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Mild Cognitive Impairment clinical trials

View clinical trials related to Mild Cognitive Impairment.

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NCT ID: NCT02309723 Completed - Clinical trials for Mild Cognitive Impairment

How Beta-amyloid Imagining Influences Clinician Diagnosis and Management of Hypothetical Patients With Cognitive Complaints

Start date: September 2013
Phase: N/A
Study type: Interventional

When older patients develop cognitive problems - like memory loss - there may be any of several underlying causes, sometimes occurring in combination. Clinicians have a better chance of providing appropriate treatment if they understand what the cause of the problem is. A diagnostic tool can help the patient by helping the clinician to make a more accurate diagnosis. This study investigates whether a new diagnostic tool - beta amyloid imaging - may potentially improve medical practice. The tool can potentially improve practice only if it can influence clinical judgment. This study investigates whether the provision of beta amyloid imaging information influences clinical judgment. The investigators will conduct a survey that presents clinicians with descriptions of hypothetical older patients with cognitive complaints. Some of the respondents also receive beta amyloid imaging information. The investigators will test the investigators hypothesis that the information will affect diagnostic judgment and management recommendations by comparing the responses of clinicians who receive the beta amyloid information to the responses of clinicians who do not.

NCT ID: NCT02301546 Completed - Clinical trials for Mild Cognitive Impairment

Cognitive Training and Practice Effects in Mild Cognitive Impairment

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

The current study will test the effectiveness of a computerized cognitive training program on auditory memory and attention in patients with mild cognitive impairment. Practice effects will also be examined as a moderator of treatment response.

NCT ID: NCT02279316 Completed - Clinical trials for Mild Cognitive Impairment

Move for Your Mind - Pilot Trial

MFYM - P
Start date: October 2014
Phase: N/A
Study type: Interventional

Move for your mind is a single blind, 3-arm randomized controlled clinical pilot trial. The study aims to test the effect of a weekly Dalcroze eurhythmics program (arm 1) and a home strength exercise program (arm 2) against control (no exercise) on the rate of falling, quality of life, gait performance and cognitive function. All groups receive vitamin D. In addition the study shall test the feasibility of the recruitment and the interventions in this target population. The study includes 60 seniors, age 65 and older, with mild cognitive impairment or mild dementia. Participants are recruited by the memory clinic of City Hospital Waid. During the 12 months follow-up, participants will have 3 clinical visits (baseline, 6 and 12 month). Despite major efforts the target population is very difficult to recruit and adherence to treatment is low. We therefore decided to stop recruitment and to use this trial as a pilot trial for future clinical trials of the same topic.

NCT ID: NCT02267499 Completed - Healthy Clinical Trials

Combined Cognitive and Physical Exercises Through Computer Games in Elderly: The LLM Project

LLM
Start date: November 2010
Phase: N/A
Study type: Interventional

The study involved Information and Communication Technologies (ICT) and more specifically computer exercises blended with game activities. It was hypothesized that ICT facilitated, game blended combined cognitive and physical exercise improves global cognition when compared to a control group; and that the number of sessions within exercising participants predict cognitive benefits. In addition, we explored the impact of potential moderators on combined exercise-induced cognitive benefits.

