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Active clinical trials for "Motor Neuron Disease"

Results 51-60 of 760

Safety and Tolerability of RAG-17 in the Treatment of Amyotrophic Lateral Sclerosis Patients With...

Gene Mutation

The goal of this clinical trial is to evaluate the safety, tolerability and pharmacokinetics of RAG-17 in adult amyotrophic lateral sclerosis (ALS) patients with SOD1 mutation. Patients will receive drug treamtent via dose escalation which ranging from minimum of 60 mg to the maximum tolerated dose (MTD), after reaching the tolerated dose, a fixed dose of the drug is given once every two months for continuous treatment, and the total treatment cycle is 8 months. The duration of this study is two years.

Enrolling by invitation24 enrollment criteria

Rehabilitation in SOD1 ALS Treated With Tofersen

Amyotrophic Lateral SclerosisLou Gehrig Disease4 more

The primary objective of this study is to document and describe the effects of a personalized rehabilitation program for patients with SOD1 ALS participating in the tofersen expanded access program. Participants currently receiving tofersen treatment will be referred to outpatient physical and/or occupational therapy. Participants will have an initial assessment performed and an individualized rehabilitation program will be prescribed. Each participant is encouraged to follow the prescribed recommendations that will include scheduled outpatient therapy sessions, functional assessments, and/or a home-based rehabilitation program. Functional assessments will be done at a minimum of every three months.

Enrolling by invitation5 enrollment criteria

HEALEY ALS Platform Trial - Regimen F ABBV-CLS-7262

Amyotrophic Lateral Sclerosis

The HEALEY ALS Platform Trial is a perpetual multi-center, multi-regimen clinical trial evaluating the safety and efficacy of investigational products for the treatment of ALS. Regimen F will evaluate the safety and efficacy of a single study drug, ABBV-CLS-7262, in participants with ALS.

Enrolling by invitation5 enrollment criteria

New Magnetic Resonance Imaging Biomarkers in Amyotrophic Lateral Sclerosis

Amyotrophic Lateral Sclerosis

Amyotrophic lateral sclerosis (ALS) is a disabling and rapidly progressive neurodegenerative disorder. There is no treatment that significantly slows progression. Our project aims to find new biomarkers in MRI at three levels: cerebral, medullary and muscular. These markers could allow an earlier diagnosis of the disease by showing more specific lesions of ALS and to quantify these lesions to measure the progression of the disease. This study will use advanced Magnetic Resonance Imaging (MRI) techniques High field (3T) and very high field (7T) MRI. Results from neurological and electrophysiological tests will be compared to the MRI. Subjects will be recruited from ALS center of Marseille, France. MRI will be done on ALS patients at baseline, at 3 month and at 6 month intervals.

Recruiting5 enrollment criteria

Extension Study Evaluating The Safety And Tolerability of AMX0035

Amyotrophic Lateral Sclerosis

The primary objective is to evaluate the safety and tolerability of AMX0035 over 108 weeks of open label treatment for participants previously enrolled in Study A35-004 (PHOENIX).

Enrolling by invitation26 enrollment criteria

Telehealth Implementation of Brain-Computer Interface

Amyotrophic Lateral SclerosisStroke

Determine if Telehealth intervention can allow/empower a caregiver (who is untrained) to effectively implement and utilize a Brain-Computer Interface for communication with a participant who is "Locked in" following progression of Amyotrophic Lateral Sclerosis and other conditions.

Recruiting2 enrollment criteria

New Therapeutic Strategy in ALS Based on Metabolic Status and Associated Metabolic Pathways.

Amyotrophic Lateral Sclerosis

Amyotrophic lateral sclerosis (ALS) is a neurodegenerative disease that affects central and peripheral motor neurons. None of the clinical trials conducted have been clearly successful and the disease remains incurable, putting patients' vital prognosis at risk in the medium term. An alteration of the basal metabolism leading to hypermetabolism has been described in several articles in the literature. The causes of this hypermetabolism and the precise exploration of the metabolic pathways involved are still poorly understood. The fibroblasts of ALS patients may be the site of some metabolic disturbances in this disease with a hypothetical specific basal metabolic profile. These cells are adapted to different metabolic explorations such as omnic approaches. Superficial skin biopsy followed by fibroblast culture can provide a considerable biobank. This cellular richness will allow us, in ALS patients and their controls, to perform metabolomic and lipidomic approaches, as well as the quantification transcriptomic approach."

