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Subjective Cognitive Impairment clinical trials

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NCT ID: NCT06150352 Recruiting - Clinical trials for Obstructive Sleep Apnea

Sleep Apnea, Neurocognitive Decline and Brain Imaging in Patients With Subjective or Mild Cognitive Impairment

Start date: September 26, 2023
Phase:
Study type: Observational

Obstructive sleep apnea (OSA) is recurrent episodes of partial or complete obstruction of the upper airway during sleep that causes intermittent hypoxia and sleep fragmentation and potentially lead to cardiometabolic and neurocognitive sequelae. Chronic intermittent hypoxia, sleep fragmentation of OSA, and insufficient sleep have been significantly associated with higher risks of neurocognitive impairment, including mild cognitive impairment (MCI) and Alzheimer's disease. Thus, sleep and sleep apnea might be modifiable factors to neurocognitive impairment. Positive airway pressure (PAP) is the first line of treatment to maintain open airways for patients with OSA. Improving sleep, sleep apnea and circadian function could be a high-value intervention target to alleviate cognitive impairment and decline in subjects with mild neurocognitive impairment. Amyloid accumulation in brain tissue is a distinct feature of Alzheimers' disease, which is associated with potential impairment of neurocognition clinically. It predicts memory decline in initially cognitively unimpaired individuals. The study explores the associations between sleep apnea, cognitive function and cerebral imaging and the role of PAP therapy on neurocognitive trajectory in these patients with subjective cognitive impairment /mild cognitive impairment (SCI/MCI).

NCT ID: NCT06089096 Recruiting - Clinical trials for Obstructive Sleep Apnea

Sleep Apnea and Cognitive Function in Subjects With Subjective or Mild Cognitive Impairment

Start date: March 7, 2023
Phase:
Study type: Observational

Obstructive sleep apnea (OSA) is recurrent episodes of partial or complete obstruction of the upper airway during sleep that causes intermittent hypoxia and sleep fragmentation and leads to cardiometabolic and neurocognitive sequelae. Chronic intermittent hypoxia, sleep fragmentation of OSA, and insufficient sleep have been significantly associated with higher risks of neurocognitive impairment, including mild cognitive impairment (MCI) and Alzheimer's disease. Thus, sleep and circadian function might be modifiable neurocognitive impairment factors. The significance of the study is to understand the relationships of MCI with sleep apnea and sleep-related symptoms, which helps pave the groundwork for further research.

NCT ID: NCT06058611 Recruiting - Clinical trials for Mild Cognitive Impairment

Effects of a Computerised Cognitive Stimulation Versus Stimulating Leisure Activities

Start date: April 1, 2024
Phase: N/A
Study type: Interventional

The aim of the study is to evaluate, at the level of global cognition, cognitive neuroconstructs, memory, verbal fluency, ADLs, IADLs, symptoms of depression and anxiety, the effectiveness of a personalised and adapted computerised cognitive stimulation programme (GI1) implemented from Primary Care versus stimulating leisure activities (GI2), in older adults aged 50 years and over with mild cognitive impairment and subjective cognitive impairment living in the community.

NCT ID: NCT06005038 Recruiting - Clinical trials for Mild Cognitive Impairment

CogT pSOPT Intervention Study

Start date: January 12, 2024
Phase: Phase 1
Study type: Interventional

(JUSTIFICATION: This is the R33 stage of an NIH funded R21/R33 study. R21 stage (IRB-61727) was focused on intervention development; R33 stage will focus on pilot testing the effect of the intervention. The R21 phase was not considered a NIH defined clinical trial; R33 will be considered a NIH defined clinical trial) The purpose is to develop and test the effect of a "personalized" computer-based cognitive training program. The personalized program tailors the difficulty of the training tasks using a participant's biofeedback (i.e., heart rate) and cognitive performance. Such a personalization will ensure that the participant can perform at his/her ideal training capacity. Participants will be randomized into one of 2 groups and each group will play a different version of computerized training game and have ECG collected to allow subject blinding.

