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Cognitive Impairment clinical trials

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NCT ID: NCT05431192 Recruiting - Heart Failure Clinical Trials

Mind Your Heart-II

MYH-II
Start date: November 30, 2022
Phase: N/A
Study type: Interventional

This projects studies the role of mindfulness training (MT) to improve self-care among patients with heart failure and cognitive impairment.

NCT ID: NCT05406778 Recruiting - Alzheimer Disease Clinical Trials

SPARK Neuro REMIND Study

Start date: May 18, 2022
Phase: N/A
Study type: Interventional

The study utilizes investigational software, the SPARK Test, with an FDA-cleared electroencephalography (EEG) amplifier and EEG cap to collect and then analyze patient EEG data.

NCT ID: NCT05399745 Recruiting - Clinical trials for Cognitive Impairment

BILACO Trial: Biliary Atresia - a Severe Complex Congenital Liver Disease

BILACO
Start date: March 1, 2020
Phase:
Study type: Observational

Biliary atresia is the most severe form of cholestatic liver disease. The children have high morbidity and mortality and get devastating pruritus and fatigue, failure to thrive, progressive hepatic failure and impaired neurodevelopment. The etiology is mostly unknown. More than half need a new liver from a living or deceased donor during childhood. However, correct timing of the transplantation is extremely difficult because of lack of consensus based on clinical assessment tools. All though the incidence is low, the cost of this disease is tremendous from both a clinical and human perspective. So far, protocolized neurodevelopment tests, genetic profiling, precise malnutrition evaluation based on clinical appearance, biochemical markers and brain MRI-scans, body composition, immunological function, level of physical activity and optimal time of transplantation in cholestatic children are unknown. The aim is to determine risk factors for neurocognitive impairment in children suffering from severe cholestasis in order to determine optimal time for liver transplantation from a brain perspective. In a prospective study, the investigators will investigate risk factors related to brain-, heart-, gut- and immunological function in the Danish cohort. This cohort consists of 75 children aged 0-18 years. In addition, 30 aged and gender matched healthy and 20 tetra fallot children will serve as control groups. The children will undergo extensive and advanced liver function evaluation, genetic profiling, nutrition and immunological status, neuro-imaging and neurocognitive evaluation at time of diagnose, 2 years of age, pre-school, pre-teenage, and teenage. In case of a liver transplantation, additional neuro-cognitive tests will be performed

NCT ID: NCT05385614 Recruiting - Depression Clinical Trials

Efficacy of Gamified Cognitive Control Training Using de:)Press on Depression Severity add-on to Treatment as Usual

de-press-2
Start date: May 2022
Phase: N/A
Study type: Interventional

Depression is one of the most frequent and devastating psychiatric diseases with a substantial bur-den for patients and society. It is specifically associated with dysfunctional activity in brain networks subserving cognitive control of emotional information processing. Normalization of this activity is a hallmark of various treatment approaches. Computerized training of cognitive control has shown antidepressant effects in experimental lab settings and small clinical pilot trials. However, motiva-tion, treatment adherence, and access for patients are major challenges that limit its broader use. To address these challenges, we developed a software application (de:)press®) that integrates gamification elements in a standard cognitive control task to support motivation, usage time, usabil-ity, and therefore symptom reduction. In a previous pilot trial, we were able to document that de:)press® is superior to a non-gamified standard cognitive control training in reducing depression symptomatology. Based on these data, we now designed a full-size confirmatory trial for the pur-pose of testing the hypothesis that de:)press® provides a positive healthcare effect by means of reduction in depression severity compared to treatment as usual (TAU). In this randomized, con-trolled, clinical trial 112 patients will be randomized to the intervention group (IG) with de:)press® additional to TAU, or the control group (CG) receiving only TAU. For a period of 6 weeks, the IG is provided with de:)press®. To prove a stable efficacy of de:)press®, the primary endpoint is the dif-ference in the Montgomery-Åsberg Depression Scale (MADRS) change 4 weeks after the end of training between IG and CG.

NCT ID: NCT05384639 Recruiting - Clinical trials for Cognitive Impairment

Dual-task Cycling System on Cognitive Function for the Elderly

Start date: January 27, 2021
Phase: N/A
Study type: Interventional

This project aims to develop a new dual-task stationary cycling system that can monitor and provide feedback on the aerobic exercise intensity, while administrating appropriate cognitive trainings targeting various cognitive sub domains through a screen in front of the user. The proposed system is designed to train the brain with cognitive tasks and the body with aerobic exercises at the same time. The difficulties of the cognitive tasks are controlled by the users' previous performances on these tasks so that they wouldn't be too easy nor too difficult. Similarly, the intensity of the aerobic exercise will be monitored through an optical encoder for the cycling cadence, two power meters for the force output on the two pedals, as well as a heart rate monitor for the users' physiological response. Constant feedback is being provided to the users so that they will exercise at the correct intensity to provide the greater cardiovascular and cognitive benefits.

