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Active clinical trials for "Tremor"

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A Study of Suvecaltamide in Adults With Moderate to Severe Residual Tremor in Parkinson's Disease...

Parkinson DiseaseTremor

This is a 17-week double-blind, placebo-controlled, randomized, flexible-dosing, parallel-group, multicenter study designed to evaluate the efficacy and safety of suvecaltamide for the treatment of moderate to severe residual tremor in adult participants with Parkinson's disease (PD). The target population represents participants who have tremor that is not adequately controlled by PD medications and that interferes with their activities of daily living (ADL) and/or with their performance of tasks.

Recruiting38 enrollment criteria

Open Label Study for the Use of Transcranial Ultrasound Treatment of Tremor

TremorParkinson Disease1 more

The purpose of this Phase I open label study is to evaluate longer term tolerability and potential effectiveness of transcranial ultrasound in people with tremor as a results of Parkinson's Disease or Essential Tremor.

Recruiting25 enrollment criteria

Bilateral Essential Tremor Treatment With Gamma Knife

Essential Tremor

Combined Phase II/III, multi-center, prospective, single-blinded trial. Ten (10) patients with essential tremor who previously underwent successful and uncomplicated GK thalamotomy for essential tremor will undergo a contralateral treatment. The incidence of side effects will be determined at 3 months postoperatively, graded per the CTCAE v5 and analyzed by a data safety monitoring board. Upon successful review, this Phase II trial will be converted to a Phase III trial of utility that will enrol 40 additional patients. The primary outcome will be the change in QUEST score at 12 months postoperatively, as well as a patient-reported assessment of Health Utility. Secondary outcomes will include objective tremor, gait and speech assessments (filmed and scored by blinded evaluators), as well as quality of life questionnaires and adverse events questionnaires. Outcomes will be assessed at baseline, as well as 3, 6, 12, 24 and 36 months post-operatively.

Recruiting9 enrollment criteria

DBS of Posterior Subthalamic Area (PSA) and Ventral Intermediate Nucleus (VIM) in Essential Tremor...

Essential Tremor

Deep brain stimulation (DBS) of the ventral intermediate nucleus of the thalamus (VIM) is an FDA approved treatment for medication refractory essential tremor (ET). However, VIM stimulation can be associated with impacts on speech and balance. There is also suggestion that there may be habituation to stimulation in more than half of these patients. Stimulation of the posterior subthalamic area (PSA) has been found to be beneficial in tremor control as well. In fact, there is thought that the improvement in tremor in standard VIM DBS stimulation may be related to stimulation effects on the PSA. Updates in DBS stimulation allow to stimulate more than one area of the brain independently, while using a single lead. In this study, we will recruit patient who are referred for VIM DBS to a randomized cross-over trial in which they will receive VIM, PSA, or dual stimulation. We will assess tremor qualitatively and quantitatively, in addition to evaluating side effects, including quantitative gait analysis on each setting. The pre-operative, operative, and initial programming evaluation will be performed per standard of care. After baseline assessment and initial programming, subjects will be evaluated in a blinded manner after they have been on each setting for 2 weeks. The entire duration of the study from baseline visit through final study visit will be 17 weeks. For subjects who are clinically evaluated in our outpatient clinics, we will review their charts at 6 months for stimulation parameters and clinical information as it relates to their tremor.

Recruiting17 enrollment criteria

The Swedish Essential Tremor (SWEET) Trial

Essential Tremor

To evaluate the effect of deep brain stimulation (DBS) vs best medical treatment in essential tremor (ET) in a randomized, single-blinded controlled trial.

Recruiting2 enrollment criteria

Physiology, Imaging and Modeling of Essential Tremor

Essential TremorParkinson Disease1 more

This project aims to investigate novel ways to deliver brain stimulation to Essential Tremor (ET) patients by introducing software changes to their existing devices. The study team aims to investigate safety and efficacy of these new stimulation parameters in patients with ET.

