View clinical trials related to Sclerosis.
Filter by:Exercise therapy and increased physical activity in persons with Multiple Sclerosis (MS) improves mobility, muscular strength, physical fitness and fatigue without increasing relapse rate. As such, physical activity and more particular exercise therapy have become an important part of MS rehabilitation. Despite the fact that the positive effects of exercise therapy in MS are obvious only 43 percent of the MS community reports to participate in an exercise program4. Therefore, new exercise therapy approaches that further optimize rehabilitation, improve exercise adherence and promote participation in physical exercise in MS are interesting to explore. Therefore, the randomized controlled trial investigates two types of exercise interventions (classic progressive vs periodized) with or without the addition of ergogenic supplements (beta-alanine vs placebo).
The aim of this study is to compare conventional neurorehabilitation with robot-assisted gait training program in terms of fatigue, anxiety, depression and quality of life.
The main purpose of the study is to see if GLPG1690 helps (together with the standard of care treatment) in the treatment of the skin and other areas affected by systemic sclerosis. Another aim is to find out how safe/well tolerated GLPG1690 will be and whether there are any side effects. The study will also look at other things, including whether the study drug affects disease progression and also if it changes any aspect of the quality of life.
The goal of this longitudinal study is to (1) explore the association between the gut microbiota and inflammatory disease activity in early onset multiple sclerosis, (2) investigate whether/how gut microbial composition vary when patients experience a relapse, and (3) to assess whether the gut microbiota shows increased similarities between affected pairs of first-degree relatives within the same family when compared with discordant pairs of first-degree relatives.
Prevalence of alexithymia in multiple sclerosis (MS) is closed to 50% but is unknown in clinically isolated syndrome (CIS).The present study sought to characterize alexithymia in CIS patients and his link between psycho behavioral and cognitive disturbances. In this context, the objectives of the present study were to (a ) define the prevalence of alexithymia in CIS patients, (b ) to study this relation between psycho behavioral and cognitive disorders frequently encountered in MS.
To evaluate if transcranial magnetic stimulation can be used as a biomarker in Amyotrophic Lateral sclerosis (ALS).
Primary Objective: To collect blood samples in a new cohort of Relapsing Forms of Multiple Sclerosis (RMS) participants who had developed immune thrombocytopenic purpura (ITP) after LEMTRADA treatment, for future Deoxyribonucleic acid (DNA) analysis as part of a global biomarker project assessing pre-identified candidate single nucleotide polymorphisms (SNPs) associated to the development of ITP after LEMTRADA treatment in RMS participants.
Forty individuals with multiple sclerosis (MS) will be randomly assigned to a 6-week web-based cognitive behavior therapy for insomnia intervention (wCBT-I) or to wCBT-I plus biweekly support meetings with research personnel via phone or video. Questionnaires will be used to assess sleep quality, fatigue, and satisfaction. Recruitment, retention, attrition, adherence, and safety information will also be collected. This study is significant because addressing insomnia symptoms through CBT-I could be a low-cost, low-risk, non-pharmacological options for improving sleep quality and MS symptoms in individuals with MS. This study is innovative because CBT-I has never been delivered via a web-based application to individuals with MS which may increase access to services.
The investigators evaluated the effects of isokinetic muscle strengthening exercises of the quadriceps and hamstring on muscle strength, joint position sense, pain, kinesiophobia and quality of life in patients with multiple sclerosis.
To assess the safety of a single dose of IV infusion of bone-marrow derived autologous Mesenchymal Stem Cells (MSCs) in Multiple Sclerosis (MS) with progressive disease status.