View clinical trials related to Epilepsy.
Filter by:The purpose of this study is to investigate the taste preference in children of 3 different flavours of the ESL oral suspension.
The aim of this study is to determine whether adherence to oral maintenance medications differs for patients randomized to receive a RxTimerCap, a Take-N-Slide, a standard pillbox, or none of these devices, with the hypothesis that low-touch devices improve adherence over control and that the increase in adherence is agnostic across devices.
This study is designed to evaluate the efficacy, safety, and tolerability of USL261 compared with that of intranasal (IN) placebo for the treatment of intermittent bouts of increased seizure activity.
In this study, brand name lamotrigine (LAMICTAL) and generic lamotrigine will be compared in patients with epilepsy. Both the brand name and generic lamotrigine are approved by the Food and Drug Administration (FDA) and are commonly used to treat epilepsy. Some physicians and patients with epilepsy have believed that brand and generic lamotrigine have had clinically significant differences in efficacy and tolerability. The brand name and generic tablets have been shown to be the same when blood levels were measured in healthy volunteers without epilepsy, but these drugs have not yet been compared in patients with epilepsy. This study will do this comparison, by switching patients between brand and generic in a very structured manner, and seeing if the drugs are the same, primarily in terms of blood levels. Other comparisons will also be made secondarily, looking for any differences in adverse effects and seizure control.
For this project we propose to refine the psychosocial intervention developed in phase one, based on input from key stakeholders, and to test the feasibility, acceptability and preliminary efficacy of the intervention. The proposed project addresses unmet public health needs for a historically hard-to-reach group of individuals with epilepsy and comorbid serious mental illnesses, and as the intervention is an adjunct to care that individuals with serious mental illness are already receiving, and uses staff already likely to be present in a care system, it is ideally suited for "real-world" implementation in people with epilepsy and serious mental illness (E-SMI). The purpose of this study is to try and engage individuals with E-SMI to actively participate in illness self-management and treatment adherence that are crucial in minimizing the morbidity and mortality associated with both chronic mental disorders and chronic neurological conditions.
In children aged 1yr -18 years with refractory epilepsy Modified Atkins diet as add on to ongoing AED therapy would not be inferior compared to ketogenic diet ** in terms of seizure reduction from baseline seizure frequency at 6 months
Pediatric cerebral malaria (CM) affects more than 3 million children each year killing ~20% and leaving one third of survivors with long term neurologic and psychiatric sequelae. Seizures occur commonly with CM and are associated with an increased risk of death and neuropsychiatric disabilities. In this Malawi-based, dose- escalation, safety and feasibility study of enteral levetiracetam in pediatric CM, the investigators will lay the groundwork for future efficacy studies aimed at improving seizure control and ultimately decreasing the neurologic morbidity of pediatric CM.
The purpose of this study is to evaluate the safety of IV Lacosamide in children ages 4-35.
SP0966 is an exploratory study to investigate safety and efficacy of Lacosamide (LCM) in children with epilepsy syndromes associated with generalized seizures. LCM will be added to current antiepileptic treatment.
The purpose of this study is to evaluate the long-term safety, tolerability and efficacy of lacosamide (LCM) in pediatric subjects.