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Active clinical trials for "Parkinson Disease"

Results 3531-3533 of 3533

MIRT and Rotigotine in the Early Stage of PD

Parkinson's Disease

To test whether a multidisciplinary intensive rehabilitation treatment (MIRT) slowed down the progression of the disease in Parkinson's disease (PD) "de novo" patients, all treated with Rotigotine, in a randomized controlled study with a 18 months follow-up.

Unknown status2 enrollment criteria

Biomarker Discovery in Parkinson's Disease

Parkinson's Disease

There are approximately one million Americans who live with Parkinson's disease with 50,000 new cases per year and this rate is expected to rise with an aging population. The underlying pathophysiology and disease understanding of PD still remains elusive due to a combination of disease complexity and lack of predictive capability of existing models. The Berg Interrogative Biology™ discovery platform has demonstrated a unique capability in producing drug targets and biomarkers that truly represent a disease phenotype. It has been able to catalyze molecules now in late stage clinical trials in cancer and many pre-clinical candidate therapeutics and biomarkers in endocrinology and central nervous system (CNS) diseases. The platform is able to decipher normal versus disease signatures by integration of data sets from the genome, metabolome, proteome, and lipidome in an agnostic manner that is subjected to Bayesian Artificial Intelligence informatics. The resulting nodes are then put back into wet-lab validation before proceeding to proof-of-principle pre-clinical testing. By utilizing clinical data and specimens obtained by the medical specialists at The Parkinson's Institute, along with Berg's Interrogative Biology™, this study aims to discover a disease biomarker enabling the creation of a diagnostic test for Parkinson's disease.

Unknown status22 enrollment criteria

The Parkinson's Genetic Research Study

Parkinson's Disease

The Parkinson's Genetic Research Study (PaGeR), headed by Dr. Cyrus Zabetian, is searching for genes that increase the risk of developing Parkinson's disease (PD) and related disorders. The study is a joint effort by neurologists and researchers across the United States and is sponsored by the National Institutes of Health. The coordinating center for PaGeR is located at the University of Washington and the VA Puget Sound Health Care System in Seattle.

Unknown status3 enrollment criteria
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