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Disorder of Consciousness clinical trials

View clinical trials related to Disorder of Consciousness.

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NCT ID: NCT05343507 Recruiting - Clinical trials for Disorder of Consciousness

Ketamine to Treat Patients With Post-comatose Disorders of Consciousness

Start date: May 1, 2022
Phase: Phase 2/Phase 3
Study type: Interventional

The investigators will run a Randomized Clinical Trial with 30 patients with disorders of consciousness (DoC), with intravenous subanesthetic doses of ketamine. Patients will simultaneously undergo TMS-EEG. The piloting will be done on 3 patients, with EEG only.

NCT ID: NCT05308186 Completed - Clinical trials for Disorder of Consciousness

Effectiveness of Sensory Stimulation on Attenuating Pain and Stress Among Patients With Disorders of Consciousness

Start date: April 10, 2022
Phase: N/A
Study type: Interventional

The aim of the presented study is to examine the effectiveness of sensory stimulation in reducing pain and stress of patients diagnosed with Disorder of consciousness.

NCT ID: NCT05285124 Recruiting - Clinical trials for Disorder of Consciousness

HD-tDCS Combined With Circadian Rhythm Reconstruction and Micro Expression Changes on Consciousness Recovery in Patients With Chronic Disturbance of Consciousness

HD-tDCS
Start date: September 22, 2020
Phase: N/A
Study type: Interventional

The circadian rhythm characteristics of sleep cycle and neuroendocrine in patients with chronic disorder of consciousness show different degrees of disorder, and the relationship between this disorder and consciousness level is unclear.The researchers used HD-tDCS to treat patients with chronic disturbance of consciousness who intervened in circadian rhythm, and used a variety of methods such as EEG, fMRI, protein metabolism, ERP and micro-expression to explore the mechanism of improving the state of consciousness of HD-DCS and the relationship between circadian rhythm and patients' consciousness level

NCT ID: NCT05237102 Not yet recruiting - Hydrocephalus Clinical Trials

Prediction Model of Improvement of Disturbance of Consciousness in Patients With Hydrocephalus After Shunt Operation

Start date: April 10, 2022
Phase: N/A
Study type: Interventional

Patients with hydrocephalus are usually treated with cerebrospinal fluid (CFS) shunt to deal with excess cerebrospinal fluid in the brain. However, it is difficult to distinguish whether ventricular enlargement is due to hydrocephalus or other causes, such as brain injury and compensatory brain atrophy after surgery. Therefore, it is important to predict whether shunting will help patients. For this reason, clinicians must be cautious when treating patients with shunt therapy. Important assessments of the level of consciousness and continuous lumbar tap test are currently clinically common predictors before making decisions about CFS shunt therapy. However, for patients with serious disturbance of consciousness, it is difficult to predict the prognosis of surgery by observing the improvement of symptoms after lumbar tap test, which brings difficulties to the majority of clinical workers, and also easy to bring serious psychological and economic burden to patients. In clinical practice, clinicians still lack a stable and objective method to predict postoperative outcomes for these patients. In this clinical study, when participants performed the cerebrospinal fluid tap test to evaluate whether or not cerebrospinal fluid shunt was performed, various predictors that may be associated with CSF shunt outcomes before and after cerebrospinal fluid tap test were collected, including imaging data, EEG characteristics and changes in cerebrospinal fluid pressure. In addition, the researchers will collect the improvement of consciousness disturbance in patients with hydrocephalus before and after cerebrospinal fluid shunt, in order to explore the correlation between preoperative imaging data, EEG characteristics, the results of cerebrospinal fluid tap test and the improvement of consciousness disorders. A scheme of consciousness assessment based on the results of imaging, EEG and tap test results afte CSF tap test was proposed.

NCT ID: NCT05219331 Recruiting - Clinical trials for Disorder of Consciousness

Hydrocephalus Treatment on Persistent Disorder of Consciousness

HYCO
Start date: September 16, 2022
Phase: N/A
Study type: Interventional

After acute brain injury or haemorrhagic stroke, hydrocephalus might participate to consciousness disorder. We plan to explore whether ventriculoperitoneal shunt insertion improves consciousness in patients with vegetative or minimally conscious state and hydrocephalus. Patients with acute brain injury, persistent consciousness disorder and hydrocephalus will be shunted with a detailed follow-up at 3 months combining: clinical evaluation, FluoroDésoxyGlucose positron emission tomography imaging, high density electroencephalogram, electrocardiogram Holter and sympathetic activity by microneurography.

