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Aphasia, Primary Progressive clinical trials

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NCT ID: NCT05443633 Recruiting - Clinical trials for Primary Progressive Aphasia

Enhancing Language Function in Aphasia

Start date: October 30, 2022
Phase: N/A
Study type: Interventional

Aphasia is an acquired impairment of language, that commonly results from damage to language areas in the brain (typically the left side of the brain). This impairment is seen in many aspects of language, including understanding, speaking, reading and writing. It is estimated that about 2 million individuals are currently living with aphasia in the United States. Further, about 200,000 Americans acquire aphasia every year (National Aphasia Association, 2020). Aphasia poses significant impact on the affected individuals and their families. Behavioral treatments that target language deficits have been shown to enhance overall communication skills and life satisfaction among individuals with aphasia. Although there is evidence that suggests that treatment is efficacious for individuals with aphasia, the extent of improvement long-term coupled with the neural patterns among those individuals are largely unknown. The current study aims to investigate the efficacy of language-based treatment and its corresponding neural patterns.

NCT ID: NCT05437159 Recruiting - Clinical trials for Stuttering, Developmental

Investigating Speech Sequencing in Neurotypical Speakers and Persons With Disordered Speech

Start date: April 3, 2023
Phase: N/A
Study type: Interventional

Persistent developmental stuttering affects more than three million people in the United States, and it can have profound adverse effects on quality of life. Despite its prevalence and negative impact, stuttering has resisted explanation and effective treatment, due in large part to a poor understanding of the neural processing impairments underlying the disorder. The overall goal of this study is to improve understanding of the brain mechanisms involved in speech motor planning and how these are disrupted in neurogenic speech disorders, like stuttering. The investigators will do this through an integrated combination of experiments that involve speech production, functional MRI, and non-invasive brain stimulation. The study is designed to test hypotheses regarding the brain processes involved in learning and initiating new speech sound sequences and how those processes compare in persons with persistent developmental stuttering and those with typical speech development. These processes will be studied in both adults and children. Additionally, these processes will be investigated in patients with neurodegenerative speech disorders (primary progressive aphasia) to further inform the investigators understanding of the neural mechanisms that support speech motor sequence learning. Together these experiments will result in an improved account of the brain mechanisms underlying speech production in fluent speakers and individuals who stutter, thereby paving the way for the development of new therapies and technologies for addressing this disorder.

NCT ID: NCT05386394 Recruiting - Clinical trials for Primary Progressive Aphasia

Transcranial Direct Current Stimulation in the Treatment of Primary Progressive Aphasia

Start date: February 13, 2024
Phase: Phase 2
Study type: Interventional

While many have strongly suggested that transcranial direct current stimulation (tDCS) may represent a beneficial intervention for patients with primary progressive aphasia (PPA), this promising technology has not yet been applied widely in clinical settings. This treatment gap is underscored by the absence of any neurally-focused standard-of-care treatments to mitigate the devastating impact of aphasia on patients' family, work, and social lives. Given that tDCS is inexpensive, easy to use (it is potentially amenable to home use by patients and caregivers), minimally invasive, and safe there is great promise to advance this intervention toward clinical use. The principal reason that tDCS has not found wide clinical application yet is that its efficacy has not been tested in large, multi-center, clinical trials. In this study, scientists in the three sites that have conducted tDCS clinical trials in North America-Johns Hopkins University and the University of Pennsylvania in the US, and the University of Toronto in Canada, will collaborate to conduct a multi-site, Phase II clinical trial of tDCS a population in dire need of better treatments.

NCT ID: NCT05374278 Recruiting - Alzheimer Disease Clinical Trials

First-in-Human Evaluation of an Astrocytic Glutamate Transporter (EAAT2) PET Tracer in Dementia

Start date: November 2, 2021
Phase: Phase 1/Phase 2
Study type: Interventional

This is a first in human study that will assess the safety and diagnostic performance of [18F]RP-115 (fluorine-18 labeled RP115), a positron emission tomography (PET) agent. This agent has the potential to identify the early changes that occur in the brains of patients with Alzheimer's disease (AD) and frontotemporal dementia (FTD).

NCT ID: NCT05326750 Recruiting - Alzheimer Disease Clinical Trials

Non-invasive Neurostimulation as a Tool for Diagnostics and Management for Neurodegenerative Diseases

Start date: November 21, 2022
Phase: N/A
Study type: Interventional

Double blinded, sham-controlled, randomized trial on repeated transcranial alternating current brain stimulation (tACS) in neurodegenerative diseases. The investigators will evaluate whether a 4-times daily repeated stimulation with gamma tACS on the posterior parietal cortex can improve symptoms in patients with neurodegenerative diseases, including dementia with Lewy Bodies, Alzheimer's disease, idiopathic normal pressure hydrocephalus and Frontotemporal dementia.

