View clinical trials related to Epilepsy.
Filter by:This is a UK, multi-center, non-interventional study based on the use of health service administrative and medical records (paper-based and/or electronic, as applicable) along with the use of prospectively collected subject-reported outcomes on experience with use of VNS therapy using validated and bespoke self-completion questionnaires. Data for hospital resource utilisation will be extracted from the Hospital Episode Statistics (HES) database.
The purpose of the study is to evaluate the long-term safety and tolerability of brivaracetam.
SMART is a program for adult individuals with sub-optimally controlled epilepsy. It involves educational and behavioral interventions intended to enhance epilepsy self-management. The group sessions are conducted remotely over the teleconferencing application, Zoom. These sessions are held over an 8 week time period and are co-lead by a trained nurse educator and a trained peer educator. The peer educator is someone with epilepsy and a history of NHEs. Educators use a written curriculum delivered online, and the interactive sessions last 60-90 minutes. Groups are limited to about 6 -12 adult participants. After the group sessions are done, individuals have 3 telephone maintenance sessions with the nurse educator once a month for the first 3 months after the group sessions end spaced approximately 4 weeks apart. SMART is intended for adults with epilepsy, especially those who belong to disadvantaged sub groups such as rural populations, veterans with epilepsy and those who are underinsured. People with epilepsy who belong to disadvantaged sub-groups are more likely to have poor outcomes and often end up using expensive crisis-oriented care, and thus potentially might benefit the most from self-management programs if they can be actively engaged.
This study will provide a comprehensive assessment of long-term treatment with the ketogenic diet, a medical diet with high fat and low carbohydrate intake, focusing on safety and cardiovascular implications. We will assess patients with epilepsy or one of two rare metabolic diseases; glucose transporter type 1 deficiency syndrome (GLUT1 DS) or pyruvate dehydrogenase complex deficiency (PDHD).
This study is being done to answer the question: Will a home-based self-management program, HOBSCOTCH, be effective in improving quality of life and perceived difficulties in cognitive abilities by teaching problem-solving strategies? The research team is also looking at a new mobile application that was developed to go with the program, and looking at extra booster sessions to improve long-term outcomes. In order to learn about the effectiveness of the program, half of the people in this study will be randomly assigned to be in the intervention immediately. The other half will be randomly assigned to a 6-month waitlist period before getting the intervention. All participants will receive the program at some point during the study.
The purpose of the study is to assess the long-term use of lacosamide oral solution dosed at 2 mg/kg/day to 12 mg/kg/day when administered to pediatric study participants with epilepsy who have completed NCT01964560 (EP0034) or NCT00938912 (SP848).
This study investigates how seizures can vary over time with changes in low grade gliomas and its treatments. This study may help doctors find symptoms or triggers of seizures earlier than normal, and ultimately earlier care or treatment for seizures.
Epilepsy is a chronic brain disease with recurrent seizures and the comorbidity of psychiatric diseases are very common. The prevalence of depression in patients with refractory epilepsy is about 60%. However, the early diagnosis is usually difficult due to the unclear mechanism and untypical clinical symptoms, and there are no extremely effective treatments for depression in patients with epilepsy until now. In this prospective, multi-center, cohort study, we aim to investigate and screen two different types of depression ("cognitive" and "somatic") in patients with epilepsy by using the combination of regular moods evaluating scales and heart rate variability instrument. The intervening methods of combining transcranial direct current stimulation (tDCS) and serotonin re-uptake inhibitors (SSRIs) are used to treat the patients with comorbidity of epilepsy and depression.
The NSR-DEV study is a longitudinal cohort study of around 280 Neonatal Seizure Registry participants that aims to evaluate childhood outcomes after acute symptomatic neonatal seizures, as well as examine risk factors for developmental disabilities and whether these are modified by parent well-being.
About half of the world's children with epilepsy do not receive treatment - known as the epilepsy treatment gap - with significantly higher rates (67%-90%) in low- and middle-income countries (LMICs). We will conduct the first cluster-randomized clinical trial (cRCT) to determine the efficacy, implementation, and cost-effectiveness of a novel intervention shifting childhood epilepsy care to epilepsy-trained community health extension workers in an effort to close the epilepsy treatment gap. This research will provide information to help extend epilepsy treatment to children in LMICs and worldwide who suffer from untreated seizures.