View clinical trials related to Multiple Sclerosis.
Filter by:Multiple sclerosis (MS) is an autoimmune disease of the central nervous systems that results in focal inflammatory lesions and then diffuse and degenerative inflammatory phenomena. It is considered to be the leading cause of non-traumatic disability in young adults. Cognitive impairment is a common and disabling part of MS. Studies carried out in the years 1990-2000 estimated their frequency to be between 40 and 60% of MS patients: they reflect the natural history of the disease. Effective treatments for the inflammatory component of the disease that are now available may have led to a reduction in their frequency. Cognitive disorders were identified at an early stage of the disease and affect certain areas preferentially: - The most common achievement is the reduction in the speed of information processing. It is present from the early stage of the disease. Progressive deterioration over time is observed, which is a prognostic factor for long-term cognitive decline. Long-term memory was impaired in 40-65% of patients in historical cohorts. More specifically, encoding and retrieval were affected, with storage and consolidation being preserved. - The attainment of executive functions is also common. - Phonemic and semantic fluency are also disturbed in MS patients. Among cognitive impairments, language impairment has been little studied in MS: in 2016 only 22 controlled studies were identified. The assessments carried out were most often partial, making it impossible to define the characteristics or to conclude that specific linguistic impairments are independent of other cognitive impairments. Finally, recent studies suggest that the frequency of language impairment in MS may be underestimated. Therefore, it seems important to assess the prevalence of language disorders in a large cohort of patients with RRMS or MS, and to characterize these disorders by identifying the linguistic processes involved and the brain substrates involved. This will make it possible to envisage the implementation of more systematic screening for language disorders in MS and to improve patient management, in particular by developing targeted rehabilitation protocols.
The purpose of this study is to investigate the immune cell and other factor changes with Ocrevus in Multiple Sclerosis (MS) patients. Researchers will recruit 35 participants for this study. Patients will be enrolled from the Multiple Sclerosis Center at the University of Michigan Health System in Ann Arbor. The goal of the study is to understand the role of regulatory B cell, T cell and other factors in mediating the therapeutic effects of Ocrevus.
Multiple Sclerosis (ME) is a degenerative, inflammatory and autoimmune demyelinating disease of the central nervous system, characterized by demyelination due to inflammation and degeneration of the myelin sheaths enveloping nerves of the eye, periventricular grey matter, brain, spinal cord and brainstem. The symptoms associated with MS include symptomatic fatigue, muscle weakness, ataxia, mobility and balance problems or cognitive problems. Strength training has been shown to improve strength and mobility in persons with MS.
Imaging methods bring new possibilities for describing the brain plasticity processes that underly the improvement of clinical function after physiotherapy in people with multiple sclerosis (pwMS). The study determined whether facilitation physiotherapy could enhance brain plasticity, compared two facilitation methods, and looked for any relation to clinical improvement in pwMS.
This study will examine the feasibility of using a mobile ABMT application as a treatment modality in the Pediatric Multiple Sclerosis population. Participants will be asked to undergo one hour-long baseline evaluation, followed by at-home ABMT application sessions. Subjects will complete online REDCap or MyCap surveys weekly and at the end of the study.
Hundreds of thousands of confirmed cases have been reported worldwide, just 3 months after the first patients were identified in Wuhan, China. Just like other members of the community, MS patients are uncomfortable with the emotional distress and health anxiety caused by the COVID-19 outbreak. Most MS patients receive immunosuppressive or immunomodulatory therapies. Patients taking immunosuppressive agents are theoretically at increased risk of being affected by viral pandemics, and a higher health concern is expected in this group of patients. Moreover, MS patients lose social support. Patients with increased duration of stay can no longer access physical and cognitive rehabilitation therapies. We also know that increased anxiety and sleep disorders can cause MS patients to have an attack. When literature is examined, it is known that MS patients' physical activity levels decrease, fatigue, sleep quality and anxiety levels increase, so their quality of life and participation in daily life activities decrease. MS patients lose social support during the COVID-19 outbreak. For all these reasons, we think that the fatigue, physical activity level, anxiety level and sleep disturbances affected before the COVID-19 outbreak will be further affected for these reasons.
This study aims to develop - in collaboration with patients with multiple sclerosis (MS)- a psychosocial and physical activity intervention (i.e., ESPRIMO intervention) for young adults with MS targeted at improving patients' health-related quality of life (HRQoL). Further, the study seeks to preliminarily test the effect, feasibility, and acceptability of the ESPRIMO intervention using a pilot sample of young adults with MS. Given that the ESPRIMO study will be conducted immediately after the COVID-19 emergency, it does not seem reasonable to start the co-creation of the intervention without taking into account the potential impact of this pandemic on the quality of life and well-being of patients with MS and on their management of care. Thus, the investigators seek to better understand the needs of the target population under these particular circumstances.
The proposed study is a single-center, single-blind three-group randomized (1:1:1) controlled trial (RCT) comparing two hypnosis interventions to waitlist control efficacy for MS-related fatigue.
There is considerable evidence to support the efficacy of moderate intensity continuous (MIC) exercise benefitting clinically-relevant outcomes in persons with multiple sclerosis (MS). However, persons with MS who have walking impairments (pwMS-wd) are severely deconditioned and may achieve superior benefits by engaging in high-intensity interval training (HIIT), especially while utilizing adaptive equipment, such as with recumbent arm/leg stepping (RSTEP). Of the published studies on HIIT in MS, HIIT yielded significant improvements in cardiorespiratory fitness in all but one study. In those studies that directly compared HIIT to MIC exercise, the data indicated a potential superiority of HIIT as compared to MIC in improving physiological conditioning in a time efficient manner. However, this evidence is specific to those with MS with mild to moderate disability engaging in cycle/arm ergometry and an investigation of HIIT in pwMS-wd is needed as the feasibility and potential benefits of engaging in HIIT in pwMS-wd is relatively unknown. The primary aim of the proposed study is to assess the feasibility of a 12-week, RSTEP HIIT program in pwMS-wd. The secondary aim is to examine changes in aerobic fitness, physical activity, ambulation, upper arm function, cognition, fatigue, and depressive symptoms as clinically-relevant efficacy outcomes following the 12-week, RSTEP HIIT intervention. It is hypothesized that the intervention will be feasible and lead to positive changes in aerobic fitness, physical activity, ambulation, upper arm function, cognition, fatigue, and depressive symptoms. This work is informed by recently published data, which indicate that a single bout of RSTEP HIIT taxes the cardiorespiratory system significantly more than MIC exercise, yet without untoward effects on walking, gait, cognition, mood, or enjoyment. These data suggest that RSTEP HIIT may be an acceptable, safe, and tolerable stimulus for chronic exercise training.
Multiple sclerosis (MS) is a complex neurodegenerative autoimmune disease. People with MS (PwMS) have low quality of life (QoL) and activities of daily living (ADL). Exercise is a safe and effective rehabilitation tool for PwMS. A structured and personalized exercise program can improve physical fitness, functional capacity, quality of life and modifiable disorders in PwMS. On the other hand, Telerehabilitation is an alternative rehabilitation method in PwMS. The purpose of this study is to investigate the effectiveness of exercise programs and telerehabilitation on ADL and QoL in PwMS, and compare the effects of supervised exercise and home-based exercise programs for the PwMS.