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Mild Cognitive Impairment clinical trials

View clinical trials related to Mild Cognitive Impairment.

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NCT ID: NCT03167840 Active, not recruiting - Clinical trials for Mild Cognitive Impairment

Falls Prevention Through Physical And Cognitive Training in Mild Cognitive Impairment

FallsPACT
Start date: September 6, 2017
Phase: N/A
Study type: Interventional

This randomised controlled trial aims to determine the effectiveness of combined physical and cognitive training in preventing falls and decreasing risks of falls among community-dwelling older persons with mild cognitive impairment (MCI).

NCT ID: NCT03162081 Active, not recruiting - Clinical trials for Mild Cognitive Impairment

Medication Misuse and Dependence Among Elderly

Start date: May 3, 2017
Phase:
Study type: Observational [Patient Registry]

The project focuses on investigating problematic medication use, especially overuse of potentially addictive drugs among the elderly. The investigators aim firstly to develop and validate instruments for detecting and describing behavioral aspects and consequences of dependence on, and misuse of, prescription medication among elderly. In addition to evaluating diagnostic utility of screening instruments, the investigators aim to identify and report characteristics, risk factors and consequences of medication misuse and dependence among the elderly.

NCT ID: NCT03147937 Active, not recruiting - Inflammation Clinical Trials

Cognitive Changes After Major Joint Replacement - Full Trial (Cognigram 2)

Start date: May 1, 2017
Phase:
Study type: Observational

Patients assume that cognitive performance rapidly returns to baseline after anesthesia and surgery. Several studies have shown that one week after major non-cardiac surgery about 27% of patients have postoperative cognitive dysfunction (POCD) and 10% of patients at 3 months. Very few studies have assessed the incidence of POCD beyond 3 months. POCD significantly reduces quality of life. Identifying risk factors for POCD is important because it is associated with prolonged hospital stay, loss of independence, and premature retirement. There is an urgent need to measure and document the level of cognitive change associated with surgery with an easy to use tool, both prior to admission and after discharge. This information can be used to plan appropriate care paths and to identify or test the efficacy of potential new treatments to alter the negative trajectory.

NCT ID: NCT03140865 Recruiting - Clinical trials for Mild Cognitive Impairment

Wake Forest Alzheimer's Disease Clinical Core

ADCC
Start date: January 2014
Phase:
Study type: Observational [Patient Registry]

Efforts to find treatments for AD have yielded only modest benefits, likely because longstanding AD pathological processes induce irreversible neurological compromise. These processes begin years before the onset of clinical symptoms. This possibility has been incorporated into a model describing stages of AD development, articulated by the NIA/Alzheimer's Association preclinical workgroup of which the Co-Director of the Kulynych Alzheimer's Research Center, Dr. Suzanne Craft, was a member. According to this model, the best hope for countermanding the effects of AD lies in intervening at the earliest possible point in the pathological cascade. There are several important ongoing efforts in adults with preclinical AD that directly target amyloid aggregation. Although this strategy addresses an important aspect of the AD pathological cascade, we believe that addressing metabolic dysfunction affecting glucose and insulin regulation offers a complementary approach, in that it may reduce amyloid burden and toxicity, while also directly enhancing synaptic health, brain metabolism, tau regulation and neurovascular function. The purpose of the ADCC is to identify and characterize early risk factors that predict cognitive decline and dementia in asymptomatic adults and adults with early signs of cognitive impairment. The data obtained from this study, collected at enrollment and follow-up will allow us to examine disease trajectory in individuals with and without prediabetes and other measures of glucoregulatory dysfunction in this process. The enrollees, who will be well-characterized with regard to cognitive and metabolic status through ADCC assessments, will provide an important resource for other local (institution) and national investigations. Data collected from participants enrolled in the ADCC will be stored indefinitely for future investigations.

NCT ID: NCT03139799 Completed - Healthy Clinical Trials

Long-term Tablet-computer Based Casual Puzzle Video Game Intervention in Healthy Older and Cognitively Impaired Persons

Start date: July 15, 2020
Phase: N/A
Study type: Interventional

This study aims at investigating the effects of tablet-based puzzle video games on cognitive function and emotional well-being. This study extends preliminary findings of studies looking at short-term benefits of playing puzzle video games to a long-term intervention in healthy older adults and patients suffering from cognitive impairment due to mild cognitive impairment or acquired brain injury. To this end, the investigators compare two interventions: A tablet-based puzzle video games experimental intervention and a control intervention tablet newspaper-reading control intervention. This study uses a 16-week, assessor blinded, randomized crossover design with two phases of treatment and three waves of measurement. Participants are randomly allocated to either the experimental or control intervention for 8 weeks, then interventions are crossed over. Both groups receive both interventions in opposite order. At three time points (pre-, mid- and post-test) higher cognitive function and emotional well-being are tested using standardised neuropsychological tests and questionnaires.

