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Frailty Syndrome clinical trials

View clinical trials related to Frailty Syndrome.

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NCT ID: NCT03995342 Enrolling by invitation - Frailty Syndrome Clinical Trials

The Correlation and Intervention of Intestinal Flora and Frailty in the Elderly

Start date: August 1, 2019
Phase: N/A
Study type: Interventional

The study aim to evaluate the improvement and correlation of soluble dietary fiber (prebiotics) in the frailty of elderly people by a randomized, double-blind, placebo-controlled clinical trial.

NCT ID: NCT02685839 Enrolling by invitation - Frailty Syndrome Clinical Trials

Development of an Intelligent POWER Rehabilitation Cluster Machine and Its Clinical Testing and Assessment

Start date: May 2015
Phase: N/A
Study type: Interventional

Elderly care has become one of the most important subjects in Taiwan and "frailty syndrome" are the most common problems among the elderly. In view of this trend, Taipei Veteran Memorial Hospital imported POWER rehabilitation from Japan in 2008. While showing significant clinical benefits, investigators have found that the system still has certain limitations (e.g. high cost, requires large space, patients must commute to the center, lacks real-time objective feedback , boring routines makes staying power to motivate patients for long term rehabilitation programs.) To overcome the above limitations, this project proposes an evidence-based rehabilitation model that accounts for actual clinical need and collaborates with our engineering team to develop a "cluster" , "wearable" and "Brain-Computer Interface System" version of POWER rehabilitation system. Combining cloud technology, investigators now introduce internet-of-things into the POWER rehabilitation procedure. The result will lower the burden of clinical support personnel, and provide an opportunity to quantify "frailty syndromes" so as to allow objective and quantitative scientific evaluation, leading to a more objective clinical diagnosis. In addition, this project further proposes a virtual-reality (VR) system for POWER rehabilitation, as well as designs for the VR sceneries. Through the use of different animated 3D VR sceneries and interactive game design, investigators can make rehabilitation interesting and fun for the patients, motivating long-term compliance of the patients, thereby, improving the clinical outcome of POWER rehabilitation. This project has the potential to create an innovative solution to address the current bottlenecks of our rehabilitation treatment model. Successful development of the system will offer rehabilitation clinicians more treatment options, lower the cost of supporting staff, reduce commuting cost for the patients, and elevate patient desire to comply with the treatment program. Finally, the system will not only enhance Taiwan's academic reputation in the international arena, it will also generate new commercial opportunities for Taiwan and contribute to Taiwan economic development.