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Active clinical trials for "Paresis"

Results 111-120 of 409

Brain Stimulation and Rehabilitation for Adults With Chronic, Severe Arm Motor Impairment After...

StrokeHemiplegia1 more

This pilot study will examine a combination therapy for adults with chronic, severe motor impairment of an arm after stroke. The intervention will combine brain stimulation with physical rehabilitation of the arm on the side of the body more-affected by stroke.

Terminated7 enrollment criteria

Controlled Trial of 3,4-Diaminopyridine (3-4DAP) in Lambert-Eaton Myasthenic Syndrome (LEMS)

Muscle Weakness

The main purpose for this study is to provide access to 3,4 DAP, a drug which has demonstrated to be effective in treating weakness associated with Lambert-Eaton Myasthenic Syndrome. LEMS is a rare autoimmune cause of a defect in neuromuscular transmission. The disorder is clinically characterized by fluctuating muscle weakness, hyporeflexia and autonomic dysfunction.

Terminated3 enrollment criteria

Mirror-Box Training in Adults With Chronic Hemiparesis Secondary to Stroke

Stroke

The purpose of this project is to assess the effects of four weeks of mirror-box training on weakness of one arm secondary to stroke. Primary measures are function and strength. Secondary measures will evaluate muscle tone, flexibility, and the subject's perception of their everyday function and improvement. Research Hypothesis: For chronic upper limb hemiparesis secondary to stroke, four weeks of mirror-box training with movement of the unaffected limb only results in a mean increase of 10 points on the Fugl-Meyer Test of Motor Recovery (Upper Extremity).

Terminated19 enrollment criteria

Optimizing Transcranial Direct Current Stimulation for Motor Recovery From Severe Post-stroke Hemiparesis...

StrokeHemiparesis

Individuals who experienced a stroke over one year ago will be randomly assigned to receive 1 of 4 different conditions of brain stimulation. All individuals will receive therapy of the hand and arm following the stimulation. This study will try to determine which brain stimulation condition leads to the greatest improvement in hand and arm function.

Terminated10 enrollment criteria

New Technology for Individualised, Intensive Training of Gait After Stroke Study I

StrokeAmbulation Difficulty1 more

The overall purpose of this project is to establish the added value of training with the Hybrid Assistive Limb (HAL) exoskeleton system as part of regular rehabilitation intervention programs after stroke. The aim of this study is to explore if HAL training when combined with conventional training in the subacute stage after stroke may accelerate the recovery of independence in walking when compared to conventional training only and if recovery is related to stroke lateralization?

Terminated1 enrollment criteria

Video-based Training for Rehabilitation of Upper Limb Functions After Stroke

StrokeUpper Limb Paresis

The study hypothesizes superiority of the video-based training (observation combined with motor exercise, "video") over motor exercise alone ("non-video") and standard rehabilitation ("standard").

Terminated27 enrollment criteria

Neuromotor Prosthetic to Treat Stroke-Related Paresis

StrokeComplication4 more

The purpose of the research is to develop a new medical device prototype to restore functional movement of an arm made weak due to a chronic stroke

Active53 enrollment criteria

Correlation Between Music Therapist's and Stroke Patient's Engagement Levels and Patient's Fingers...

Hemiparesis;Poststroke/CVA

Background: Fingers and wrist functional impairments are common among stroke patients. The patient's engagement, their therapist's engagement, and the patient-therapist interaction during therapy, contribute significantly towards better outcomes in rehabilitation. Music therapeutic interaction between patient and music therapist, which involves active music-making, can enhance a stroke patient's engagement and improve fingers and wrist movement of the affected hand. Study Objectives: 1. To assess the correlation between the therapist engagement's levels, patient engagement's levels, and patient's fingers and wrist movement. 2. To examine how the levels of patient and therapist engagement differ during music therapeutic interaction when compared with verbal interaction. 3. To determine if the changes to patients' fingers and wrist movement differ during a music therapeutic Interaction session when compared with a verbal interaction session. Methods: This feasibility pilot study will include 10 patients, with right-sided hemiparesis who will be recruited 1-6 months following stroke. Each subject will participate in 2 sessions: verbal interaction session and music interactions session conducted both by the same qualified music therapist. For both sessions, each participant will be asked to perform three musical exercises with their right hand on an electric piano. During the Verbal Interaction session, participants will perform exercises alone, while the therapist only interacts with them verbally. During the second session, the Music Therapeutic Interaction session, participants will perform musical exercises while the therapist is interacting with them musically, using music therapy techniques. Measurement tools will include an EEG marker - the Cognitive Effort Index (CEI), for real-time measurement of the patient's and therapist's level of engagement; the HandTutorTM for evaluating real-time changes in a patient's fingers and wrist movement; and video recordings of the patient's hands while performing the musical exercises.

Terminated9 enrollment criteria

Transcutaneous Spinal and Peripheral Stimulation and Wrist Robotic Therapy for Patients With Spastic...

Spasticity as Sequela of StrokeStroke6 more

The purpose of this study is to investigate if two courses of five consecutive sessions of noninvasive spinal stimulation paired with peripheral nerve stimulation at the forearm provided by an investigational device (Doublestim™/ MyoRegulator™ System - PathMaker Neurosystems Inc.) are able to improve wrist stiffness and motor function, when combined with intensive robotic wrist training program in participants with chronic spastic hemiparesis after stroke.

Terminated22 enrollment criteria

Self-modulated Functional Electrical Stimulation in Chronic Stroke Patients With Severe and Moderate...

Stroke Rehabilitation

The study aims at demonstrating the efficacy of self-modulated functional electrical stimulation (SM-FES) in promoting upper-limb (UL) motor recovery in chronic stroke patients with severe and severe-moderate paralysis. The effect of such experimental therapy will be compared to dose-matched, goal-oriented standard care (SC). SM-FES consists of intensive, goal-oriented, repetitive functional exercises assisted by electrical stimulation. The patient actively self-administers the electrical stimulation on the impaired limb by controlling the electrical stimulation device with the non-impaired hand. The duration of the intervention is 90 min per day, 5 days per week, for 2 weeks.

Terminated17 enrollment criteria
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