View clinical trials related to Epilepsy.
Filter by:Epilepsy is a common neurological condition that affects people of all ages.Recent studies found that epilepsy is associated with several chromosomal regions, where mutations in these regions cause neurological dysfunction. BDNF which is the most ample neurotropic factor in the CNS, has survival and growth promoting roles in a variety of neurons. It has been shown to promote excitatory (glutamatergic) synapses while weakening inhibitory (GABAergic) ones. A nonsynonymous G to A single-nucleotide polymorphism (SNP) exists at position 196 of exon 2 (rs6265), which results in valine (val) to methionine (met) substitution. This polymorphism affects intracellular packaging of pro-BDNF, its axonal transport and in turn, activity-dependent secretion of BDNF at the synapse.
The aim of this study is to investigate whether researchers can improve sleep quality in patients with deep brain stimulators by delivering targeted stimulation patterns during specific stages of sleep.
This is a GWAS study that aims to identify possible candidate genes associate to epilepsy by exploring single nucleotide polymorphism (SNP) in a group of epilepsy, in the Kazakh population. The investigators hypothesize that the careful phenotyping of the subject sand matching with increase the power to find SNP significantly associate with epilepsy
The goal is to develop methodology to monitor flux in the citric acid cycle in brain via 13C nuclear magnetic resonance (NMR) spectroscopy at 7 Tesla.
This is a two-arm randomized controlled trial to compare telephone-based depression self-management (UPLIFT) to telephone-based support groups (BOOST). A sample of 120 English- and Spanish-speaking people with epilepsy (PWE) with elevated depressive symptoms will be enrolled. Both interventions are 8-week programs delivered in one-hour weekly sessions to groups of about 6 participants. Changes in depressive symptoms, quality of life and seizures will be assessed over 12 months. The trial will also examine mediators and moderators of treatment effects.
The main purpose of this study is to investigate effects of Lu AG06466 on seizure activity after increasing daily doses during 4 weeks in participants with an implanted responsive neurostimulation system.
The current project undertakes a prospective multicentre randomised controlled trial to evaluate whether full or continuous electroencephalography (cEEG) is superior to amplitude-integrated electroencephalography (aEEG) in the real time evaluation and diagnosis of neonatal seizures and in reducing time to treatment. At-risk new-born infants will be recruited on the participating neonatal intensive care units (NICUs) by trained specialist staff and will have 24 hours of EEG monitoring.
This is a Phase 1/2a, open-label, single-dose, PK study of VALTOCO with open-label safety period in pediatric epilepsy subjects age 2 to 5 years.
More people are living with chronic or long-term disorders together and they live longer, which gives an increase in patients who need health services. Seen in the context of the shorter lengths of stay, and the outpatient clinics' increasing responsibility, there is a need to increase outpatient capacity without leading to more patient readmissions. Further, new services should take into account the patients capacity to benefit from the services, and their level of health literacy is crucial. By developing new services using technology, patients will be able to be followed up closely in their own home with adapted treatment and information, a closer dialogue with the health service where there is a need, and the utilization of scarce resources in the health care system can increase. The aim of the current study is to evaluate a digital outpatient clinic, and assess any differences over time in health literacy, digital health literacy, quality of life and overall satisfaction with the outpatient services. Furthermore, the investigators will assess the intervention group's satisfaction with the digital outpatient clinic. In addition, the digital services will be tailored and revised throughout the study based on continuous feedback and iterative processes. The current study is a pragmatic controlled multicenter study with two study arms; one control arm and one intervention arm. In total, eligible participants will be recruited from one of four centers.
Epilepsy is a common health problem worldwide. In general population, studies in developed countries estimated the annual incidence of epilepsy to be~50 per 100,000 and prevalence to be ~8.2 per 1,000. These figures are higher in developing countries in which prevalence of >10 per 1,000 was reported. In Upper Egypt, Assiut Governorate, the prevalence rate was 12.9 per 1,000. In people with epilepsy there is an associated high rate of cognitive difficulties that compromise educational progress and achievement throughout life. Approximately 1-5% of the population exhibits epileptiform discharges on electroencephalography (EEG). Interictal epileptiform discharges (IEDs), meaning spikes, polyspikes, sharp waves, or spike and slow-wave complexes without observed clinical seizures, are commonly observed in patients with epilepsy. Epilepsy syndromes manifesting with IEDs are detrimental to cognitive function. Recently, two studies found that frequent IEDs can impair cognitive performance in children. and adult patients. Several studies indicated that IEDs in patients with epilepsy had a disruptive effect on information processing speed with even a low percentage of IEDs (1%).However, it is unclear whether IEDs are associated with disrupted academic performance in patients with idiopathic epilepsy, and the relationship between general cognitive ability and academic performance in those patients has not been clarified. Understanding how IEDs interfere with neurocognitive outcomes is important ,while the goal of medical and surgical treatments for epilepsy is to achieve seizure-freedom with minimal morbidity, the benefits of IED suppression are more controversial.