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Active clinical trials for "Brain Injuries"

Results 1171-1180 of 2049

Pennsylvania Abusive Head Trauma Prevention Program

InjuryTraumatic Brain Injury1 more

This project is designed to evaluate a statewide, hospital-based parent education program to prevent abusive head trauma (AHT) in Pennsylvania, and investigate the additional effectiveness and cost-effectiveness of "booster" sessions of parent education delivered to parents at primary care provider offices in central Pennsylvania. Specific Aims: Assess the effectiveness of an established statewide program of hospital-based postnatal parent education about violent infant shaking, provided at a single consistent point in time between the infant's birth and hospital discharge, in reducing the incidence of AHT. Identify which component(s) are the most important mediators of the intervention's effectiveness; determine whether the intervention effect is more directly related to changes in perpetrator or caregiver behavior; and determine the effectiveness of the intervention among various socioeconomic groups. Determine the cost effectiveness of the hospital-based program. Establish the feasibility, additional costs, and effectiveness of a combined program of repeated exposure delivered both post-natally in the hospital and during follow up 2-, 4- and 6-month outpatient health maintenance visits with the pediatric care provider.

Completed1 enrollment criteria

Impact of Maternal Pomegranate Juice on Brain Injury in Infants With Intrauterine Growth Restriction...

Intrauterine Growth Restriction

Infants with intrauterine growth restriction are known to be at increased risk for long term neurodevelopmental delay into adulthood. The main mechanism for this is likely decreased blood flow to the brain secondary to altered placental blood flow. Antioxidants may serve to protect the developing brain from this process. Animal studies have shown that pomegranate juice protects the fetal brain from injury in a model of stroke. This clinical trial is intended to evaluate if giving mothers pomegranate juice during the last several weeks of pregnancy can help protect intrauterine growth restricted babies' brains.

Completed12 enrollment criteria

The Use of Low Molecular Weight Heparin in Traumatic Brain Injury

Brain InjuryVenous Thrombosis

To study the safety and efficacy of early administration of Low Molecular Weight Heparin to patients with traumatic brain injury.

Completed8 enrollment criteria

The Effects of Fish Oil Supplementation on the Brain Health of Collegiate Football Athletes

Traumatic Brain Injury (TBI)Chronic Traumatic Encephalopathy (CTE)

Determine if the daily docosahexaenoic acid (DHA)/eicosapentaenoic acid (EPA) supplement will reduce serum levels of biomarkers of sub-concussion injuries over a course of American football season among collegiate football athletes.

Completed8 enrollment criteria

Cerebral Regional Tissue Oxygen Saturation to Guide Oxygen Delivery in Preterm Neonates During Immediate...

Preterm InfantBrain Injuries1 more

The aim of the COSGOD Phase III trial is to examine, if it is possible to increase survival without cerebral injury in preterm neonates <32 weeks of gestation by monitoring the cerebral tissue oxygen saturation in addition to routine monitoring of arterial oxygen saturation and heart rate and specified clinical treatment guidelines during immediate transition period after birth (the first 15 minutes).

Completed6 enrollment criteria

Cognitive Rehabilitation and Brain Activity of Attention Control in TBI

Brain InjuriesTraumatic

The purpose of this study is to test an innovative combination of direct-attention training and metacognitive training in the treatment of attention impairments in Veterans with moderate-to-severe traumatic brain injury (TBI) who report experiencing attentional problems. Enrolled participants will be randomized to receive either the direct-attention training or metacognitive training first and then will be crossed over to receive the opposite intervention. The study will consist of two treatment periods of 4 weeks and a post-treatment 4 weeks later. In addition to the rehabilitation treatments, participants will also perform measures of complex functional activities (e.g., independent activities of daily living or IADLs) and neurocognitive tests of attention-control functions. Participants will also perform an attentional task that probes the function of three different attentional systems while brain wave activity (i.e., electroencephalography or EEG) is being recorded in order to assess changes in brain function that may be improved by the rehabilitation approach. Planned enrollment will be 36 Veterans.

Withdrawn21 enrollment criteria

DANish DELIrium Study On Neurointensive Care Patients

Acquired Brain InjuriesDelirium1 more

Abstract Background Studies have shown that delirium in medical and surgical intensive care units (ICUs) increases mortality, length of stay (LOS) as well as the risk of dementia symptoms and cerebral atrophy after discharge. Only few studies have investigated delirium in the neurointensive care unit (N-ICU). Delirium is most often assessed by one of two instruments: Intensive Care Delirium Screening Checklist (ICDSC) or the Confusion Assessment Method for the ICU (CAM-ICU). Aims To measure the effect of a systematic intervention (sedation, sleep, mobilization and pain) on delirium symptoms in patients with acute acquired brain injury in N-ICU. To validate the ICDSC and CAM-ICU to patients with acute acquired brain injury Method The design of the study is a two-phase interventional trial. Based on a power calculation, 56 patients will be enrolled both in the baseline and the intervention group (n=112). Part 1: A baseline investigation will be conducted to establish prevalence, duration and type of delirium symptoms in patients with acute acquired brain injury before implementing the intervention bundle. Part 2: A systematic Intervention protocol will be implemented in the N-ICU. The Intervention elements consist of a sedation, sleep, mobilization and pain treatment regimen based on the newest available evidence. Enrolled patients will be contacted 12 months after discharge for a follow-up including a quality of life with (EuroQoL-5D) questionnaire, a cognitive test measuring their cognitive end point (Repeatable Battery for Assessment of the Neuropsychological Status) and a short test for dementia symptoms (MMSE, Mini Mental State Examination).

Completed5 enrollment criteria

Safety Study for Adolescents With Concussion

Brain InjuryConcussion

The purpose of the study was to determine if administration of an exercise stress test within the first ten days after a sports related concussion would delay or otherwise interfere with recovery.

Completed5 enrollment criteria

Flooring for Injury Prevention Trial

Accidental FallsBone Fracture4 more

This study will evaluate the efficacy of novel compliant flooring in reducing injuries due to falls in a long-term care facility, determine the cost effectiveness of this intervention, and assess perceptions about compliant flooring among staff, residents, and families. The investigators hypothesize that compliant flooring will (1) reduce the incidence of injuries due to falls in long-term care residents; (2) represent an overall cost-savings when material and implementation costs are considered relative to direct and indirect costs associated with injuries due to falls; and (3) be received positively by staff, residents, and their family members.

Completed2 enrollment criteria

Cognitive Impairment Following Cardiac Arrest and Target Temperature Management

Heart ArrestOut-of-hospital Cardiac Arrest2 more

This is a steering group approved substudy to the Target Temperature Management trial (TTM, ClinicalTrials.gov Identifier: NCT01020916). TTM compares the effect of two strictly controlled temperature regimes for survivors of out-of-hospital cardiac arrest. The primary aim of this sub-study is to compare the amount of cognitive impairment in cardiac arrest survivors treated with 33 degrees and 36 degrees and with a matched group of control patients with myocardial infarction. Our secondary aims are: To investigate the impact of cognitive impairment on our patients' ability to participate in society and their health related quality of life. To investigate the relationship between our patients cognitive impairments and their relatives/informants health related quality of life and feelings of burden. To test the hypothesis that the simple cognitive screening battery used in the TTM main trial is sensitive enough to detect all patients with significant cognitive disability.

Completed18 enrollment criteria
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