NCT ID: NCT05893524 Recruiting - Dementia Clinical Trials

Uppsala-Dalarna Dementia and Gait Project

UDDGaitâ„¢
Start date: April 9, 2015
Phase:
Study type: Observational

UDDGaitâ„¢ is a multidisciplinary research project with the overreaching goal of providing an aid for early identification of cognitive impairment and risk of dementia development, thereby providing a basis for adequate symptom relieving and health promoting interventions. A new concept is investigated for this purpose: a "dual-task-test", which implies the combination of a well-established mobility test (Timed Up-and-Go, TUG) with a simultaneous verbal task (i.e. TUG dual-task, TUGdt). This type of test has been judged as a potential aid for early identification of dementia disease. More research is needed to further examine the test's validity, reliability and predictive capacity. The overall aim is to investigate if TUGdt is useful as an aid for prediction of dementia disease. To ensure the results, the aim is also to evaluate the test's measurement properties and to generate normative reference values of healthy control persons.

NCT ID: NCT05534607 Recruiting - Clinical trials for Mild Cognitive Impairment

Natives Engaged in Alzheimers Research - 'Ike Kupuna

NEAR
Start date: September 15, 2022
Phase: N/A
Study type: Interventional

This study will conduct a group randomized trial to test the effects of a hula-based intervention in improving vascular risk factors for ADRD and cognitive complaints and function over 12 months.

NCT ID: NCT05485025 Not yet recruiting - Clinical trials for Subjective Cognitive Impairment

Long Term Prospective Study of Tai Chi Intervention to Delay the Progression of Subjective Cognitive Impairment

TIPS
Start date: September 2022
Phase: N/A
Study type: Interventional

This study evaluates the effects of 3 years-Tai Chi exercise intervention on cognitive function in subjects with subjective cognitive impairment (SCI). Participants will be randomized into the Tai chi training group and the control group.

NCT ID: NCT05347966 Active, not recruiting - Clinical trials for Mild Cognitive Impairment

Brain Health Support Program

CTU: BHSP
Start date: April 6, 2022
Phase: N/A
Study type: Interventional

The Canadian Therapeutic Platform Trial for Multidomain Interventions to Prevent Dementia (CAN-THUMBS UP, or CTU) is a comprehensive and innovative program aimed to develop, implement and evaluate an interactive and compelling online educational Brain Health Support Program (BHSP) intervention, called Brain Health PRO (BHPro), with potential to positively influence dementia literacy, lifestyle risk factors, and scale-up to reach the broader Canadian public; enroll and retain a community-dwelling Platform Trial Cohort (PTC) of individuals at risk of dementia; and support an open platform trial to test a variety of multidomain interventions that might further benefit individuals at risk of dementia.

NCT ID: NCT05167045 Completed - Dementia Clinical Trials

A Pilot Study for the Brain Health Support Program

CTU BHSP-P
Start date: November 15, 2021
Phase:
Study type: Observational

Prior studies have shown that programs that focus on promoting brain health and managing lifestyle risks (such as poor diet, obesity, physical inactivity, sleep issues, loneliness) may help in preventing or lowering the risk of dementia. To address this, investigators have developed the CAN-THUMBS UP program to conduct studies that target lifestyle risk and focus on dementia prevention. An online Brain Health Support Program (BHSP) has been developed. The BHSP is an educational program designed to teach about dementia. Before the full BHSP is offered to a large group, we are conducting an initial pilot study to help assess the usability of the program.

NCT ID: NCT03650816 Recruiting - Alzheimer Disease Clinical Trials

Cerebrovascular Reactivity in Alzheimer's Disease

VARAD-ET
Start date: October 22, 2019
Phase:
Study type: Observational [Patient Registry]

The etiology of Alzheimer's disease (AD), the most common type of dementia, remains largely undefined and the early diagnostic and effective treatments are still not available. In addition to the neuropathological hallmarks, cerebrovascular dysfunction has been identified as an important component of AD. Using the experimental models, we showed that cerebrovascular reactivity (CVR), the ability of cerebral vessels to dilate or constrict in response to stimuli, is impaired very early in AD. We designed this trial to compare CVR to carbon dioxide (CVR CO2) in AD patients and in persons with subjective cognitive impairment (SCI), the cognitively healthy individuals which began to worry about worsening their memory, and to correlate CVR CO2 with AD markers in cerebrospinal fluid and the blood markers of endothelial function. We hypothesize that CVR represents a potential diagnostic/prognostic marker and an attractive target for the development of new therapeutics in AD.