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Active clinical trials for "Friedreich Ataxia"

Results 51-60 of 84

Rehabilitative Trial With Cerebello-Spinal tDCS in Neurodegenerative Ataxia

AtaxiaCerebellar11 more

Neurodegenerative cerebellar ataxias represent a group of disabling disorders for which we currently lack effective therapies. Cerebellar transcranial direct current stimulation (tDCS) is a non-invasive technique, which has been demonstrated to modulate cerebellar excitability and improve symptoms in patients with cerebellar ataxias. In this randomized, double-blind, sham-controlled study, the investigators will evaluate whether a two-weeks' treatment with cerebellar anodal tDCS and spinal cathodal tDCS can improve symptoms in patients with neurodegenerative cerebellar ataxia and can modulate cerebello-motor connectivity, at short and long term.

Completed9 enrollment criteria

Long-Term Safety and Tolerability of Idebenone in Friedreich's Ataxia Patients (MICONOS Extension)...

Freidreich's Ataxia

This is an Extension study of the MICONOS main randomised placebo-controlled trial (NCT00905268), and open to those patients completing the main study. The scientific aim of this extension study is to monitor safety and tolerability of idebenone over two years in patients with Friedreich's Ataxia.

Completed9 enrollment criteria

A Study Investigating the Long-term Safety and Efficacy of Deferiprone in Patients With Friedreich's...

Friedreich's Ataxia

The primary objective of this study is to evaluate the long-term safety and tolerability of deferiprone in subjects with Friedreich's ataxia (FRDA). The secondary objective is to evaluate the long-term efficacy of deferiprone for the treatment of FRDA. The tertiary objectives are to evaluate the effect of deferiprone on: cardiac function, quality of life, and functional status.

Completed13 enrollment criteria

Idebenone to Treat Friedreich's Ataxia

Friedreich Ataxia

This study will determine whether a drug called idebenone is safe and effective in reducing the level of oxidants that are believed to damage the nervous system and hearts in patients with Friedreich's ataxia. Friedreich's ataxia is caused by an abnormality in the gene that makes a protein called frataxin, which is necessary for the proper functioning of energy-producing parts of cells called mitrochondria. In Friedreich's ataxia, the mitochondria become overloaded with iron, and high levels of harmful compounds called oxidants are formed. These oxidants are believed to damage the cells of the nervous system and hearts of people with Friedreich's ataxia. Idebenone is a man-made drug similar to a naturally occurring compound known as Coenzyme Q10. This study will test whether idebenone can alleviate some of the symptoms of Friedreich's ataxia and slow or halt the progression of the disease. Patients with genetically confirmed Friedreich's ataxia who are between 9 and 18 years of age, weigh between 65 and 175 pounds and can walk 25 feet with or without an assistive device may be eligible for this study. Candidates are screened with blood tests and a review of their medical records. Participants undergo the following tests and procedures: Medical interview and physical examination. Tests include blood and urine tests, an electrocardiogram, or EKG (recording of the electrical activity of the heart), echocardiogram (ultrasound test showing the pumping action of the heart, thickness of the heart walls, and any valve leakage), and a detailed neurological examination, including maneuvers such as copying a drawing and putting pegs in a board. Patients' parents are asked questions about how they feel their child's disease affects the child's quality of life. Magnetic resonance imaging (MRI) to examine the heart muscle and blood flow to the heart. MRI uses a magnetic field and radio waves to produce images of body tissues and organs. The patient lies on a table that is moved into the doughnut-shaped MRI scanner, wearing earplugs to muffle loud knocking and thumping sounds that occur during the scanning process. A catheter (plastic tube) is placed in a vein in the child's arm so that a chemical called gadolinium can be injected during the MRI study. Gadolinium brightens areas of the heart, improving the ability to see the heart and blood flow. Physical medicine and rehabilitation evaluations to test the child's physical functioning. These tests include gait evaluation, measurements of the ability to exert and maintain a constant force, assessment of visual-motor control and fine motor control, aerobic exercise endurance testing, and measurement of the ability of the child's heart and lungs to increase their effectiveness with exercise. Idebenone/placebo treatment. Patients are given a 6-month supply of either idebenone pills or placebo (pills that look like the study drug but have no active ingredient) to take three times a day. Patients are seen by their primary care physician after 1 and 3 months on the study medication for a brief physical examination. In addition, they have blood and urine tests once a month while on medication to check for any abnormalities. 6-month examination. After 6 months on the study drug, patients return to NIH to repeat all the tests listed above to determine the effects of idebenone treatment.

