View clinical trials related to Mild Alzheimer's Disease.
Filter by:Dementia resulting from AD is associated with vascular function decline and involves a pro-inflammatory state. In our Phase 1 trial, Lomecel-B treatment met the primary safety endpoint, with no safety concerns, and showed potential to improve clinical assessments. Mechanistically, Lomecel-B treated subjects had higher serum concentrations of pro-vascular and anti-inflammatory biomarkers relative to placebo. This trial builds upon those preliminary Phase 1 results, and is designed to evaluate the safety profile of multiple infusions of Lomecel-B, and to investigate provisional efficacy of single dosing versus multiple dosing of Lomecel-B on cognitive function and biomarkers in AD subjects.
The purpose is to assess the safety, tolerability, pharmacokinetics, and pharmacodynamics of IONIS-MAPTRx in patients with Mild Alzheimer's Disease
This is a study where AZD5213 or placebo is given to patients with Mild Alzheimer's Disease or Mild Cognitive Impairment in a blinded and random assignment. The main study objective is to estimate the relationship of sleep duration versus dose after 4 weeks of treatment.
Age-related cognitive decline is unavoidable. However, recent results of neuroplasticity-based research show that neuroplasticity-based training and physical activity might have the potential to decelerate or even reverse effects of aging and age-related cognitive impairments. Little is known whether these results also apply to pathological processes of aging such as mild cognitive impairment (MCI) and dementia. This multi-center study aims at investigating efficiency and feasibility of a neuroplasticity-based auditory discrimination training and a physical fitness training for patients suffering from mild cognitive impairment or mild Alzheimer's disease (Mini Mental State Examination, MMSE > 19). Evaluation will include neuropsychological testing, electroencephalography (EEG) and magnetic resonance imaging (MRI) measurements as well as blood and liquor analyses.
To evaluate the safety, tolerability, multiple dose plasma pharmacokinetics (PK) of LNK-754 in male and female elderly volunteers after dosing with LNK-754 for 7 days and in subjects with mild Alzheimer's Disease after dosing with LNK-754 for 28 days.
Our central hypothesis is that the early metabolic lesions of MCI can be reliably detected in individual subjects by objective analysis of [18]F-fluorodeoxyglucose (FDG) positron-emission tomography (PET) brain images, earlier and more accurately than by subjective clinician rating.