NCT ID: NCT05288842 Recruiting - Alzheimer Disease Clinical Trials

Tanycytes in Alzheimer's Disease and Frontotemporal Dementia

BIOWATCH
Start date: September 6, 2022
Phase:
Study type: Observational

Metabolic and hormonal deregulations are both a risk factor and a hallmark of Alzheimer's disease (AD) and frontotemporal dementia (FTD), occurring early in the course of the disease. In FTD in particular, hyperorality and dietary changes are associated with metabolic and hormonal changes such as altered levels of the anorexigenic hormone leptin. The hypothalamus is a brain region that controls metabolism and hormonal systems. Hypothalamic function depends on its ability to sense peripheral signals. The hypothalamus sits on a circumventricular organ called the median eminence (ME) that puts it in contact with systemic blood circulation. In the ME, fenestrated capillaries allow the diffusion of bloodborne factors. However, despite the lack of blood-brain barrier at brain microvessels, diffusion is controlled by specialized ependymoglial cells, the tanycytes, which exert a barrier function between the ME and the third ventricle and controls the access of blood-borne molecules into the hypothalamus. Previous work from our laboratory and the ERC consortium has highlighted the role of tanycytes not only in the regulation of the release of neurohormones from neuroendocrine nerve terminals into the pituitary portal blood circulation, but also in the transport of circulating leptin into the hypothalamus. Hence hypothalamic dysfunction in AD and FTD can result either from dysregulation of neuroendocrine secretions, direct neuronal loss or from defective transport (and hence resistance) to hormones like leptin. This study is to demonstrate that leptin transport though tanycytes is early altered in FTD and AD and correlates

NCT ID: NCT05260151 Recruiting - Alzheimer Disease Clinical Trials

Tau Protein and SV2a Imaging in Patients With Tau Protein-related Diseases

Start date: November 18, 2020
Phase:
Study type: Observational

Tau protein has been identified as one of the key pathological features of Tau proteinopathies, such as Alzheimer's disease (AD), progressive supranuclear palsy (PSP), frontotemporal dementia (FTD). Tau protein-targeted PET imaging can detect the amount and distribution of Tau protein deposition in human body, and has great research and application value in the diagnosis and evaluation of Tau protein disease. This study will be the first to introduce a complete quantitative, repeatable detection and analysis method in China. For the SV2a tracer [18F]MNI-1126, cross-sectional evaluation of its imaging in patients with Tau protein-related diseases and normal controls will be carried out. Later, longitudinal clinical symptoms and two tracers will be evaluated in patients with Tau protein-related diseases and normal controls.([18F]APN1607 and [18F]MNI1126) Imaging follow-up to explore longitudinal changes in brain Tau protein deposition and synaptic density in Tau protein-related diseases, thus providing support for future clinical drug trials using imaging biomarkers.

NCT ID: NCT05184569 Recruiting - Semantic Dementia Clinical Trials

Veri-T: A Trial of Verdiperstat in Patients With svPPA Due to TDP-43 Pathology

Veri-T-001
Start date: April 19, 2022
Phase: Phase 1
Study type: Interventional

The purpose of the study is to test the safety and tolerability of twice daily Verdiperstat in patients with semantic variant primary progressive aphasia (svPPA) due to frontotemporal lobar degeneration with TDP-43 pathology (FTLD-TDP). Three-fourths of the participants will receive Verdiperstat and one-fourth will receive Placebo during the 24-week treatment duration.

NCT ID: NCT05165186 Recruiting - Dementia Clinical Trials

Care Planning for a Loved One With Dementia: Knowledge, Preparing for Decisions, and Emotions

Start date: April 13, 2022
Phase: N/A
Study type: Interventional

The overall objective of this study is to compare knowledge, decisional conflict, preferences, and caregiver burden over time caregivers of Alzheimer's Disease and Related Dementias (ADRD) patients by comparing the effectiveness of a video decision aid intervention and enhanced usual care.

NCT ID: NCT04957537 Recruiting - Clinical trials for Primary Progressive Aphasia

Semantic Rehabilitation for Patients With Primary Progressive Semantic Aphasia

SCED-APPvs
Start date: September 20, 2021
Phase: N/A
Study type: Interventional

This project aims to measure the effect of a semantic rehabilitation protocol for patients with primary progressive semantic aphasia and using the SCED methodology.