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Neurologic Disorders clinical trials

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NCT ID: NCT02527460 Terminated - HIV Infections Clinical Trials

Anakinra, A Recombinant Human IL-1 Receptor Antagonist for Neuroinflammation in HIV-1 Infection

Start date: August 17, 2015
Phase: Phase 1
Study type: Interventional

Background: HIV can sometimes cause HIV-associated neurocognitive disorder, or HAND. HAND is HIV-associated neurocognitive disorder. It can affect memory, thinking, or concentration. It can cause mood changes. HAND may be caused by HIV hiding in the central nervous system then causing inflammation. Researchers want to see if a drug for inflammation (Anakinra) can help people with HIV. Objective: To see if a drug for inflammatory diseases is safe for people with HIV-infection on antiretroviral therapy. Eligibility: Adults 18-61 years old with HIV who are enrolled in another study. Design: Participants will be screened with medical history, physical exam, and blood and urine tests. Participants will have up to 15 study visits over 16 weeks. At study visit 1, participants will have: - Screening tests repeated. - Brain magnetic resonance imaging (MRI) scans. They will lie on a table that slides into a metal cylinder in a strong magnetic field. They will get a dye inserted by a thin plastic tube in a vein. - Lumbar puncture. The lower back will be numbed. A needle will collect fluid from between bones in the back. - Tests of memory, thinking, and attention. Participants may also fill out forms and do tasks. Participants will learn how to inject the study drug. Over 8 weeks, they will give themselves the study drug at home every day. They will do up to 3 injections at once. They will write down their injections and any side effects. Participants will have 5 weekly visits while taking the study drug. They will answer questions and have blood drawn. At weeks 8 and 16, they will have a visit that repeats visit 1.

NCT ID: NCT02236091 Terminated - Clinical trials for Neurologic Disorders

Monitoring Everyday Life Motor Activity in Children

MELMAC
Start date: October 2014
Phase:
Study type: Observational

The overall aim of this project is to monitor everyday life activity of children with neurological disorders undergoing rehabilitation using wearable sensors capable of accurate and unobtrusive long-term measurement. Specific objectives: 1. To adapt the sensors for the use by children with neurological disorders. The focus lies on the exact positioning and the investigation of the needed amount of IMUs. 2. To validate the sensor data with collected video recordings and to develop specific algorithms to automatically extract specific movements and to analyze long-term sensor recordings. 3. To perform a cross-sectional study to assess intensity, task-specificity and duration of upper and lower limb activity during rehabilitation. There, we aim to gain objective information about levels and types of activity during rehabilitation in relation to age, gender and disorder. 4. To conduct a responsiveness study to assess whether or not the sensor output is able to highlight changes over time during rehabilitation. Therefore, at time point T=0 (shortly after admission to our center), participants are equipped with 3 inertial measurement units (1 at each wrist and 1 at the sternum). Additionally, a small wearable camera is mounted to the chest. The participants then return to their everyday life for 4 hours (no therapies, measurement period is in the evening). Afterwards, the equipment is removed again. To investigate responsiveness, the same protocol is being repeated 4 weeks later (time point T=1).