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Active clinical trials for "Cognitive Dysfunction"

Results 831-840 of 2792

Analysis of Motor Skills in Subjects Aged 55 and Over: the Role of Cognitive Abilities for Planning...

Mild Cognitive Disorder

Falling is an event that is more frequent and severe in older age. It can lead to a loss of autonomy and a decrease in quality of life. It is therefore important to understand this phenomenon in order to better prevent it. Among the multiple risk factors associated with falling, recent research has shown a link between the decline in cognitive abilities (i.e., the mental processes that form our knowledge, such as memory) and the risk of falling. However, the impact of this cognitive decline on motor skills is still poorly understood. The purpose of this research is to study how the changes induced by aging affect motor skills. This would make it possible to take a new look at the phenomenon of falls occurring in the elderly and, in the long term, to improve the prevention and rehabilitation.

Recruiting25 enrollment criteria

Development and Validation of a Novel Functional Eye-Tracking Software Application for Cancer-related...

Cancer-related Cognitive Impairment

This study aims to develop and validate a sensitive and non-invasive eye-tracking software application.

Recruiting19 enrollment criteria

Cognitive Impairment and Imaging Correlates in End Stage Renal Disease

End Stage Renal Disease

The purpose of this study is to understand cognitive impairment in end stage renal disease before and after a kidney transplant.

Recruiting7 enrollment criteria

Living Alone in Old Age With Cognitive Impairment

Living AloneAlzheimer Disease1 more

The purpose of this study is to better understand the experience of living alone in older age with cognitive impairment. We recruit adults 55+ living alone with cognitive impairment such as Alzheimer's disease or mild cognitive impairment. This study investigates the priorities and concerns of older adults living alone with cognitive impairment. Participants are interviewed 5 times for one hour in their homes within 3 months at a time that works for them.

Recruiting4 enrollment criteria

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

Amyotrophic Lateral SclerosisCognitive Impairment

This study evaluate use of a translated Norwegian version of the Edinburgh cognitive and behavioral amyotrophic lateral sclerosis screen (ECAS-N) as an early predictor in car-driving, working and use of advanced life-prolonging therapy.

Recruiting6 enrollment criteria

Functional Magnetic Resonance Imaging (fMRI) of Brain in ICU Survivors With Cognitive Impairment...

Cognitive ImpairmentFunctional Magnetic Resonance Imaging

Long-term cognitive dysfunction greatly influences patient's quality of life after critical illness. However,its neurophysiological basis remains unknown.This is a one year fMRI study conducted at the Jiangyin people's Hospital. This study utilize resting-state functional magnetic resonance imaging(fMRI) to investigate the regional alterations in survivors with cognitive impairment.Further, the investigators hypothesize that these regional changes in fMRI activity are predictive of cognitive impairment.

Recruiting3 enrollment criteria

Postoperative Cognitive Function and EEG

AgingPostoperative Cognitive Dysfunction1 more

In the elderly patients undergoing elective non-cardiac major surgery, the differences of EEG parameters between those with and without postoperative cognitive dysfunction were observed to determine the characteristic changes of EEG parameters related to postoperative cognitive dysfunction

Recruiting8 enrollment criteria

Amyloid Prediction in Early Stage Alzheimer's Disease Through Speech Phenotyping - FUTURE Extension...

Alzheimer DiseasePreclinical Alzheimer's Disease3 more

The primary objective of the study is to evaluate whether a set of algorithms analysing acoustic and linguistic patterns of speech, can predict change in Preclinical Alzheimer's Clinical Composite with semantic processing (PACC5) between baseline and +12 month follow up across all four Arms, as measured by the coefficient of individual agreement (CIA) between the change in PACC5 and the corresponding regression model, trained on baseline speech data to predict it. Secondary objectives include (1) evaluating whether similar algorithms can predict change in PACC5 between baseline and +12 month follow up in the cognitively normal (CN) and MCI populations separately; (2) evaluating whether similar algorithms trained to regress against PACC5 scores at baseline, still regress significantly against PACC5 scores at +12 month follow-up, as measured by the coefficient of individual agreement (CIA) between the PACC5 composite at +12 months and the regression model, trained on baseline speech data to predict PACC5 scores at baseline; (3) evaluating whether similar algorithms can classify converters vs non-converters in the cognitively normal Arms (Arm 3 + 4), and fast vs slow decliners in the MCI Arms (Arm 1 + 2), as measured by the Area Under the Curve (AUC) of the receiver operating characteristic curve, sensitivity, specificity and Cohen's kappa of the corresponding binary classifiers. Secondary objectives include the objectives above, but using time points of +24 months and +36 months; and finally to evaluate whether the model performance for the objectives and outcomes above improved if the model has access to speech data at 1 week, 1 month, and 3 month timepoints.

Recruiting4 enrollment criteria

Determinants of Incident Stroke Cognitive Outcomes and Vascular Effects on RecoverY

Ischemic StrokeIntracerebral Hemorrhage5 more

The overall goal of the DISCOVERY study is to better understand what factors contribute to changes in cognitive (i.e., thinking and memory) abilities in patients who experienced a stroke. The purpose of the study is to help doctors identify patients at risk for dementia (decline in memory, thinking and other mental abilities that significantly affects daily functioning) after their stroke so that future treatments may be developed to improve outcomes in stroke patients. For this study, a "stroke" is defined as either (1) an acute ischemic stroke (AIS, or blood clot in the brain), (2) an intracerebral hemorrhage (ICH, or bleeding in the brain), (3) or an aneurysmal subarachnoid hemorrhage (aSAH, or bleeding around the brain caused by an abnormal bulge in a blood vessel that bursts). The investigators hypothesize that: The size, type and location of the stroke play an important role in recovery of thinking and memory abilities after stroke, and pre-existing indicators of brain health further determine the extent of this recovery. Specific stroke events occurring in individuals with underlying genetic or biological risk factors can cause further declines in brain heath, leading to changes in thinking and memory abilities after stroke. Studying thinking and memory alongside brain imaging and blood samples in patients who have had a stroke allows for earlier identification of declining brain health and development of individualized treatment plans to improve patient outcomes in the future.

Recruiting15 enrollment criteria

Identification of Patients With a High Probability of Meeting Eligibility Criteria for an Alzheimer's...

Alzheimer DiseaseMild Cognitive Impairment3 more

Apheleia-001 is a prescreener that aims to identify and characterize participants with reported cognitive impairment using demographic information, clinical history, brief cognitive assessments, and blood-based biomarkers to distinguish appropriate participants for referral to a therapeutic AD clinical trial.

Recruiting25 enrollment criteria
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