Recruiting29 enrollment criteria

Awareness Detection and Communication in Disorders of Consciousness

Disorder of ConsciousnessParalysis3 more

STUDY OVERVIEW Brain injury can result in a loss of consciousness or awareness, to varying degrees. Some injuries are mild and cause relatively minor changes in consciousness. However, in severe cases a person can be left in a state where they are "awake" but unaware, which is called unresponsive wakefulness syndrome (UWS, previously known as a vegetative state). Up to 43% of patients with a UWS diagnosis, regain some conscious awareness, and are then reclassified as minimally conscious after further assessment by clinical experts. Many of those in the minimally conscious state (MCS) and all with unresponsive wakefulness syndrome (UWS) are incapable of providing any, or consistent, overt motor responses and therefore, in some cases, existing measures of consciousness are not able to provide an accurate assessment. Furthermore, patients with locked-in syndrome (LIS), which is not a disorder of consciousness as patients are wholly aware, also, struggle to produce overt motor responses due to paralysis and anarthria, leading to long delays in accurate diagnoses using current measures to determine levels of consciousness and awareness. There is evidence that LIS patients, and a subset of patients with prolonged disorders of consciousness (DoC), can imagine movement (such as imagining lifting a heavy weight with their right arm) when given instructions presented either auditorily or visually - and the pattern of brain activity that they produce when imagining these movements, can be recorded using a method known as electroencephalography (or EEG). With these findings, the investigators have gathered evidence that EEG-based bedside detection of conscious awareness is possible using Brain- Computer Interface (BCI) technology - whereby a computer programme translates information from the users EEG-recorded patterns of activity, to computer commands that allow the user to interact via a user interface. The BCI system for the current study employs three possible imagined movement combinations for a two-class movement classification; left- vs right-arm, right-arm vs feet, and left-arm vs feet. Participants are trained, using real-time feedback on their performance, to use one of these combinations of imagined movement to respond to 'yes' or 'no' answer questions in the Q&A sessions, by imagining one movement for 'yes' and the other for 'no'. A single combination of movements is chosen for each participant at the outset, and this participant-specific combination is used throughout their sessions. The study comprises three phases. The assessment Phase I (sessions 1-2) is to determine if the patient can imagine movements and produce detectable modulation in sensorimotor rhythms and thus is responding to instructions. Phase II (sessions 3-6) involves motor-imagery (MI) -BCI training with neurofeedback to facilitate learning of brain activity modulation; Phase III (sessions 7-10) assesses patients' MI-BCI response to closed questions, categorized to assess biographical, numerical, logical, and situational awareness. The present study augments the evidence of the efficacy for EEG-based BCI technology as an objective movement-independent diagnostic tool for the assessment of, and distinction between, PDoC and LIS patients.

Recruiting10 enrollment criteria

COMMAND Early Feasibility Study: Implantable BCI to Control a Digital Device for People With Paralysis...

Neurologic DisorderParalysis11 more

The Synchron motor neuroprosthesis (MNP) is intended to be used in subjects with severe motor impairment, unresponsive to medical or rehabilitative therapy and a persistent functioning motor cortex. The purpose of this research is to evaluate safety and feasibility. The MNP is a type of implantable brain computer interface which bypasses dysfunctional motor neurons. The device is designed to restore the transmission of neural signal from the cerebral cortex utilized for neuromuscular control of digital devices, resulting in a successful execution of non-mechanical digital commands.

Recruiting15 enrollment criteria

BrainGate2: Feasibility Study of an Intracortical Neural Interface System for Persons With Tetraplegia...

TetraplegiaSpinal Cord Injuries4 more

The purpose of this study is to obtain preliminary device safety information and demonstrate proof of principle (feasibility) of the ability of people with tetraplegia to control a computer cursor and other assistive devices with their thoughts.

Recruiting8 enrollment criteria
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