View clinical trials related to Dementia.
Filter by:This is a cluster randomized controlled trial to examine the feasibility, acceptability, and preliminary efficacy of the phone version of REACH VN, a psychosocial culturally adapted Alzheimer's family caregiving intervention, to support family caregivers of persons living with dementia in Vietnam.
The Syn-D Study will be evaluating α-synuclein in patients with suspected MCI-AD and MCI-DLB. Using a simple diagnostic test will improve clinical accuracy in diagnosing, earlier diagnosis, and distinguish between neurodegenerative diseases.
The number of people suffering from dementia in Asia (22.9 million) is more than twice the numbers in Europe (10.5 million) or the Americas (9.4 million), as recorded in the global impact of dementia in the World Alzheimer Report 2015.1 This dementia tsunami will continue to rise and the estimated number is 67 million in 2050 in Asia alone, which will be 2 to 3 times higher than the estimates for Europe (19 million) or the Americas (30 million). Devising and implementing preventive strategies against dementia is of paramount importance. The proposed project will be able to establish the associations between VRFs and cognition across cohorts with cultural, ethnical, and demographical variations. This study will generate data for evidence-based knowledge for globally implementable and effective preventive strategies for cognitive impairment and dementia.
The purpose of this study is to assess acceptability, and safety of providing tDCS to ADRD patients with behavioral symptoms and to assess the efficacy of tDCS for ADRD-related symptoms, mainly behavioral symptoms.
There is an important unmet need for timely, non-invasive, and low-burden evaluation of patients presenting with mild cognitive impairment (MCI) and early dementia. MCI impacts 12-18% of people in the United States over age 60 and is often an initial clinical sign of Alzheimer's disease (AD) (Alzheimer's Association, 2022). The PrecivityAD test is an analytically and clinically validated blood test that aids healthcare providers in the diagnosis of AD in patients with MCI and early-stage dementia. C2N has created a quality improvement (QI) survey to gather insight from clinicians as to the clinical effectiveness of the commercially available PrecivityAD™ test, which identifies whether a patient with signs and symptoms of cognitive decline is likely to have amyloid plaques in the brain, a pathological hallmark of Alzheimer's disease.
The purposes of this study are to develop an upgraded version of the smart-clothes home care model that include an interactive family caregiver App, and to examine its effect on a randomized controlled trial.
To compare alternation of retinal microcirculation within the macula and optic disc in patients with dementia, mild cognitive impairment (MCI), and cognitively healthy subjects who had positive amyloid biomarkers (Aβ +) or not, using optical coherence tomography angiography (OCTA).
This study aims to evaluate a care empowerment program using virtual reality on dementia knowledge, attitude, care self-efficacy, empathy and caregiver burden of family caregivers of people with dementia.
Prophylactic TxA administration in patients undergoing major gastrointestinal surgery reduces the incidence of delirium after surgery when compared with placebo. The unifying hypothesis is that systemic and neuro-inflammation lead to neuronal injury and resultant postoperative delirium.
The purpose of this study is to develop a prototype of a home-based, dyadic tangible toolkit comprised of simple tools to help people living with dementia (PLWD) and their care partners manage stress at home. A human-centered design approach will be used to develop and user-test a prototype of a dyadic, tangible stress-management toolkit with and for PLWD and their care partners; and to explore the feasibility of collecting several stress-related outcomes. A total of 4 focus groups (n=3-4 dyads/group) will be convened to explore the experiences, perceptions, preferences, and recommendations of dementia-caring dyads regarding stress, stress management, and key components and features of a stress management toolkit. Eligible tools for the toolkit include low burden, high safety tools such as weighted blankets, robotic pets and baby dolls, guided journals, aromatherapy and bright light therapy devices, and massage and acupressure tools. Ten dyads who were not involved in prototype development will then use the toolkit for 2 weeks. Feedback on usability, feasibility, and acceptability will be collected through questionnaires (end of weeks 1 and 2) and 3 focus groups (3-4 dyads/group at end of week 2). We will collect stress-related, participant-reported outcomes (e.g., neuropsychiatric symptoms of dementia, caregiver stress, dyadic relationship strain), and saliva biospecimens from participants with dementia and their care partners at baseline and end of week 2, to explore their utility as endpoints in a future toolkit intervention that uses a single-arm, pre-post study design. Results will yield valuable data to support development and preliminary testing of a stress management toolkit intervention in a future pilot study. This study involves human subjects and is expected to yield no more than minimal risk. Tools eligible for the toolkit must have demonstrated high degrees of safety in prior research. Major risks for participation include the potential for negative emotional responses to focus group discussions and surveys pertaining to stress, excess time burden to participate in the study, and breach of confidentiality. It is not anticipated, but there is a potential for physical discomfort if tools are not used as directed, which is why the toolkits will include a user guide outlining safety information, which a research team member will review with each participant prior to use.