NCT ID: NCT03136679 Recruiting - Alzheimer Disease Clinical Trials

Discovery of Novel Biomarkers That Will Lead to the Early Detection of Alzheimer's Disease

BVB
Start date: March 22, 2017
Phase:
Study type: Observational

This study will perform a targeted metabolic analysis in blood and urine samples from subjects attending the Baylor AT&T Memory Center. The aim is to identify novel biomarkers that can distinguish normal aging subjects with no cognitive impairment from those with mild, moderate or severe cognitive impairment associated with Alzheimer's disease. Subjects will also be screened for B-vitamin deficiencies that may correlate with other metabolic biomarkers and Alzheimer's disease.

NCT ID: NCT03134963 Completed - Alzheimer Disease Clinical Trials

Cerebral Haemodynamic Changes During Cognitive Testing: A fTCD Study

Start date: May 5, 2017
Phase:
Study type: Observational

850,000 people live with dementia in the UK, with that number expected to rise to more than 1 million within the next 5 years. The most common type of dementia (55%) is Alzheimer's dementia, and vascular dementia is the second commonest type (15%). Mild cognitive impairment (MCI) affects up to 20% of older adults and describes a set of symptoms rather than a specific medical condition or disease. A person with MCI has subtle problems with one or more of the following: day-to-day memory, concentrating, planning or organising, language (eg struggling to find the right word), and judging distances and seeing objects properly. Although MCI significantly increases the risk of developing dementia (by up to 5 times), at present it is not possible to accurately predict which patients with MCI will progress to dementia. In recent times there has been an increasing awareness that problems with brain blood flow may contribute to the development, or progression, of dementia. Tests of mental abilities, with standardised questions and pen-and-paper tests are a key component of the formal diagnosis of dementia, yet little is known of the effects of these tests on brain blood flow. Brain blood flow can be can be assessed non-invasively by the use of Trans Cranial Doppler (TCD). This means using ultrasound probes over both sides of the head to measure changes in blood flow in one of the main brain arteries (the middle cerebral artery). This proposed study will therefore use TCD to evaluate changes in brain blood flow during performance of the Addenbrooke's-III (ACE-III) cognitive assessment in four key groups of patients, specifically: 1. Healthy older adults 2. Patients with mild cognitive impairment (MCI) 3. Patients with vascular dementia 4. Patients with Alzheimer's dementia

NCT ID: NCT03130036 Enrolling by invitation - Clinical trials for Mild Cognitive Impairment

Biodistribution of [11C]Acetoacetate/[18F]Fluorodeoxyglucose in Subjects With Risk Factors for Alzheimer's Disease

AcAc PET
Start date: June 9, 2015
Phase: N/A
Study type: Interventional

This is a single center imaging study that will recruit 60 participants who are enrolled in the Effect of a Ketogenic Diet on Alzheimer's Disease Biomarkers and Symptoms: Brain Energy for Amyloid Transformation in AD (BEAT-AD) Study protocol. This cohort of patients will receive a maximum of 3 [11C]Acetoacetate (AcAc)/[18F]Fluorodeoxyglucose (FDG) PET scans over 18 weeks as part of this supplemental trial.

NCT ID: NCT03121118 Completed - Clinical trials for Mild Cognitive Impairment

Return of Amyloid Imaging Results (RAISR Study)

RAISR
Start date: September 17, 2014
Phase:
Study type: Observational

Diagnostic tests designed to detect Alzheimer's disease (AD) pathology are increasingly popular in research on cognitive aging and AD. Due to concerns that information from such tests may be misunderstood, psychologically harmful, and of unclear clinical significance, results of pre mortem tests of AD pathology have typically been withheld from research participants. However, as the reliability and potential clinical significance of tests like brain amyloid imaging have become clear, there is a pressing need to revisit the practice of unilaterally withholding such information from research participants and identify responsible approaches to communicating individual results. Amyloid imaging results may be particularly relevant to mild cognitive impairment (MCI), a population for whom a growing body of evidence suggests that such testing may provide valuable prognostic and planning information, despite the unavailability of interventions to alter one's clinical course. Our preliminary work suggests that research participants with MCI and their family members are receptive to and capable of understanding information about the purpose, results, and implications of amyloid imaging when presented using a standardized approach developed by our interdisciplinary team. Building on this work, the proposed study will examine a well characterized sample of MCI care dyads (patient + family member) who will be randomized to either receive the opportunity to decide if they would like to pursue an amyloid PET Scan, or be randomized to not receive that opportunity (and will serve in the no-scan comparison group). This study aims to test hypotheses that examine how receiving amyloid imaging results will impact understanding of, and perceived self-efficacy for coping with, MCI among both patients and care partners.

NCT ID: NCT03120741 Not yet recruiting - Clinical trials for Mild Cognitive Impairment, Dementia

Dementia Patient's Behavior Evaluation Using Noninvasive Ambient Sensor

Start date: May 2017
Phase: N/A
Study type: Observational

This study is an observational study that uses daily activity and environmental sensing techniques to establish behavioral models of early dementia patients and cognitive healthy function to assess their daily behavior and determine their activities. Specifically, the team will collect information on a number of wireless sensors for dementia, mild cognitive impairment and healthy elderly residents, and use special mathematical models to establish the behavior of the two groups of subjects Model. The model will be developed a reliable algorithm to assess health risk of the subjects.