search

Active clinical trials for "Brain Injuries"

Results 391-400 of 2049

Biomarkers of Brain Injury in Critically-Ill Children on Extracorporeal Membrane Oxygenation

Extracorporeal Membrane OxygenationChildren1 more

The BEAM study is a multicenter, prospective, observational study in children supported on extracorporeal membrane oxygenation (ECMO). The primary goals of this study are to develop and refine a brain injury multimarker panel for accurate neurologic monitoring at the bedside and early classification of mortality and disability outcomes of critically ill children supported on ECMO.

Recruiting6 enrollment criteria

Optimal Brain Oxygenation in Neurologic Intensive Care Unit : The NeurO2 Study

Traumatic Brain InjurySubarachnoid Hemorrhage4 more

The NeurO2 study is a multicenter observational study looking at NIRS monitoring in neurocrocritically ill patients during the acute phase of care following an acute brain injury. The study is nested within the HEMOTION Trial and the SAHaRA Trial

Recruiting9 enrollment criteria

Clinical Effectiveness of iReadMore for People With Alexia

StrokeBrain Injuries3 more

iReadMore will provide an app-based therapy for people with pure or central alexia. This study aims to test the clinical effectiveness of iReadMore for improving reading accuracy and speed in real world users of the therapy.

Recruiting5 enrollment criteria

Amotivational Syndrome and Fatigue in Neurosurgery

Cerebral InjuryMotivation1 more

Depression is a major public concern associated with profound distress, intense suffering, and impairment in social, professional and familial functioning. Among the numerous symptoms defining depression, fatigue and motivation are not only frequent but also highly associated with poor quality of life and resistance to conventional antidepressant. Recent data, mainly obtained in animals, suggest that these symptoms may be linked to inflammatory processes within the central nervous system. Yet access to the brain is too invasive for exploring this link in patients with psychiatric conditions. However, certain conditions in neurosurgery, such as aneurysm rupture, require external evacuation, over several days or weeks, of the fluid bathing the brain through a catheter directly inserted into it. Critically, these patients also exhibit extreme exhaustion and fluctuating motivation, allowing to investigate the involvement of neuroinflammation in lack of motivation and fatigue by carrying out repeated motivation assessments with short behavioral tests (around ten minutes), while performing an analysis of inflammation markers in the fluid evacuated from the brain. The identification of inflammatory mechanisms underlying lack of motivation and fatigue could lead to the development of treatments for both resistant depression and motivation deficits that largely hamper rehabilitation in neurosurgery.

Recruiting5 enrollment criteria

Cerebrospinal Fluid Hemoglobin to Monitor for Aneurysmal Subarachnoid Hemorrhage Related Secondary...

Subarachnoid HemorrhageAneurysmal3 more

The primary objective of this study is to evaluate the association between hemoglobin levels in the cerebrospinal fluid (CSF-Hb) and the occurrence of secondary brain injury in patients after aneurysmal subarachnoid hemorrhage (SAH-SBI) during the first 14 days after bleeding.

Recruiting5 enrollment criteria

Evaluation of the Impact of a Dietary and Nutritional Intervention on Persistent Post-concussive...

Brain Injury Traumatic Mild

Concussions affect thousands of Canadians every year. Although the effects are usually temporary, 10-15% of adults experience persistent symptoms likely to last several weeks or even months. It is suggested that nutritional interventions should be considered in concussion management because nutrition can act on several mechanisms of brain injury. However, to date, no study has assessed the impact of dietary interventions on the recovery of people with persistent post-concussive symptoms. This randomized controlled trial aims to determine the impact of a dietary and nutritional intervention on the physical, cognitive, behavioural and emotional symptoms of patients with persistent post-concussive symptoms in New Brunswick, Canada. Patients will be randomized to one of three groups: 1) dietary treatments and nutritional supplements (experimental group A), 2) nutritional supplements (experimental group B), and 3) physiotherapy treatments (control group). Patients in group A will receive four consultations with a dietitian over eight weeks, in addition to conventional physiotherapy treatments. These patients will receive nutritional counselling and omega-3, vitamin D and creatine supplements. Patients in group B will be prescribed the same supplements as those in group A by their doctor and receive physiotherapy treatments. Finally, patients in the control group will only receive physiotherapy treatments. Patient symptoms will be measured using a questionnaire constructed from tools commonly used in practice. This questionnaire will be completed at the first physiotherapy session and 2, 4 and 8 weeks after the start of the intervention.