NCT ID: NCT02266563 Completed - Clinical trials for Mild Cognitive Impairment

Amyloid and Tauopathy PET Imaging in Acute and Chronic Traumatic Brain Injury

Start date: January 2015
Phase:
Study type: Observational

The potential long-term effects of Traumatic Brain Injury (TBI) are poorly understood. Repeated concussions have been associated with an elevated incidence of Alzheimer's disease (AD) along with a reduced age of onset. As repetitive TBI has been studied, a syndrome has now been identified: chronic traumatic encephalopathy (CTE). There are growing concerns about the long-term neurologic consequences of head impact exposure from routine participation in contact sports (e.g., boxing, football). Brain autopsies of athletes with confirmed CTE have demonstrated tau-immunoreactive neurofibrillary tangles and neuropil threads (known as tauopathy). The relationship between exposure to repetitive head impact and the subsequent development of chronic neurodegenerative disease has not been established. Further, as the diagnosis of CTE (defined by the presence of tauopathy) is presently made after death at autopsy, clinical tools and biomarkers for detecting it remain to be defined. With the advent of FDA-approved PET amyloid imaging, clinicians and researchers are now able to estimate plaque density in the brains of living patients. However, there are critical limitations to amyloid imaging. Current evidence suggests that markers of the presence and severity of tauopathy may be able to address these limitations. The study will utilize both [18F] Florbetapir and [18F]-T807 PET imaging to investigate amyloid and tau accumulation in subjects with a history of concussions. In order to determine whether problems with cognition and memory are seen within the populations defined for the study, the researchers will administer a core battery of neurocognitive testing. This battery will assess cognitive abilities commonly affected by TBI, including processing speed, reaction time, new problem-solving, executive functions, attention and concentration, and learning and memory. These tests, in conjunction with the imaging, will be able to determine whether regional brain activity is associated with specific cognitive problems. The researchers will obtain PET and neurocognitive data in 3 cohorts: subjects with a history of TBIs, subjects with mild cognitive impairment (MCI) and no TBI history, and healthy controls. The investigators aim to determine whether individuals with TBI are on the same trajectory of neurodegenerative disease seen in AD or in CTE. Because of the overlap in clinical/cognitive and some behavioral symptoms in AD and CTE, an additional biomarker tool is needed to prevent misdiagnosis. Accurate diagnosis is crucial in order to provide patients with appropriate treatment.

NCT ID: NCT02265757 Completed - Clinical trials for Mild Cognitive Impairment

Behavioral Interventions to Prevent or Delay Dementia

Start date: June 2014
Phase: N/A
Study type: Interventional

This study will compare the effectiveness of different combinations of 5 types of behavioral interventions across patient-centered outcomes. It will also evaluate which outcomes (e.g. quality of life, cognition, function, mood) matter most to people at risk for dementia and their care partners. The results of this study have the potential to direct patients, families, and health care providers as to which combinations of behavioral interventions provide the greatest potential impact on which dementia prevention outcomes. Greater use of behavioral strategies that are targeted to the outcomes of most important to the patient will likely improve patient compliance and treatment adherence. This, in turn, can lessen the need for medication, health care, and long term care utilization.

NCT ID: NCT02253732 Completed - Healthy Volunteers Clinical Trials

Skeletal Muscle as a Mediator of Exercise Induced Effects on Metabolism & Cognitive Function: Role for Myokines & miRNAs

Brain-Muscle
Start date: September 2015
Phase: N/A
Study type: Interventional

The purpose of this study is to determine specific changes in muscle secretory profile (myokines, miRNA) in association with neurodegenerative disease progression and metabolic dysfunction. Next the investigators would like to determine the shift in the muscle secretory activity induced by regular exercise intervention, which the investigators think could be translated into the beneficial changes in clinical phenotypes, determined by neuroimaging, cognitive function tests and metabolic phenotyping.

NCT ID: NCT02240459 Completed - Clinical trials for Mild Cognitive Impairment

A Study of Fesoterodine and Oxybutynin on Cognitive Function in Mild Cognitive Impairment

Start date: August 2016
Phase: Phase 2
Study type: Interventional

The purpose of this study is to assess the effects of fesoterodine at 4mg and 8mg doses versus a placebo and oxybutynin 5mg bid versus placebo on cognitive abilities in older people with overactive bladder and mild cognitive impairment.

NCT ID: NCT02239003 Completed - Clinical trials for Mild Cognitive Impairment

NMDA-enhancing Agent for the Treatment of Mild Cognitive Impairment

Start date: January 2012
Phase: Phase 2
Study type: Interventional

NMDA neurotransmission plays an important role in learning and memory. NMDA receptors were found to decrease in the frontal lobe and hippocampus of mild cognitive impairment. This study is a randomized, double-blind, placebo-controlled drug trial. All subjects will be allocated randomly to 2 groups: (1) NMDA-enhancer: DAOIB group (starting dose: 250-500 mg/d); (2) placebo group. The study period is 24 weeks. The investigators hypothesize that DAOIB may yield better efficacy than placebo for cognitive function in patients with mild cognitive impairment.

NCT ID: NCT02237560 Completed - Healthy Clinical Trials

The Aerobic & Cognitive Exercise Study

ACES
Start date: September 2014
Phase: N/A
Study type: Interventional

The purpose of this study is to clarify the benefits to brain health and thinking processes that result from different forms of exercise. This study will examine the effectiveness of cybercycling (virtual reality enhanced stationary cycling) for persons at risk for and with MCI, and compare this with the individual cognitive, behavioral, and physiological effects of physical and mental exercise alone. The Investigators hypothesis that cognitive benefit will be greatest for combined aerobic and cognitive exercise compared to physical and mental exercise alone.