Clinical Trials Logo

Consciousness Disorders clinical trials

View clinical trials related to Consciousness Disorders.

Filter by:

NCT ID: NCT04978857 Recruiting - Clinical trials for Consciousness Disorder

Feasibility Study of Virtual Reality to Promote the Awakening of Patients in a State of Minimal Consciousness

REVEIL
Start date: November 14, 2022
Phase: N/A
Study type: Interventional

Advances in neurosurgery and neuroresuscitation have improved patients' prognosis. However, 2% of serious head injuries progress to a vegetative state, this condition persisting at 1 year for 1% of these patients. The minimum state of consciousness is to be distinguished from coma and vegetative state, it is a condition marked by a severe alteration of consciousness in which there are minimal and fluctuating, but obvious, signs of environmental consciousness. There is a minimum degree of response to some stimulations, response generally fluctuating over time. In practice, these patients are unable to consistently follow simple instructions, but they often have a preserved visual pursuit (proper rotation of the head when someone enters the room, prolonged eye follow-up, etc.). Patients with minimal awareness have been shown to perceive emotions and pain. These patients may exhibit behavioural and emotional changes (smiling, crying motivated), induced by verbal stimulations (familiar voice). But these events remain fluctuating during the day or according to the days and interlocutors. For the moment, the most commonly accepted strategy since the 1990s remains sensory stimulation (SS), while knowing that this term includes extremely varied stimulations (sensory, olfactory, auditory, fixation on a mirror, etc.) without the practice of this technique being well defined and systematized. It has been shown that a regular family visit program with auditory, emotional and tactile stimuli improves the state of consciousness of these patients. Physicians also know that this SS must be personalized and adapted to the patient's tolerance and premorbid preferences. SS programmes are poorly standardized. Programmes generally consist of a simple, moderate to high intensity, non-standardized stimulation, presented repetitively and frequently. Indeed, it has been shown that stimulation must begin early, be frequent, and continue until reactions appear. In this project, investigator want to use the new technologies now commonly used such as photos, videos or sounds taken by smartphone's relatives of the brain patient-injured in order to make a personalized 3D film using film editing software and a predefined film frame, by integrating autobiographical elements and emotional, multisensory (binaural sound, vibration) integrating, if possible, a certain interactivity (haptic feedback, triggering of videos by the patient's eyes). The objective is to develop an innovative multi-sensory stimulation technique through a personalised enriched environment to induce, facilitate and accelerate the return to consciousness of patients in altered state of consciousness during their initial management.

NCT ID: NCT04913831 Recruiting - Stroke Clinical Trials

Effects of Cerebrolysin on Level of Consciousness and Brain Metabolism in Disorder of Consciousness After Stroke: Single Center Randomized Controlled Study

Start date: June 2021
Phase: Phase 4
Study type: Interventional

The purpose of this study was to determine the effect of stroke on post-stroke level of consciousness through a double-blind, placebo-controlled, randomized study design. And Brain 18F-FDG PET was used to reveal the mechanism of recovery after cerebrolysin administration. Thirty patients with chronic stroke patients with minimal consciousness (MCS) or vegetative human (VS) level of consciousness disorder in the revised coma recovery scale were enrolled. Thirty patients were randomly divided into a Cerebrolysin group and a placebo group.

NCT ID: NCT04833543 Recruiting - Brain Injuries Clinical Trials

Verticalization Robotic Exoskeleton DoC

Start date: April 21, 2021
Phase: N/A
Study type: Interventional

Mobilization, specifically verticalization, has been shown to play a role in enhancing consciousness. Vestibular stimulation has the potential to influence the neural substrate of consciousness, but this modality has not been thoroughly explored. The primary aim of this study is to compare the influence of verticalization with and without vestibular input on level of consciousness in patients experiencing disorders of consciousness (DoC).

NCT ID: NCT04798456 Recruiting - Caregivers Clinical Trials

Aiming for a Better Understanding and Improvement of the Diagnosis and Prognosis of Patients With Disorders of Consciousness Through Multimodal Observations

PerBrain
Start date: June 1, 2020
Phase:
Study type: Observational

Improved treatment of severe brain injuries has resulted in increased survival rates. While some of these patients regain consciousness after a transient state of coma, others may develop a disorder of consciousness (DoC). Diagnosis of DoC currently relies on standardized behavioral assessment. The importance of accuracy in such diagnosis cannot be overstated, as it guides critical decisions on treatment (including pain management), and could underlie end-of-life decisions. Despite this importance, current behavioral diagnosis often fails, if because of the major sensory and motor deficits associated with DoC, or because of the heterogeneous etiology and pathophysiology associated with the condition. Finally, the need for accurate diagnosis and prognosis transcends the needs of the patients alone: caregiving of these patients is very stressful, principally for the large uncertainty associated with them. Thus, more accurate diagnosis and prognosis provide major relief for caregivers, and paradoxically, even if the news is not "good". For all these reasons it is critical to developing personalized diagnosis and prognosis prediction tools that permit a stratified analysis at the single-patient level. The PerBrain Project will benefit from the multidisciplinary partners' expertise, and the unique opportunity to perform longitudinal assessments in four clinical sites through both established and novel electrophysiological, neuroimaging, and physiological techniques. Based on the collected data, the investigators will develop a multimodal personalized diagnostic tool for DoC patients using state-of-the-art computational tools, such as machine learning, in order to better determine the current state (diagnosis) and future outcome (prognosis). The overall aim of this project will provide for a better understanding of the pathophysiological mechanisms in DoC, which will, in turn, allow personalized rehabilitation strategies, and improved single-patient predictions of state and prognosis.

