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Active clinical trials for "Alzheimer Disease"

Results 1911-1920 of 2939

Safety Study of Sargramostim in Treating Patients With Mild Cognitive Impairment Due to Alzheimer's...

Dementia Alzheimer's Type

Primary Objective: To compare the effect of repeat doses of Leukine to placebo administered subcutaneously (SC) on established cortical amyloid load in patients with mild cognitive impairment (MCI) due to Alzheimer's disease (AD). Secondary Objective: To evaluate safety and tolerability of Leukine versus placebo. To explore the effect of Leukine versus placebo on cognitive performance. To collect biospecimens for future biomarker research.

Withdrawn34 enrollment criteria

Olfactory Deficits and Donepezil Treatment in Cognitively Impaired Elderly

Alzheimer DiseaseMild Cognitive Impairment4 more

Olfactory identification deficits occur in patients with Alzheimer's disease (AD), are associated with disease severity, predict conversion from mild cognitive impairment (MCI) to AD and are associated with healthy elderly subjects developing MCI. Odor (olfactory) identification deficits may reflect degeneration of cholinergic inputs to the olfactory bulb and other olfactory brain regions. Acetylcholinesterase inhibitors (ACheI) like donepezil show modest effects in improving cognition but can be associated with adverse effects and increased burden and costs because of the need for prolonged, often lifelong, treatment. Converging findings on odor identification test performance (UPSIT, scratch and sniff 40-item test) from four pilot studies, including two of our own, suggest that acute change in the UPSIT in response to an anticholinergic challenge (atropine nasal spray), incremental change over 8 weeks, and even the baseline UPSIT score by itself, may predict cognitive improvement with ACheI treatment in MCI and AD. If change in odor identification deficits can help to identify which patients should receive ACheI treatment, this simple inexpensive approach will advance the goal of improving personalized treatment, improve selection and monitoring of patients for ACheI treatment, reduce needless ACheI exposure with risk of side effects, and decrease health care costs.

Completed37 enrollment criteria

PET Imaging of the Translocator Proteine Ligands (TSPO) With [18 F] DPA-714 Biomarker of NeuroInflammation...

Memory ComplaintMild Cognitive Impairment1 more

Alzheimer's disease (AD) is the most common cause of dementia in elderly subjects. AD is characterized by brain lesions like extracellular deposits of ß-amyloïd proteins in senile plaques and intracellular neurofibrillary tangles of hyper-phosphorylated tau protein, both of which are associated with the loss of neurons. The development of disease biomarkers for AD (Tau, PhTau and βamyloid dosing in the cerebrospinal fluid, brain MRI, amyloid PET imaging and fluorodeoxyglucose PET imaging) to identify the pathophysiological processes underlying cognitive impairment biomarkers, have been incorporated into revised diagnosis guidelines. Post-mortem human AD and AD animal model studies have reported inflammatory processes also implicated in the neuropathology of AD, and upregulated levels of pro-inflammatory cytokines. In vivo visualization of microglial activation has become possible with the development of molecular imaging ligands (tracers) for use with positron emission tomography (PET). The translocator protein (TSPO) formerly known as the peripheral benzodiazepine receptor (PBR), a receptor located in the outer membrane of mitochondria, is upregulated during neuroinflammation. So targeting TSPO with radiolabeled ligands for PET is considered as an attractive biomarker for neuroinflammation. The main aim of this pilot study is to quantify neuroinflammation, in terms of fixation and distribution of [18F] DPA-714(Binding Potential BP), and to study its relationship with amyloid load, measured with in [18F]AV-45 (Standard Uptake Values ratio) in cognitive decline.

Completed18 enrollment criteria

Indiana University Dementia Screening Trial

DementiaAlzheimer's Disease1 more

The purpose of the study is to conduct a randomized clinical trial assessing the harms and benefits of screening for dementia, compared to no screening for dementia, among 4,000 older adults, cared for in typical, primary care practices.

Completed8 enrollment criteria

Illiteracy and Vulnerability to Alzheimer's Disease: Evaluation of Amyloid Pathology by PET Imaging...

Alzheimer Disease

The goal of this study is to improve the diagnosis of Alzheimer's disease (AD) at two different stages (MCI and dementia) in illiterate subjects, using FDG- fluorodeoxyglucose - and florbetapir F 18 -PET imaging. This study will compare amyloid load and cerebral metabolism dysfunction in literate versus illiterate MCI and AD patients.

Completed19 enrollment criteria

BAC in Patient With Alzheimer's Disease or Vascular Dementia

Alzheimer's DiseaseVascular Dementia

The primary objective of this study is to evaluate the efficacy of BAC patients with Alzheimer's disease or vascular dementia.The secondary objective of this study is to evaluate the safety of BAC patients with Alzheimer's disease or vascular dementia.

Withdrawn23 enrollment criteria

Pathological and Non-pathological Aging, Physical Activity, Genotype and Cognition

Alzheimer's Disease

Alzheimer's disease (AD) is an irreversible, progressive brain disease. It is the most common form of dementia and the major cause of functional dependence in the elderly. Since there is currently no cure for Alzheimer's disease, a growing number of scientists pointed out the interest to use non-pharmacological alternative therapeutic approaches in order to slow down the decline of physical and cognitive resources and improve quality of life of patients with Alzheimer's disease. Several narrative and meta-analytical reviews suggest that regular practice of physical activity delays the occurrence of cognitive decline and slows down Alzheimer's disease progress when compared with sedentary people. Despite the growing interest of the scientific community for the positive effects of chronic exercise on mental health and cognitive functions, the clinical reality of this phenomenon remains to be clearly established, more particularly in aged people suffering from neurodegenerative diseases.The first aim of this research project is to test if chronic exercise reduces and even compensates for a cognitive decline in both patients with prodromal Alzheimer's disease (i.e., no dementia) and aging people with no pathology of central nervous system. The second aim of this research project is to examine whether an increasing of cerebral blood flow induced by chronic exercise can explain this positive effect.

Completed7 enrollment criteria

Longitudinal Evaluation of [18F]GTP1 as a PET Radioligand for Imaging Tau in the Brain of Participants...

Alzheimer's Disease

This is an open-label, longitudinal observational study evaluating the imaging characteristics of the tau positron-emission tomography (PET) radioligand [18F] Genentech Tau Probe 1 (GTP1) in the brain of participants with prodromal, mild, and moderate Alzheimer's disease (AD) compared to healthy participants. The overall goal of this protocol is to evaluate the longitudinal change in tau burden using [18F]GTP1, a tau targeted radiopharmaceutical.

Completed19 enrollment criteria

MIND Diet Intervention and Cognitive Decline

Cognitive DeclineDementia2 more

Phase III randomized controlled trial designed to test the effects of a 3-year intervention of the MIND diet (Mediterranean-DASH Intervention for Neurodegenerative Delay) on cognitive decline and brain neurodegeneration among 600 individuals 65+ years without cognitive impairment who are overweight and have suboptimal diets.

Completed7 enrollment criteria

Multiple Ascending Dose Study of TC-5619 in Healthy Elderly Subjects and Subjects With Alzheimer's...

Alzheimer's Disease

This is a Phase 1 study to examine the safety, tolerability and pharmacokinetics of TC-5619 in elderly subjects with and without Alzheimer's disease. Group 1 includes elderly subjects with Alzheimer's disease to receive TC-5619 or placebo for 28 days to evaluate safety and tolerability. Group 2 includes healthy elderly subjects in a dose escalation design to receive TC-5619 or placebo for 10 days to evaluate safety, tolerability and pharmacokinetics.

Completed10 enrollment criteria
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