NCT ID: NCT05213169 Recruiting - Clinical trials for Disorder of Consciousness

Apomorphine in Severe Brain-injured Patients

APODoC
Start date: June 18, 2021
Phase: Phase 2/Phase 3
Study type: Interventional

Background: Patients who survive severe brain injury may develop chronic disorders of consciousness (DoC). Treating these patients to improve recovery is extremely challenging because of scarce and inefficient therapeutical options. Among pharmacological treatments, apomorphine, a potent direct dopamine agonist, has exhibited promising behavioral effects, but its true efficacy and its mechanism remains unknown. This randomized controlled study aims to verify the effects of apomorphine subcutaneous infusion in patients with disorders of consciousness and investigate the neural networks targeted by this treatment. Methods/design: The double-blind randomized controlled trial will include 48 patients: 24 patients will be randomly assigned to the apomorphine and 24 to the placebo group. Investigators and the patients will be unaware of the nature of the treatment rendered. Primary outcome will be determined as behavioral response to treatment as measured by changes of diagnosis using the Coma Recovery Scale - Revised (CRS-R), while secondary outcome measures will include the Nociception Coma Scale - Revised (NCS-R), Disability Rating Scale (DRS), Wessex Head Injury Matrix (WHIM), circadian rhythm using actimetry, electroencephalography (EEG), positron emission tomography (PET) and functional magnetic resonance imaging (fMRI). The Glasgow Outcome Scale - Extended (GOS-E) and a phone-adapted version of the CRS-R will be used for long-term follow-up. Statistical analyses will focus on the detection of changes induced by apomorphine treatment at the individual level (comparing data before and after treatment) and at the group level (comparing responders with non-responders). Response to treatment will be measured at four different levels: 1. behavioral response (CRS-R, NCS-R, DRS, WHIM, GOS-E, phone CRS-R), 2. brain metabolism (PET), 3. network connectivity (resting-state fMRI, clinical EEG and high-density EEG) and 4. Circadian rhythm changes (actimetry, body temperature, 24h-EEG). Discussion: Apomorphine is a promising and safe strategy for the treatment of DoC but efficacy, profile of the responding population and underlying mechanism remain to be determined. This trial will provide unprecedented data that will allow to investigate the response to apomorphine using multimodal methods and shed new light on the brain networks targeted by this drug in terms of behavioral response, functional connectivity and metabolism.

NCT ID: NCT05187000 Recruiting - Clinical trials for Transcranial Magnetic Stimulation

Effects of Individualized rTMS in DOC Patients

Start date: July 5, 2021
Phase: N/A
Study type: Interventional

Background: Disorder of consciousness(DOC) is a series of arousal and cognitive disorders secondary to the most severe brain injury. Once a patient is diagnosed with a DOC, a poor prognosis is assumed and the rehabilitation for whom is greatly limited. Therefore, the treatment of DOC poses extraordinary challenges. Various treatments protocols have been reported of successful in promoting rehabilitation of DOC patients. Repetitive transcranial magnetic stimulation(rTMS), as a non-invasive brain stimulation technique, has shown potentials for consciousness rehabilitation of DOC patients as it is effective in regulating the central nervous system. Methods and design: This protocol is a double-blind randomized sham-controlled crossover trial. Totally 30 participants will be randomly assigned to either group 1 or group 2 in a 1:1 ratio, with 15 patients in each group. Each patient will received 20 sessions, in which 10 sessions will be active and 10 will be sham, separated by 10-days washout period. The active-rTMS will include 10 Hz rTMS over the individual-targeted area on each participants. Primary and secondary evaluating indicators will be performed at each baseline and after rTMS treatment. Primary outcome will be determined as behavioral response to treatment as measured using the Coma Recovery Scale - Revised (CRS-R). Resting-state high-density EEG will be also recorded to investigate the neurophysiological correlates by rTMS. Discussion:This study will contribute to define the role of rTMS for the treatment of DOC patients and characterise the neural correlates of its action. The investigators proposed a method of individualized target selection for DOC patients based on the existing gold standard CRS-R score and MRI, and used a cross randomized controlled trial to verify the role of rTMS in DOC treatment.

NCT ID: NCT05010265 Recruiting - Clinical trials for Disorder of Consciousness

An Ethical Approach to Detecting Covert Consciousness

DECODE
Start date: February 1, 2022
Phase:
Study type: Observational

This study aims to develop an ethical approach to developing and deploying novel neurotechnologies to aid in the detection of consciousness and prediction of recovery after brain injury.

NCT ID: NCT04921683 Completed - Clinical trials for Traumatic Brain Injury

The Use of LIFUP in Chronic Disorders of Consciousness

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

When patients survive a severe brain injury but fail to fully recover, they often enter a Disorder of Consciousness (DoC) --that is, a set of related conditions of decreased awareness and arousal including the Vegetative State (VS) and the Minimally Conscious State (MCS). When these conditions become chronic, there are no approved treatments to help bolster any further recovery. In prior work, we have shown the clinical feasibility and potential of Low Intensity Focused Ultrasound Pulsation (LIFUP) as a remarkably safe form of non-invasive brain stimulation in these conditions.

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).