NCT ID: NCT04706689 Recruiting - Dysphagia Clinical Trials

Development and Validation of the SWADOC Tool

Start date: July 24, 2020
Phase:
Study type: Observational

Background: After a period of coma, patients with severe brain injury may present disorders of consciousness (DOC). A wide proportion of these patients also suffer from severe dysphagia. Assessment and therapy of swallowing disabilities of DOC patients are essential because dysphagia has major functional consequences and comorbidities. Dysphagia evaluation in patients with DOC is hampered by the lack of adapted tools. The first aim of the study was to develop a new tool, the SWallowing Assessment in Disorders Of Consciousness (SWADOC), and propose a validation protocol. The SWADOC tool has been developed to help therapists to apprehend components related to swallowing in patients with DOC. The second aim is to appreciate the relationship between patients' level of consciousness and SWADOC items and scores. Method/design: In this multicentric prospective cohort, 104 patients with DOC will be tested three times during two consecutive days with the SWADOC tool. Statistical analyses will focus on the reliability and validity of the SWADOC tool, especially the intra and inter-rater reliability, internal consistency, measures of dispersion and concurrent validity with the FOTT Swallowing Assessment of Saliva (FOTT-SAS). The level of consciousness will be assessed with the Simplified Evaluation of CONsciousness Disorders (SECONDs) and the Coma Recovery Scale-Revised (CRS-R) Discussion: The assessment of swallowing abilities among patients with DOC is the first necessary step towards the development of an individualized dysphagia care plan. A validated scoring tool will be essential for clinicians to better apprehend dysphagia in DOC patients and to document the evolution of their disorders.

NCT ID: NCT04534777 Recruiting - Clinical trials for Consciousness Disorder

Multimodal Neuroprognostication in Disorders of Consciousness

M-Neuro-DoC
Start date: September 9, 2020
Phase:
Study type: Observational

Disorders of consciousness frequently occur at the acute phase of brain injuries. For the most severe cases, consciousness impairment can be prolonged. To optimize the medical plan and the goal of care, it is fundamental to have precise tools to predict chances of recovery of consciousness and potential disability. Currently, multimodal assessment including behavioral, neurophysiological and neuroimaging technics is recommended. However, the respective predictive values of these markers are poorly understood and decision making is challenging when results are contradictory

NCT ID: NCT04495192 Recruiting - Brain Injuries Clinical Trials

Predictors of Better Outcomes After Severe Acquired Brain Injuries

FP-GCA
Start date: June 9, 2020
Phase:
Study type: Observational [Patient Registry]

Severe Acquired Brain Injury is defined as a traumatic, post-anoxic, vascular or other brain damage that causes coma for at least 24 hours and leads to permanent disability with sensorial, motor, cognitive or compartmental impairment. In this context, an accurate characterization of individual patients' profile in terms of neuronal damage, potential for neuroplasticity, neurofunctional and clinical state could allow to plan tailored rehabilitation and care pathway on the basis of solid prognostic information, also for optimizing resources of the National Health care systems and enhance ethical decisions. Patient profiling should encompass measures and procedures easily available at the bedside, and with affordable time, resource, and money-costs to determine a real impact on National Health systems. The aim of the study is identifying patient profiles in terms of clinical, neurophysiological and genetical aspects with better long-term outcome in order to plan tailored therapeutic interventions.

NCT ID: NCT04445649 Recruiting - Stroke Clinical Trials

Prognostic Factors to Regain Consciousness

Start date: June 15, 2020
Phase:
Study type: Observational

The study aims to identify factors that predict the medium and long-term outcome of patients with disorders of consciousness (DOC) undergoing early neurological rehabilitation. In this prospective, observational study, 130 DOC patients are going to be included (36 months). At study entry, different routine data, disease severity and functional status are documented for each patient. In addition, MRI, EEG and evoked potentials are measured within the first week. The level of consciousness is recorded with the Coma-Recovery-Scale-Revised and serves as the primary outcome parameter. Complications, comorbidities, functional status and leve of consciousness are assessed weekly. After eight weeks, the measurement of the MRI, the EEG and the evoked potentials are repeated. After 3, 6 and 12 months, the Glasgow Outcome Scale-Revised is used to followed up the current status of the patients.

NCT ID: NCT04442971 Recruiting - Clinical trials for Traumatic Brain Injury

Effectiveness of Music Therapy on Level of Consciousness

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

It is known that even in patients with severe disorders of consciousness (DOC), the perception of known stimuli triggers emotional reactions that can be interpreted as an expression of a residual function of consciousness. Music therapy has a long tradition in neurological rehabilitation. Frequently, active therapies with own music making and singing are implemented in clinical settings. In DOC patients, it is more likely to use passive music listening. However, findings on effectiveness are limited, as only a few studies have systematically investigated the effects of music therapy in this population. Therefore, the investigators want to investigate the effectiveness of passive listening to preferred music on the level of consciousness.

NCT ID: NCT04411719 Recruiting - Clinical trials for Consciousness Disorder

Outcome Prediction in Patients With Acute Disorders of Consciousness

Start date: January 1, 2022
Phase:
Study type: Observational

Prior research has indicated a link between outcomes in patients with disorders of consciousness (DOC) and their responses to emotional auditory stimuli. Given the high degree of uncertainty in acute situations, this study plans to record EEG responses and observe microexpressions in DOC patients during exposure to auditory stimuli, with the aim to identify more reliable prognostic indicators. The goal is to uncover potential patterns or signals that can contribute to a more comprehensive understanding of a patient's condition, and thereby provide more accurate prognostication.