NCT ID: NCT05383443 Recruiting - Clinical trials for Cognitive Impairment

MIND-Matosinhos: Multiple Interventions to Prevent Cognitive Decline

Start date: December 15, 2020
Phase: N/A
Study type: Interventional

The present study aims to quantify the impact of a multidomain approach to prevent cognitive decline in individuals from the general population at-high risk of dementia. It will be based on five distinct components: 1) cognitive training; 2) physical exercise; 3) nutrition education; 4) capacitation to deal with cognitive decline; 5) assessment and correction of hearing loss.

NCT ID: NCT05371639 Recruiting - Clinical trials for Cognitive Impairment

Efficacy and Safety of Tian Ma Bian Chun Zhi Gan Tablets in Mild to Moderate Vascular Dementia

Start date: May 25, 2022
Phase: Phase 2
Study type: Interventional

The study will be a 36-week multicentre, double-blind, placebo-controlled phase Ⅱb trial in China. Total 360 participants aged 55-80 years will be randomized to Tian Ma Bian Chun Zhi Gan group (84mg per day) or to placebo group. The primary endpoint will be Vascular Dementia Assessment Scale-cognitive subscale and Clinical Dementia Rating-Sum of Boxes. Secondary outcomes included changes in Mini-Mental State Examination, Clock Drawing Test, Delayed Story Recall and Ability of Daily Living. Patients' safety will be assessed by recording of adverse events, clinical examinations, electrocardiography and laboratory tests. The patients, caregivers, and investigators will be blinded to the treatment allocations.

NCT ID: NCT05369195 Recruiting - Depression Clinical Trials

Cerebral Protection in Transcatheter Left Atrial Appendage Occlusion

LAAC-SBI
Start date: May 26, 2023
Phase: N/A
Study type: Interventional

The study aims to assess the effect of the use of neuroprotection in transcutaneous occlusion of the left atrial appendage in patients with atrial fibrillation on the risk of perioperative silent brain ischemia and associated cognitive impairment and depression.

NCT ID: NCT05367076 Recruiting - Clinical trials for Cognitive Impairment

Fitness to Aid the Brain and Cognitive Skills

Fit ABCS
Start date: October 7, 2021
Phase: N/A
Study type: Interventional

The study will assess the feasibility of a pilot clinical trial of community-led aerobic exercise training for paediatric brain tumour survivors (PBTS) and the feasibility of a web-based platform to deliver this exercise training. It is hypothesized that 12 weeks of community-led exercise training will be feasible for PBTS and the web-based platform will be feasible to deliver exercise training by community-based instructors.

NCT ID: NCT05366023 Recruiting - Alzheimer Disease Clinical Trials

Elucidating the Necessary Active Components of Training

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

Loss of independence, cognitive decline, and difficulties in everyday function are areas of great concern for older adults and their families. Cognitive training is one low cost, noninvasive training intervention that has repeatedly demonstrated reliable transfer effects to maintained cognition, everyday function, health, and most recently, a 29% reduction in incident dementia. Importantly, many of these everyday function effects are maintained across five to ten years including: maintained driving mobility, 50% reduction in at-fault vehicle crashes, and maintained Instrumental Activities of Daily Living (IADL). Although clearly an important and effective intervention, the moderators and mechanisms underlying this program are unknown. The overall objective in this planning grant is to lay the conceptual and methodological foundation to explore cognitive, psychosocial, lifestyle behaviors, and biomarker mechanisms and moderators of two forms of conceptually driven cognitive training. Additionally, this study will examine how cognitive and psychosocial factors within daily life account for the transfer of cognitive training to everyday function. We will use a factorial design to randomize adults ages 55-85 to 0, 10, 20, 30, or 40 hours of two forms of cognitive training, a combined training, or an active comparison condition (Phase 1). An additional sample of participants will complete 20 hours of two forms of cognitive training or the active comparison group as well as provide blood samples (Phase 2). Across the study period, participants will complete cognitive, health, lifestyle, and psychosocial assessments at baseline, posttest, and approximately three month follow-up assessments in person or remotely using a study-provided laptop. Additionally, all participants will be asked to complete daily cognitive, health, lifestyle, and psychosocial measures daily using study-provided smartphones. This study will allow us to test the feasibility of our enrollment, assessment and training protocols for a future multisite clinical trial. This exploratory study is the first of its kind and will be used to provide important data relevant to a future larger randomized controlled trial examining mediators of cognitive training in a representative sample of adults. This information will assist in the future development of more effective home- and community-based interventions that maintain everyday function.