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Active clinical trials for "Mutism"

Results 11-17 of 17

Evaluating Intensive Group Behavioral Treatment for Children With Selective Mutism

Selective Mutism

This goal of this study is to evaluate an intensive group behavioral treatment (IGBT) program for children with selective mutism, a low base-rate childhood anxiety disorder. 29 children between the ages of 5 and 9 will be randomly assigned to participate in a 5-day IGBT over the summer or to a waitlist control condition, with the opportunity to participate in IGBT 4 weeks later. All children that participate in treatment will be followed up 8 weeks into the following school year.

Completed4 enrollment criteria

The Efficacy of Integrated Behavioral Therapy for Selective Mutism

Selective Mutism

This study examines the efficacy of the Integrated Behavioral Therapy for Selective Mutism protocol (Bergman et al., 2013). Participants are 60 children, aged 4-8 years, diagnosed with Selective Mutism (SM). The level of SM symptoms is assessed during first arrival to the SM unit of Schneider Children's Medical Center of Israel (Intake), at the first treatment session, at sessions 12, and at the end of treatment. A secondary aim of this study is to assess the contribution of parent's characteristics (anxiety and depression levels, parenting style) to the childrens' SM symptoms level and to treatment achievements.

Unknown status5 enrollment criteria

Posterior Fossa Mutism on Quality of Life

Posterior Fossa Mutism

Posterior fossa mutism (PFM) occurs in up to 30% of patients after resection of a posterior fossa tumor, most commonly a medulloblastoma. PFM is characterized by delayed onset of mutism 1-6 days after surgery that can spontaneously improve on average from 7-8 weeks later. Few patients recover normal speech. Most of their speech continues to be marked by dysarthria, dysfluency and slowed rate. Researchers have not identified the pathophysiologic mechanism for PFM nor have they found a cure. Despite the improvements in speech, patients with PFM have shown multiple areas of neurocognitive deficits 12 months after diagnosis. Few studies have looked at long term outcomes of patients affected by PFM. We propose to survey patients who developed PFM after resection of a medulloblastoma to determine long term effects of PFM on patient's quality of life.

Completed5 enrollment criteria

Functional Imaging of Cerebellar Mutism Syndrome

Brain Mass

The purpose of this study is to better understand why some children with cancer have difficulty speaking after brain surgery. Difficulty speaking may be due to known complications to the language centers in the brain. These language centers may be located in slightly different places in different people. This study will study which areas may be damaged.

Completed10 enrollment criteria

Advanced MRI for Posterior Fossa Tumours

Cerebellar MutismPosterior Fossa Syndrome

Post-operative paediatric cerebellar mutism syndrome (pCMS) is a well-recognised complication of resective surgery for brain tumours of the cerebellum and fourth ventricle in children. Occurring in around 25% of infratentorial craniotomies, it is characterised by a delayed onset of mutism and emotional lability, and may comprise motoric and cognitive cerebellar deficits. Transient mutism gives way to prolonged, and often incomplete, recovery. Neuroimaging studies are beginning to reveal anatomical and functional aberrancies in the brain of children with pCMS. The cerebellar efferent pathways are likely to be implicated as a neuroanatomical substrate in the development of pCMS, as shown by a handful of diffusion tractography studies to date. However, the pathophysiology of this condition still remains unclear. Hypoperfusion of supratentorial cortical and subcortical structures may mediate the speech and behavioural deficits seen in pCMS, and is a candidate for a causal pathophysiological mechanism. This study aims to prospectively image children with pCMS using advanced MRI techniques including diffusion tractography and arterial spin labelling, and to correlate this with clinical descriptions of the syndrome. All children referred to Great Ormond Street Hospital for Children with a posterior fossa brain tumour will be imaged pre-operatively, post-operatively and at delayed follow-up. In tandem with this, clinical assessments will be made of children post-operatively to ascertain which patients develop pCMS. In addition, anonymised advanced MRI data on healthy controls will be used as a comparator group.

Completed2 enrollment criteria

Factors Influencing Selective Mutism

Selective Mutism

The study's goal is to check and verify basic assumptions of a new selective mutism developmental model from Melfsen and Walitza through standardized and routinely used patient questionnaires. The primary emphasis is the question of a connection between selective mutism and high sensitivity, dissociation, emotional regulation, family structure, social anxiety and self-esteem.

Completed9 enrollment criteria

Vagal Nerve Stimulation in Coma Patients

Chronic Consciousness DisordersVegetative State2 more

Minimally Conscious (MCS) or Vegetative State (VS) are disorders of consciousness which often occur following traumatic brain injury or ischemia. These alterations result most of the time in patients' loss of autonomy and require long years of special care. No efficient therapy to improve patients' consciousness has been found so far. Investigators propose to use vagal nerve stimulation (VNS) to restore cortical activity and patients' embodied self. The investigators' main hypothesis is that VNS will reestablish the thalamo-cortical connectivity leading to an improvement of the consciousness state. To test this hypothesis, investigators will use behavioral measures as well as fMRI, PET scan and EEG to assess brain activity. Patients will be evaluated before and during eight months following implantation of the stimulation device.

Unknown status19 enrollment criteria
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