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Aphasia clinical trials

View clinical trials related to Aphasia.

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NCT ID: NCT00608582 Completed - Aphasia Clinical Trials

Transcranial Magnetic Stimulation to Improve Speech in Aphasia

Start date: July 2002
Phase: Phase 2
Study type: Interventional

The purpose of this study is to examine whether repetitive transcranial magnetic stimulation (rTMS) can be used to improve speech in chronic stroke patients with aphasia. Aphasia patients can have problems with speech production. The rTMS procedure allows painless, noninvasive stimulation of human cortex from outside the head. Chronic aphasia patients have been observed in our functional magnetic resonance brain imaging studies to have excess brain activation in brain areas possibly related to language on the right side of the brain (opposite side to where the stroke took place). It is expected that suppression of activity in the directly targeted brain region will have an overall modulating effect on the neural network for naming (and propositional speech) and will result in behavioral improvement.

NCT ID: NCT00567242 Completed - Clinical trials for Cerebrovascular Accident

Treating Intention In Aphasia: Neuroplastic Substrates

Start date: March 2007
Phase: Phase 1/Phase 2
Study type: Interventional

The purpose of this study is to determine if an "intentional act" improves treatment response for patients with nonfluent aphasia. The treatment involves naming pictures and saying members of categories. The "intentional act" requires initiating picture naming or category member trials with a left-hand movement sequence. Nonfluent aphasia is a disorder of language production in which patients with damage to the brain's language system have trouble initiating and maintaining spoken communication. All patients participating in the study take part in functional MRI scans to determine how treatments affect brain systems.

NCT ID: NCT00494520 Completed - Clinical trials for Traumatic Brain Injury

Cognitive Therapy to Improve Word Finding

Start date: July 2004
Phase: N/A
Study type: Interventional

Adults who sustain brain damage due to stroke, traumatic injury or surgery may develop difficulty finding words. This study compares the effectiveness of two behavior-based programs to improve picture naming ability in these individuals.

NCT ID: NCT00467103 Completed - Stroke Clinical Trials

Neural Networks and Language Recovery in Aphasia From Stroke: fMRI Studies

Start date: October 1, 1999
Phase:
Study type: Observational

The purpose of this research is to utilize functional magnetic resonance imaging (fMRI) to investigate brain reorganization for language behavior in stroke patients with aphasia. A primary focus of the study is on recovery of nonfluent propositional speech and naming in chronic aphasia patients. The fMRI technique is used to examine activation in the left hemisphere (LH) and right hemisphere (RH), during recovery of specific language behaviors in chronic nonfluent aphasia patients.

NCT ID: NCT00223847 Completed - Stroke Clinical Trials

An Investigation of Constraint Induced Language Therapy for Aphasia

Start date: August 2002
Phase: N/A
Study type: Interventional

The purpose of this study is to investigate the effects of intensive, constraint induced language therapy (CILT) for individuals with chronic aphasia compared with traditional aphasia therapy. The specific objectives of the proposed research are to determine the effects of therapy type (CILT vs. traditional) and dose density (intensive or distributed) on speech therapy outcome. In addition, we will investigate the functional and qualitative impact of these interventions on functional communication.

NCT ID: NCT00196690 Completed - Stroke Clinical Trials

Donepezil in Chronic Poststroke Aphasia: a Randomized Controlled Trial

Start date: February 2003
Phase: Phase 4
Study type: Interventional

- Aphasia (impairment of language function due to brain damage)may be treated with speech-language therapy and drugs. Several drugs have been studied but with limited success. - Recent data suggest that the neurotransmitter acetylcholine may be reduced in brain damaged subjects and that drugs that stimulates acetylcholine activity may help recovery of aphasic deficits particularly when paired with speech-language therapy. - Recent evidence indicates that medicaments acting on the neurotransmitter acetylcholine may promote improvement of aphasic deficits and our previous open-label study of donepezil in post-stroke aphasia showed benefits in all patients and observed benefit were long-lasting (6 months).This study will test the safety and efficacy of donepezil (an agent acting on acetylcholine)in subjects with stroke-related chronic aphasia (more than 1 yr of evolution).

NCT ID: NCT00170703 Completed - Stroke Clinical Trials

Assessment of Cortical Stimulation Combined With Rehabilitation to Enhance Recovery in Broca's Aphasia.

Start date: December 2004
Phase: Phase 1
Study type: Interventional

The primary objective of this feasibility study is to evaluate the safety and effectiveness of targeted sub-threshold epidural cortical stimulation delivered concurrent with speech-language rehabilitation activities to enhance recovery in study subjects suffering from Broca's aphasia (the inability to speak or to organize the muscular movements for speech), following a stroke.

NCT ID: NCT00125242 Completed - Aphasia Clinical Trials

Word-Retrieval Treatment for Aphasia: Semantic Feature Analysis

Start date: July 2005
Phase: N/A
Study type: Interventional

The purpose of this investigation is to further develop and test a treatment for word-finding problems in aphasia. The treatment is designed to strengthen meaning associations within categories of words (e.g., animals, tools, fruits). The treatment is also designed to be used as a search strategy in instances of word-finding difficulty. The study was devised to evaluate the extent to which treatment increases the ability to recall trained, as well as untrained, words.

NCT ID: NCT00125216 Completed - Aphasia Clinical Trials

Evaluation of the Effects of Response Elaboration Training for Aphasia

Start date: December 2004
Phase: N/A
Study type: Interventional

The purpose of this study is to evaluate the effects of Response Elaboration Training (RET), which is a speech/language therapy for aphasia. The study is designed to determine whether verbal language production improves in terms of content and length of utterances as a result of treatment.

NCT ID: NCT00102869 Completed - Clinical trials for Cerebrovascular Accident

Dopaminergic Enhancement of Learning and Memory in Aphasia

Start date: January 2005
Phase: Phase 4
Study type: Interventional

The purpose of this study is to determine whether levodopa, in combination with a high frequency language training, is effective in boosting naming performance in patients with aphasia.