View clinical trials related to Brain Concussion.
Filter by:Traumatic brain injury (TBI) is a leading cause of long-term disability and mortality. The costs associated with hospitalization, rehabilitation, and productivity losses after injury impose a significant socioeconomic and healthcare burden. TBI patients often struggle with symptoms such as dizziness and post-concussion syndrome, preventing them from returning to their previous level of functioning. This leads to negative consequences, including unemployment, psychosocial adjustment difficulties, and decreased quality of life, particularly affecting young working-age individuals. The purpose of this study was to investigate whether vestibular rehabilitation exercises for mild traumatic brain injury (mTBI) patients could improve symptoms of dizziness, post-concussion syndrome, physical balance, anxiety, and quality of life. The study aimed to provide individualized care plans for mTBI patients, reducing symptom burden, lowering healthcare costs, and enhancing their quality of life.
Analysis of cardiac induced brain forces using cranial accelerometry has been shown to diagnose concussion in high school athletes. This trial expands on this observation by recording headpulse signals in a recently concussed athletes playing Australian rules football.
Analysis of cardiac induced brain forces using cranial accelerometry has been shown to diagnose concussion in high school athletes. This trial expands on this observation by recording headpulse signals in a recently concussed athletes playing Australian rules football.
The goal of this clinical trial is to test a wearable device's effect on performance in tactical populations with a history of concussion. The main question it aims to answer is the effectiveness of the device on modulate physiological and cognitive function. The physiological function will be derived from metrics of heart rate variability and blood-based biomarkers, whilst human performance will be evaluated using tasks that assess cognitive domains of executive function, reaction time, and memory.
The investigational device used in this clinical investigation, the Nurochek Headset, is a portable electroencephalogram (EEG) headset which delivers a visual stimulus and measures a VEP. The visual stimulus is delivered to the subjects' eyes via light-emitting diodes, and the EEG measures the user's visual-evoked potential. This headset communicates with an application on a smartphone which processes the signals and transmits them to a secure cloud server for analysis and storage of the data. The primary objective of this clinical investigation was to evaluate the performance of the investigation device (NCII) against clinical diagnosis and SCAT 5, in the accurate detection of mild traumatic brain injury (mTBI). The primary endpoint outlined for this study was set at the collection of 100 valid investigational device readings from individuals with concussion The aim of this study was to collect data from 100 readings from individuals with concussion. It was estimate that approximately 10-20% of baselined players would suffer a concussion during the season. There it was estimated there would be a need to baseline 500-1000 individuals in order to achieve the number of concussions required. The initial assumption was that sites would provide players pre-season and make players available for testing post-concussion. In practice, some sites provided player data only post-concussion event (such as medical clinics). Participants were required from sporting clubs, medical clinicals and schools.
Abstract Purpose Patients with anticoagulation therapy has a higher risk of developing traumatic Intracranial Hemorrhage (tICH). Delayed Intracranial Hemorrhage (d-ICH) is a rarer clinical manifestation; however, the incidence varies from 0-9,6 % in other studies. Some studies have also questioned the clinical relevance of d-ICH, since the mortality and the need of neurosurgical intervention is reported to be very low. The aim of this study is to determine the incidence of d-ICH at Sundsvall Regional Hospital. Methods A retrospective observational study of patients with mTBI and oral anticoagulation therapy. Data from medical records and radiology registry in Sundsvall hospital for 29 months during 2018-2020 in Sundsvall identified 249 patients with an initial negative CT scan who performed a follow-up CT scan. Outcome measure was incidence of d-ICH.
Management of traumatic brain injuries causes significant efforts on emergency departments (ED) and overall health care. Patients on antithrombotic treatment with even minor trauma to the head, although without significant clinical findings, represent special challenges because the risk of traumatic intracranial hemorrhage (tICH) with these agents. The aim of this study was to compare the prevalence of tICH in patients on various pre-injury antithrombotic treatment exposed to minor Traumatic Brain injuries (mTBI) in Sundsvall with untreated patients. Secondary aim was to explore different risk factors for tICH. Data from medical records and radiology registry with mTBI in Sundsvall hospital between 2018-2020 in Sundsvall identified 2044 patients. Demographic data, pre-injury medications with antithrombotic treatment, state of consciousness at admission and the results of CT-scans of brain was investigated.
The purpose of this study is to investigate the role of cognitive reserve in change in connectivity in the brain (measured with functional magnetic resonance imaging, fMRI) and how this is related to symptoms and symptom resolution.
To compare the use of the Concussion Pen to current clinical care practice. This will be a prospective study of a maximum of 24 subjects, with a goal enrollment of 20 subjects (10 in each cohort). All subjects will undergo clinical evaluation for concussion and will also be evaluated using the Concussion Pen. Randomization to being evaluated using clinical care first then the Concussion Pen and vice versa will be utilized. This randomization will help to control for evaluation fatigue on the part of study participants.
Young adults (aged 18-30) with a concussion history (defined as experiencing a concussion within the past five years but not within the past month) will complete a six-week mindfulness intervention. Throughout the intervention, participants will complete 10-20 minutes of mindfulness-focused exercises and meditations each day using the LoveYourBrain Foundation Meditation Library. Before the intervention, participants will complete a baseline assessment including demographics, concussion history, mental health history, mindfulness history, perceived stress, mindfulness, and concussion symptoms. Throughout the intervention, participants will complete weekly assessments measuring adherence and concussion symptoms. After six weeks, participants will complete a final, follow-up assessment with assessments for adherence, acceptability, feasibility, intervention perceptions, perceived stress, mindfulness, and concussion symptoms. This study's aim is to determine the acceptability, feasibility, usability, and effectiveness of a mindfulness intervention in young adults with a concussion history. The investigators hypothesize that participants who participate in the mindfulness intervention will report high adherence (complete five days of meditation per week), positive acceptability, positive feasibility, and positive intervention perceptions. Additionally, after completing the intervention, participants will report decreased perceived stress, increased mindfulness, and decreased concussion symptoms compared to before the intervention.