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Active clinical trials for "Cognitive Dysfunction"

Results 821-830 of 2792

DC Longitudinal Study on Aging and Specimen Bank

Alzheimer DiseaseDementia3 more

The Georgetown University Memory Disorders Program, part of the Department of Neurology, is conducting pilot studies of the feasibility of various diagnostic tests for Alzheimer's disease, mild cognitive impairment and other neurodegenerative diseases. Further, this study is assessing longitudinal changes in biological, lifestyle, and cognitive assessment collection. The primary goal of this study is to examine the feasibility of biochemical assays, genetic testing, and cognitive and lifestyle assessments in the ante-mortem diagnosis of Alzheimer's disease, mild cognitive impairment and other neurodegenerative diseases. This research involves genetic and cognitive status testing but the findings will not be shared with research subjects. This will be accomplished ex vivo using blood, and/or cerebrospinal fluid (CSF) specimens from patients with a diagnosis of probable Alzheimer's disease, mild cognitive impairment, or other neurodegenerative diseases and from normal controls.

Recruiting3 enrollment criteria

Cerebrovascular Correlates of Dementia in Rural Communities - The Three Villages Study

DementiaCardiovascular Risk Factor3 more

This study aims to assess the prevalence and severity of dementia in an established cohort of community-dwelling older adults living in three neighboring rural Ecuadorian villages (Atahualpa, El Tambo, and Prosperidad), as well as to evaluate clinical and neuroimaging correlates of dementia in the study population. By the use of the Clinical Dementia Rating Scale (CDRS), the study also aims to assess the lower cutoff of the MoCA that better correlates with the occurrence of dementia in the study population. In addition, this study will provides grounds for the initiation of a prospective cohort study to assess factors influencing the development of dementia in the follow-up.

Recruiting2 enrollment criteria

Cognitive Impairment, Retinopathy, and Cerebrovascular Lesions in the Elderly

Cerebral Small Vessel DiseasesRetinopathy1 more

The CIRCLE study is a single-center prospective observational study that enrolled individuals with cerebral small vessel disease (SVD), while free of known dementia or stroke (both cerebral infarction and hemorrhage). The patients will receive neuropsychological testing, retinal digital images and multimodal magnetic resonance imaging (MRI). Blood samples will also be collected. Recent small subcortical infarcts, lacunes, white matter hyperintensities, perivascular spaces, microbleeds, and brain atrophy will be evaluated on both baseline and follow-up brain MRIs. The investigators will explore the predictors of preogression of SVD and cognitive deficits.

Recruiting5 enrollment criteria

Edinburgh Cognitive and Behavioural Amyotrophic Lateral Sclerosis Screen in Norway: A Validation...

Amyotrophic Lateral SclerosisCognitive Impairment

Cognitive impairment is present in about 30-50% of the patients with amyotrophic lateral sclerosis (ALS). Suitable screening tools are available, but none of these are evaluated in a Norwegian population.

Recruiting7 enrollment criteria

Linking Tau PET to Medial Temporal Lobe Subregions With High Resolution MRI

Mild Cognitive Impairment

The investigators will conduct a tau PET scan in cognitively normal older adults and patients with Mild Cognitive Impairment (MCI), enrolled in the National Alzheimer's Coordinating Center (NACC) study at the University of Pennsylvania's Penn Memory Center/Alzheimer's Disease Core Center (PMC/ADC).

