View clinical trials related to Dementia.
Filter by:A Study to Evaluate NYX-458 in Subjects With Mild Cognitive Impairment or Mild Dementia Associated With Parkinson's Disease or Prodromal or Manifest Lewy Body Dementia
The STRENGTH project is a randomized controlled trial to assess the effects of a 6 months multimodal intervention consisted of adapted Tango dancing together with music therapy, engagement in social activities, cognitive intervention and psycho-education on functional, biological, cognitive outcomes and psycho-social aspects in 300 subjects with mild cognitive impairment.
This study is an RCT to evaluate the effectiveness of Brain Safe on reducing anticholinergic exposure. Over 42 months, the trial will enroll 700 community-dwelling older adults who were prescribed one or more strong anticholinergics. Participants will be randomized to use the Brain Safe app or an attention control medication list app for 12 months, with monthly usage reminders.
Patients with dementia exhibit a wide range of behavioral symptoms which include mood disturbances (e.g depression, anxiety), behavior and activity disturbances (e.g agitation, aggression, wandering) and psychotic symptoms (e.g hallucinations and delusions). Behavioral disturbances are a major source of caregiver burden and an important contributor to the decision to admit AD patients to institutionalized long-term care. Among the innovative approaches, rocking chair therapy has been introduced as a potential means for reducing agitation in elderly with dementia. Only few studies evaluated the effect of this therapy on the behavioral symptoms in elderly with cognitive impairment. The results were promising, but not sufficiently significant. We propose to perform this study having as a main goal to evaluate the effect of the rocking chair therapy in agitation for home care residents with dementia. The secondary aim of the study will be the evaluation of psychoactive drugs use as well as pain killers. Cohen Mansfield agitation inventory will be employed for the pre- and post-therapy evaluation. Included subjects will be installed in groups of five, rocking chairs will be placed away from other residents in a semicircle in a corner of the dayroom. The therapy sessions will be held every afternoon, for two hours, under the supervision of the unit psychologist and a master's degree psychology student. During the daily session, each resident should be encouraged to actively rock to reach the goal of 60 minutes of rocking accumulated per day. The total duration of the therapy period will be 6 weeks. The use of pharmacological restraint (neuroleptics, anxiolytics) and pain killers will be evaluated before, during and after the six weeks therapy. The expected outcome is a reduction of agitation among elderly with dementia, as well as a reduction in the use of pharmacological restraint and pain killers.
This study aims at developing, implementing and evaluating a complex intervention involving Learning, Innovation, Volunteers and Empowerment for home dwelling persons with dementia and their caregivers. The investigators hypothesise that a successfully implemented intervention will reduce caregivers burden and be cost-effective.
The purpose of the TRC-PAD study is to develop a large, well-characterized, biomarker-confirmed, trial-ready cohort to facilitate rapid enrollment into AD prevention trials utilizing the APT Webstudy and subsequent referral to in-clinic evaluation and biomarker confirmation. Participants with known biomarker status may have direct referral to the Trial-Ready Cohort. If you are interested in being selected for the TRC-PAD study, you should first enroll in the APT Webstudy (https://www.aptwebstudy.org/welcome).
A Phase 2 open label study evaluating the safety, tolerability, pharmacokinetics (PK) and pharmacodynamics (PD) of AL001 in participants with a Granulin mutation or C9orf72 mutation causative of frontotemporal dementia.
At present, there is no treatment for dementia that changes the course of the disease. However, it is now understood that the proteins in dementias such as Alzheimer's disease are present years before someone develops symptoms of dementia. Studies may therefore need to give potential treatments to patients before they develop symptoms of dementia. To do this, researchers need a way of predicting who will go on to develop dementia in the future. There are several ways of doing this, however, many of these methods are costly and difficult to implement at a population level - such as brain imaging, lumbar punctures or psychological tests. In this study, the investigators aim to develop a method of predicting who will go on to develop dementia (and dementia due to Alzheimer's disease) using only the sort of information that a general practitioner would have available to them. To do this, the investigators will develop a dementia prediction model using data from the Secure Anonymised Information Linkage (SAIL) Databank, which contains anonymised primary care, hospital admissions and mortality data for the population of Wales, United Kingdom (UK). They will then go on to test how well it performs in an external dataset, such as the UK's Clinical Practice Research Datalink (CPRD).
This study, being conducted under the auspice of the CReATe Consortium, will enroll patients with ALS and related disorders as well as healthy controls, with the goal of facilitating clinical validation of leading biological-fluid based biomarker candidates that may aid therapy development for patients with ALS and related disorders.
Currently almost 5 million Americans suffer from the distressing symptoms related to dementia and this number that will triple by 2050. The overall goals of the proposed project are to evaluate, in community dwelling Alzheimer's Disease Research Center participants the benefits of a 12-month nurse-led early palliative intervention on symptoms, quality of life, health care resource use. The relevance of this research to public health is that there is an urgent need to improve the palliative care of persons with dementia living in the community. This study will contribute substantially to that effort.