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Cognitive Function clinical trials

View clinical trials related to Cognitive Function.

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NCT ID: NCT03115788 Recruiting - Cognitive Function Clinical Trials

Pain Effect on Attention Using an Ipad Game App

Start date: May 15, 2016
Phase: N/A
Study type: Interventional

Cognitive performance will be studied over time using an iPad game interface called the nine choice human game (5CH) in normal volunteer subjects before during and after experimentally induced thermal (cold or warm) pain or control (no intervention).

NCT ID: NCT02763371 Recruiting - Cognitive Function Clinical Trials

Cognition Intervention Study Dortmund- Glycemic Index (CogniDo GI)

CogniDo-GI
Start date: April 2016
Phase: N/A
Study type: Interventional

The Cognition Intervention Study Dortmund (CogniDo) and the Cognition Intervention Study Dortmund PLUS (CogniDo PLUS) investigated the short-term effects of having school lunch versus skipping it on children's basal (CogniDo) and executive (CogniDo PLUS) cognitive functions in the afternoon. The The Cognition Intervention Study Dortmund Continued (Coco) connected this two previous studies and investigates the effect of having school lunch versus skipping it on children's basal and executive cognitive functions later in the afternoon. The present study the Cognition Intervention Study Dortmund- Glycemic Index (CogniDo GI) examines the influence of the gylcemic index of lunch on cognitive performance of school children in the afternoon.

NCT ID: NCT01589003 Recruiting - Cognitive Function Clinical Trials

The Impact of Milk-products Differing in Their Glycaemic Properties on the Behaviour of Infants

Start date: April 2012
Phase: N/A
Study type: Interventional

The current study proposes to investigate the impact of a low glycaemic index (GI), fortified toddlers milkpowder on mood, behaviour and cognitive function in young children.

NCT ID: NCT00494689 Recruiting - Cognitive Function Clinical Trials

Transcranial and Rapid Magnetic Stimulation for Gait Apraxia Due to Normal Pressure Hydrocephalus and Cerebral Ischemia

Start date: January 2002
Phase: N/A
Study type: Observational

The investigator(neurologist) has published a study in International Congress Series, in the 15th International Conference of Biomagnetism Vancouver Proceedings 2006,and Science Direct website, of 15 patients with brain ischemia and dilated ventricles who improve when treated with transcranial monitoring or low ultrasound wave intensity (milliwatts) and with rapid magnetic stimulation which is also a diagnostic tool routinely used by many neurophysiologists. Before, these patients will progress and may need a brain shunt called Ventriculo-peritoneal shunt. He and collaborators now would like to do a double study as this appears to be a cheap and effective alternative treatment and help patients to walk again.