Not yet recruiting8 enrollment criteria

Application of Circulating Extracellular Vesicles in Early Disease Assessment and Prognosis After...

Traumatic Brain Injury

The purpose of this study was to observe the relationship between the changes of circulating extracellular vesicles and disease development and outcome in patients with traumatic brain injury, and to find early serum markers and potential intervention targets for disease monitoring in patients with traumatic brain injury. In addition, explore the source of extracellular vesicles as much as possible to prepare for subsequent basic experiments.

Recruiting10 enrollment criteria

Imaging [18F]PI-2620 and [18F]Florbetaben in Military Service Members With Blast Related Mild Traumatic...

Mild Traumatic Brain Injury

The main objective of this interdisciplinary study is to develop an understanding of the molecular imaging features of blast-related mild traumatic brain injury (mTBI) in military personnel, while helping to establish assessment tools that may be of use in diagnosis, determining prognosis, and in future therapeutic clinical trials. Additionally, the objective is to evaluate feasibility of [18F]PI-2620 in the assessment TBI.

Active23 enrollment criteria

Comparison of Two Initial Evaluation Scales of the Severity of Brain Injury Adults Patients on the...

Brain Injury

Prospective cohort study. Any patient with potential cerebral injured (medical or traumatic) will be included in the study, regardless of its severity, history, the presence of anticoagulant or antiagrégant. The collection should be done as soon as possible, in the reception of vital emergencies or in the urgencies. The collection consists of the realization of a Glasgow score and a scale of Kremlin-Bicêtre for all patients by completing a standardized collection sheet. The collection of GCS and Kremlin-Bicêtre must be did at the same time. The collection sheet is filled by medical personnel trained. The future of the patient is informed at 6 months using the Glasgow Outcome Scale- Extended, which will be made during a following consultation or by phone. Additional data will be collected on the folder (ventilation time, days of hospitalization, mortality).

Recruiting7 enrollment criteria

The FBRI VTC Neuromotor Research Clinic

Neuromotor ImpairmentsCerebral Palsy6 more

The FBRI VTC Neuromotor Research Clinic was established and opened in May of 2013 to provide intensive therapeutic services to individuals with motor impairment secondary to neuromotor disorders. It is direct by Dr. Stephanie DeLuca and based on the principles surrounding ACQUIREc Therapy. ACQUIREc Therapy is an evidenced-based approach to pediatric constraint-induced movement therapy, which refers to a multi-component form of therapy that is focused on helping children who have asymmetric motor abilities between the two sides of the body. Historically, ACQUIREc Therapy has the unimpaired or less impaired upper extremity constrained (by a cast or a splint) while also receiving active therapy from a specially trained therapist who shapes new skills and functional activities with the child's more impaired upper extremity but who is also a licensed Occupational or Physical Therapist (OT/PT). Therapy dosages are high much higher than tradition OT or PT - often lasting many hours per day, up to 6 hours a day, 5 days a week, for 2-4 weeks. Investigators have developed further treatments based on the same principles of intensive services combined with behavior shaping for other areas of the body that are also affected by weakness (e.g., the leg and trunk) also, but which usually do not involve constraint. These have been more generally labeled ACQUIRE Therapy. All forms involve intensive, play-based therapy for children with asymmetric motor impairments of the arms and hands. The primary focus of treatment is to facilitate the acquisition of new motor skills in the child's weaker body parts through high levels of intensive therapy using scientifically-based behavioral guidelines. Therapy is also delivered in naturalistic environments. ACQUIREc Therapy as a treatment method has been tested in two randomized controlled trials, and a specific manual for its implementation has been developed. Dr. (s) Ramey and DeLuca previously founded a similar clinic, The Pediatric Neuromotor Research Clinic, at the University of Alabama at Birmingham where Dr. DeLuca directed the research clinic for 13 years and oversaw the implementation of the ACQUIREc Therapy treatment protocol in more than 400 cases. This research will involve analyzing and interpreting the clinical data of children going through clinical procedures at the FBRI VTC Neuromotor Research Clinic. All participation is voluntary and no children will denied services if families choose not to participate.

Recruiting2 enrollment criteria
1...394041...205

Need Help? Contact our team!


We'll reach out to this number within 24 hrs