hand, RCVS, although most often of excellent prognosis, can have severe complications such as intracerebral hemorrhage, subarachnoid hemorrhage, posterior reversible encephalopathy syndrome and cerebral infarction. In order to limit headaches and potential complications, RCVS require special management, including symptomatic treatments for headaches, complete rest, removal of precipitin factors and introduction of calcium channel blockers for a few weeks. This study aim to described three cases of patient who presented with concomitant TGA and RCVS, and to discuss pathogenic mechanism which may be similar in both these pathologies.
The Etude Study is a multi-center, four-arm prospective dose-adjusting study designed to assess the tolerability, safety and efficacy of non-invasive sensory stimulation for patients with cognitive impairment.
Dementia is a progressive decline in cognition that impairs a person's ability to perform activities of daily living. Changes in mood, gait, and balance are prominent secondary symptoms of Alzheimer's dementia that can dramatically decrease quality of life for the person with dementia and increase caregiver burden. The overall aim of this study is to determine the independent and combined effects of dance movement and social engagement on quality of life in people with early-stage dementia, and test the neural mechanisms of these effects.
The transient global amnesia (IA) is defined clinically as a temporary suspension and isolated from the ante and retrograde memory, totally regressing within 24 hours. The causes of AI remain unknown. The diagnosis of IA is based on consensus clinical criteria including the absence of associated location marks. In clinical practice, the MRI is often performed in conjunction with clinical examination because it ensures the absence of differential diagnoses, including stroke. The visualization of MRI signal abnormalities related to AI directly dependent on the completion time of the review in relation to the onset of symptoms. Typically, no signal abnormality is visible in the hyperacute phase (ie D0-D1) while punctate appear hyperintense on diffusion sequences in hippocampal structures from J2 to J7 to disappear completely. It has been previously demonstrated that the use of higher values of b and / or a better spatial resolution significantly increases the sensitivity of the broadcasting sequence for the detection of these abnormalities hippocampal signal. At St. Joseph Hospital, Investigators explore the AI suspected patients with diffusion tensor sequence (DTI) on our high resolution 3T MRI. Compared to the classical diffusion sequence, DTI is characterized by the use of a greater number of directions in which the diffusion gradients are applied. One advantage of this technique is to be able to perform tractography of white matter fibers. Thus the "connectome" is a new technique for post-processing of DTI images based tractography and to assess all the networks of nerve fibers in the brain. By this technique, the values of average diffusivity (MD) and fractional anisotropy (FA) can be measured along each of the studied nerve fibers. Group studies thus become feasible to compare quantitatively healthy subjects and patients groups in terms of structural differences within the connectome. The contribution of this technique was recently highlighted in patients with temporal lobe epilepsy.
Hippocampal Sclerosis (HS) leads to anterograde amnesia mimicking early Alzheimer's disease (AD) (so called HSA-nonAD). Recent studies showed that (a) the deficit of episodic memory as well as the level of hippocampal atrophy in bvFTD may be of similar severity to that observed in AD, even at initial presentation, leading to misdiagnosis in 22% of cases with post mortem diagnosis; (b) amnesia with HS due to microvascular lesion and microinfarcts can also cause impairment of episodic memory mimicking AD, without subcortical cognitive profile. Because these diseases involve distinct pathophysiological processes, they require different specific care and treatment. In consequence, it is very important to improve our knowledge about HS in order to identify its mechanism and improve the diagnosis.
The purpose of this study is to establish a diagnosis in transient global amnesia (TGA) in assessing three episodic memory's abilities (mental simulation throught the future, and the past, the learning of personnal actions i-e the enactment effect). Secondary goal is to describe the neuronal substrates associated to the alteration of theses abilites in TGA.