Recruiting11 enrollment criteria

Cognitive Impairment in Ageing People

MCIAlzheimer Disease2 more

Mild cognitive impairment (MCI) and neurocognitive disorder such as Alzheimer's disease (AD) and Vascular dementia (VaD) have become common diseases in the elderly. The burden of dementia is rising in China, with major medical, social and economic impacts. To address this important public health problem, cohort study on elderly cognitive disorders should be carry out. The methods of early prevention, early diagnosis and early treatment the cognitive disorders in elderly should be found to reduce the burden of the social and economic issue due to dementia. At present, the international corresponding guidelines have taken gene and brain imaging biomarkers as important indicators of dementia pathogenesis research, accurate diagnosis and targeted intervention. The study will construct a prospective cohort to establish database that provide not only comprehensive epidemiological data on the MCI and neurocognitive disorder in ageing people, but also complete the construction of biological samples bank and clinical diagnosis and treatment information database. Using the database, the study will identify the conversion rates from MCI to dementia and risk factors for the progression from MCI to dementia or AD. The study will also apply and develop brain structural and pathological imaging technology to support precision diagnosis of senile cognitive disorders. The study have goals to identify and validate imaging and blood/CSF biomarkers for the early detection and tracking of cognitive disorders.

Recruiting9 enrollment criteria

Mental Health of Men Before and After Testicular Cancer Treatment

Testis CancerCognitive Impairment1 more

This is a prospective observational study, that investigates men diagnosed with testicular cancer before and after treatment. The patients are included at their visit at the Fertility clinic in Horsens, where they deposit semen for cryopreservation prior to surgery and potential systemic treatment. Here the patients, who want to participate will perform a cognitive test and afterwards complete a questioner (T1). After 9 month the patients will be invited to perform the cognitive test and complete the questionnaire again (T2).

Recruiting4 enrollment criteria

Predictors of Parkinson's Disease Progression

Parkinson DiseaseCognitive Dysfunction1 more

it is a prospective longitudinal observational study, aiming to to identify clinical, and biochemical baseline predictors of motor and non-motor PD progression in sample of Egyptian patients. it measures the baseline motor, non-motor, biochemical and imaging characteristics at enrollment and its relation to PD progression over 3 years

Recruiting5 enrollment criteria

Prevalence of Cognitive Disorders in Newly Diagnosed Epilepsy

EpilepsyCognition

A prospective prevalence study recorded that up to 50% of adult patients with newly diagnosed epilepsy had at least one cognitive impairment before initiation of antiepileptic drug (AED). Multiple factors exist and interact in the same patient. Cognitive impairments may affect psychiatric (loss of self-esteem, anxiety, depression) and social status (e.g., vocational aptitude, educational). These factors in turn influence cognitive abilities in a triangular and bidirectional relationship. In addition, the type of epilepsy, development in childhood or cerebral ageing, antiepileptic treatments (AED, surgery) and etiology also have an impact on cognitive performances. The burden of these factors differs from patient to another and must be determined individually. Longitudinal follow-up seems to be crucial because it will allow us to highlight the change in the cognitive profile of newly diagnosed patients over time. The main objective is to compare the prevalence of cognitive impairment in patients with newly diagnosed epilepsy prior to the initiation of AED with healthy subjects matched on age, sex, manual laterality and socio-educational level. But also to compare the longitudinal evolution of the cognitive profile of patients with healthy controls (0 to 10 years) to determine, among the age of onset seizures, their etiology, the syndrome, the sex, the socio-educational level and the cognitive reserve, which one are related to the severity of cognitive disorders.

Recruiting14 enrollment criteria

Perioperative Cognitive Trajectories in Deferred Surgery (CoTELE-SURGE)

Postoperative Cognitive DysfunctionDepressive Symptoms1 more

Cognition is the way people use their brains to think, understand, remember and make decisions. Cognitive changes are often seen even up to 1 year after surgery. Whether these changes are more than what is expected for someone's age and morbidities is still uncertain. Due to the COVID-19 emergency, many elective surgeries have been delayed, which is stressful for patients, but also represents an opportunity of understanding better how surgery can impact cognitive abilities. The purpose of this study is to explore if and how cognitive performance changes over time for patients aged 65 years or older, whose surgery has been postponed. due to the COVID-19 emergency, following and assessing the cognitive performance of these patients over time before and after surgery. In particular, in this study, the participant's cognitive performance will be assessed periodically with a computer-based instrument for cognitive testing, self-administered at home, in which tests are based on playing cards.

Recruiting8 enrollment criteria
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