Completed14 enrollment criteria

A Clinical Study to Evaluate the Effect of MIN-102 on the Progression of Friedreich's Ataxia in...

Friedreich Ataxia

Randomized, double-blind, placebo-controlled study on the effects of MIN-102 on Biochemical, Imaging, neurophysiological, and clinical markers in patients with Friedreich's Ataxia

Completed6 enrollment criteria

Open Trail of γIFN for Friedreich Ataxia

Friedreich Ataxia

The investigator proposes an open label pilot study to investigate the safety and efficacy of gamma interferon (γIFN) in patients with Friedreich's Ataxia (FRDA). yIFN, an approved drug for treatment of granulomatous disease, has been shown to promote Frataxin expression in FRDA models in vitro and in vivo as well as in pilot human studies. Safety will monitored by clinical surveillance and biohumoral periodic assessment. Efficacy will be assessed by a combination of advanced neuroimaging techniques and established clinical indicators. The investigators intend to recruit over a 6 months period 12 subject with molecularly established FRDA. The protocol builds on a recently concluded observational study which established the pattern of clinical and neuroimaging abnormalities characterizing a cohort of patients with FA. The data already acquired through such study will constitute the T-6/-12 point, and together with T0 assessment, carried out at study entrance, will provide for each patient the exact appreciation of disease actual progression over a year time. Recruited patients will receive for 6 months yIFN at a final dose of 200 ug/three times a week. Patients will be evaluated clinically after 3 and 6 months (T3 and T6) of treatment and 6 months after treatment end (T+6) and by neuroimaging at T6 and T+6. The neuroimaging protocol, based on 3 Tesla scanner, consists in functional MRI, tractography. The clinical protocol consists on specific ataxia scales administration. Regular monitoring with for eventual adverse events will be provided. Frataxin levels in the peripheral blood mononuclear cells will also be evaluated at T0, T3, T6, T+6. Furthermore, the thickness of the cardiac ventricle and retinal nerve fibre layer (RNFL) thickness with optical coherence tomography (OCT) will be performed at T0, T6, T + 6.

Completed9 enrollment criteria

A Study to Assess Efficacy, Long Term Safety and Tolerability of RT001 in Subjects With Friedreich's...

Friedreich's Ataxia

The purpose of this study is to assess the Efficacy, Long Term Safety and Tolerability of RT001 in subjects with Friedreich's Ataxia

Completed14 enrollment criteria

Evaluation of the Effects of Calcitriol's in the Neurological Symptoms of Friedreich's Ataxia Patients...

Friedreich Ataxia

Friedreich's Ataxia (FA) is an autosomal recessive disease the mutation of which leads to a deficiency of a protein called frataxin, which is responsible for the symptoms of the disease. It is assumed that inducing an increase in the production of frataxin could reverse part of the disease's symptoms. Several treatments with drugs that raise frataxin levels have been tested, but they have either have not given the expected result or have induced intolerable side effects. The IRBLleida (Institut de Recerca Biomèdica de Lleida Fundació Dr. Pifarré) team has shown that calcitriol can increase the production of frataxin up to 2.5 to 3 times, a higher proportion than any of the drugs previously tested. For that reason, the next step in our research would be to check the effects of this drug (Calcitriol 0.25mcg/24h for a year) in patients with FA. On the other hand, calcitriol, the active form of vitamin D, is a drug with a very low rate of adverse effects that has been used for decades. Therefore, it is a drug with a very well established tolerability. The results of the present study, if positive, would lead to the organization of trials at a larger scale, and they would allow the use of an effective treatment for patients with FA.

Completed30 enrollment criteria

Safety and Efficacy of EPI-743 in Patients With Friedreich's Ataxia

Friedreich's Ataxia

The purpose of this study is to examine the effects of EPI-743 on visual function and neurologic function in patients with Friedreich's ataxia.

Completed20 enrollment criteria

A Study of Resveratrol as Treatment for Friedreich Ataxia

Friedreich Ataxia

The purpose of this study is to determine the effect of two doses of resveratrol taken for a 12 week period, on frataxin levels in individuals with Friedreich ataxia. This study will also measure the effect of resveratrol on markers of oxidative stress, clinical measures of ataxia, and cardiac parameters.

Completed6 enrollment criteria
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