View clinical trials related to Dementia.
Filter by:This is a monocentric prospective, randomized, double-blind placebo-controlled study. It is designed to evaluate the superiority of the rTMS over sham treatment of depressive symptoms in the context of dementia. It is aimed at a population ≥ 65 years old, with affective BPSD. We wish to recruit 44 participants, with an estimated rate of potential drop out of 20%. Patients will be randomly assigned to the sham or rTMS group. The sham stimulation reproduces the procedure in all the steps, has the same duration and differs exclusively by the device setting. After inclusion, both groups will receive 15 sessions distributed over 5 days a week for 3 weeks
This is a Phase 1/2, multicenter, randomized, placebo-controlled, double-blind study to evaluate the safety, tolerability, pharmacokinetics (PK), and pharmacodynamics (PD) of single and multiple doses of DNL593 in two parts followed by an optional open-label extension (OLE) period. Part A will evaluate the safety, tolerability, PK, and PD of single doses of DNL593 in healthy male and healthy female participants of nonchildbearing potential. Part B will evaluate the safety, tolerability, PK, and PD of multiple doses of DNL593 in participants with frontotemporal dementia (FTD) over 25 weeks. Part B will be followed by Part C, an optional 18-month OLE period available for all participants who complete Part B.
PROACTS is a Phase I/II study to assess the efficacy of AARP Staying Sharp online health program, focusing on the health of non-professional home-based caregivers of persons with Alzheimer's disease and related dementias (ADRD). PROACTS has three aims. Aim 1&2 is an one-time survey study to evaluate the current uptake and utilization of Staying Sharp among caregivers. Aim 3 is a single-group intervention to assess how Staying Sharp may maintain health and function for caregivers of persons with ADRD. Participants will participate in a 4-month program with a 4-month follow-up. Aim 1&2: Characterize caregivers of persons with ADRD using Staying Sharp and evaluate user experiences of Staying Sharp. Aim 3: Establish preliminary efficacy of Staying Sharp program.
The purpose of this study is to develop and refine OPTIMAL and evaluate its feasibility, fidelity, and usefulness. The OPTIMAL is designed to teach staff to effectively engage residents in eating using individualized, person-centered behavioral strategies.
EYE-TAR(MA)-Follow-Up is a non-interventionel, long-term follow-up study in subjects who participated to the study referred as EYE-TAR(MA) (NCT04730440) EYE-TAR(MA)-Follow-Up aims to evaluate the long-term impacts of the Training of Affect Recognition TAR (an emotion recognition rehabilitation program), on social cognition abilities, evolve gaze strategies, behavioral disorders, and the caregiver's burden in Alzheimer's disease (AD). Subjects who completed EYE-TAR(MA) study, and who have signed informed consent for this follow-up, will be eligible to enroll. They will attend one visit two years post EYE-TAR(MA) study intervention (intervention was TAR, or a "classic" cognitive stimulation program) to undergo the following evaluation: Eye-tracking recording during Ekman Faces task, Mini Mental State Examination (MMSE), Neuropsychiatric Inventory (NPI), Zarit scale (completed by caregiver).
Family caregivers of persons with dementia often experience chronic stress and insomnia, resulting in decreased mental and physical health. Accessibility of in-person stress reduction therapy is limited due to caregiver time constraints and distance from therapy sites. The goal of this study is to address gaps in the literature regarding smartphone delivery of Mentalizing Imagery Therapy to older adult caregivers. Mentalizing Imagery Therapy (MIT) provides mindfulness and guided imagery tools to reduce stress, promote self and other understanding, and increase feelings of interconnectedness. This study aims to determine the clinical effects of App-delivered caregiver skills with MIT (experimental condition) or without MIT (control condition) on caregivers' perceived stress (primary outcome), as well as develop digital phenotypes of participant behaviors that are associated with clinical/psychological outcomes. Hypotheses include the following: at the 8 week timepoint, caregivers receiving MIT+CS-App will exhibit superiority on psychological outcome measures relative to those receiving CS-App alone (perceived stress being the primary outcome), that overall app usage will mediate improvements in perceived stress, and that the beneficial effects of the MIT+CS-App will remain significant at the 24-week follow-up.
This research is a randomized controlled study conducted to examine the effect of standard patient simulation training in providing nursing students with the ability to care for individuals with dementia. The population of the research consisted of 100 students who were enrolled in the Nursing Faculty and took the "Psychiatric Nursing" course in 2020-2021 academic year. 84 students who were in the universe and completed the pre-test were randomly assigned to the experimental groups that received simulation training and the control groups that did not receive simulation training. The study was completed with 36 students in the experimental group and 35 students in the control group. Research data were collected with "Personal Coding System and Scale Cover Document", "Structured Student Information Form", "Dementia Information Test", "Case Study Form for Individuals Diagnosed with Dementia", "Standardized Mini Mental Examination", "Communication Skills Evaluation Form", Nursing Diagnosis Detection Skill Form" and "Modified-Simulation Effectiveness Tool".
This project's main goal is to use state-of-the-art passive sensing techniques to identify digital biomarkers that relate to bioenergetic changes in the brain due to nicotinamide riboside supplementation in those with mild cognitive impairment and mild Alzheimer's dementia.
Mindfulness-based intervention (MBI) has been shown promising effects in enhancing the well-being of caregivers of patients with dementia (PWD). However, the time schedule and the mode of delivering the conventional MBI was demanding to family caregivers of PWD, and therefore impeding the feasibility of use among caregivers. Our research team had developed a hybrid MBI program which includes face to face and online mode of mindfulness sessions w. The study aims to evaluate the effectiveness of this 6-week hybrid MBI program on caregivers of PWD over a 6-month follow up. This study is a two-arm parallel randomized controlled trial. Participants are family caregivers of PWD and we aimed to recruit 290 subjects. Eligible participants will be recruited from three local nongovernmental organizations (NGOs) in Hong Kong. They will be randomly allocated into MBI group and a control group (with 145 participants in each group) . The participants in the MBI group will receive 6 weekly 90-minute group-based sessions delivered through a face-to-face and online approach. The participants in control group will receive brief education on dementia care with the same group size, duration, and frequency as the sessions in the intervention group. Assessment (using questionnaire) about caregiving stress and other outcomes (positive aspect of caregiving, depression, dyadic relationship, anxiety, neuropsychiatric symptoms of patients) will be assessed at baseline, immediately after the intervention and at the 6-month follow up. Focus group interview will also be conducted to explore family caregivers' experience in participating in the program. We aimed to recruit 20 caregivers for the interviews via purposive sampling. It is hypothesized that compared to the control group, the MBI group will have a reduction on caregiving stress and improve other outcomes after the intervention.
Advance care planning (ACP) has been widely advocated for persons with early stage dementia (PWEDs). This proposed study attempts to promote the uptake of ACP for this population and their family caregivers in the community and to examine the effects of an ACP programme "Have a Say" for this population. It is hypothesized that participants in the intervention group will be more engaged in ACP and their dyadic concordance on end-of-life care preference with their family caregivers will be significantly higher than that in the control group.