Recruiting2 enrollment criteria

Multicentre RCT of Awake Versus Asleep Tractography Based DBS for ET

Essential TremorDeep Brain Stimulation3 more

Rationale: Deep brain stimulation (DBS) of the thalamus is an effective surgical treatment for patients with disabling essential tremor, despite optimal pharmacological treatment. To date, the standard DBS procedure is performed under local anesthesia which is very burdensome for patients. It is now possible to directly visualize the target (motor) area in the thalamus due to advances in modern imaging techniques. DBS surgery could be performed under general anesthesia (asleep). Objective: The primary objective of the study is to determine whether asleep thalamic DBS surgery provides an equal tremor reduction compared to awake thalamic DBS surgery, measured by the clinically validated Essential Tremor Rating Assessment Scale after six months of DBS. Secondary outcomes are: disease related daily functioning, adverse effects, operation time, quality of life, patient satisfaction with treatment outcome and patient evaluation of treatment burden. Study design: The study will be a multicentre prospective randomized open label blinded (PROBE) endpoint trial comparing thalamic DBS under general versus local anesthesia. Study population: A total of 110 patients with disabling essential tremor despite optimal pharmacological treatment will be randomized. Intervention (if applicable): Patients will be randomized for asleep DBS or awake DBS. According to the standard DBS procedure, two brain-electrodes are connected to an implanted neurostimulator, which is placed subcutaneously in the subclavicular area Main study parameter/endpoints: The primary outcome measure is the change in tremor score on the Essential Tremor Rating Assessment Scale after 6 months of thalamic DBS. The secondary outcome measures are the Amsterdam Linear Disability Score for functional health status, Quality of Life in Essential Tremor Questionnaire, patient satisfaction with the treatment, patient evaluation of treatment burden, operating time, hospitalization time, change of tremor medication, side effects and complications. Nature and extent of the burden and risks associated with participation, benefit and group relatedness: Awake DBS at present is very burdensome and by many patients and health care providers considered to be an overly invasive treatment for essential tremor. Through this trial, we aim to investigate whether asleep DBS in essential tremor can become the new treatment standard. This is expected to increase the accessibility for DBS and subsequently would allow more people with essential tremor to be helped, as well as in an earlier stage of their disease than currently; more patients will benefit for a longer time period from DBS. Asleep DBS will have a shorter procedure length. The proposed research project involves treatment options that are standard care in daily practice. The therapies will not be combined with other research products. Both treatments have a low risk of serious complications and a higher risk of minor side effects. Regular follow up will be used. Participation in this study constitutes moderate risk according to NFU criteria for human research.

Recruiting10 enrollment criteria

Pilot Study of the Felix System in Patients With Essential Tremor and Parkinson's Tremor

Essential TremorParkinson Disease

A prospective, open-label, multi-center pilot study designed to evaluate the safety and effectiveness of the Felix system in the relief of upper limb tremors in adults with essential tremor and Parkinson's disease.

Recruiting27 enrollment criteria

Coordinated Reset Deep Brain Stimulation for Essential Tremor

Essential TremorUpper Extremity Essential Tremor

Deep brain stimulation (DBS) is a surgical procedure for the treatment of Essential Tremor (ET). A novel approach to current DBS approaches is called coordinated reset DBS (CR-DBS) which uses different patterns of stimulation at lower currents and can address the limitations of traditional DBS that uses continuous high amplitude, high frequency stimulation. This study will evaluate the feasibility, safety and short-term efficacy of thalamic CR-DBS in upper extremity ET. The goal of this study is to evaluate the safety and short-term efficacy of thalamic CR- DBS in ET, including the acute (during CR-DBS) and carryover (following DBS cessation) effects, and compare these to those induced by clinically optimized T-DBS. To achieve our goal, a low-risk, two-phase clinical study will be conducted in patients with upper extremity (UE) ET. The first aim is to identify the spatial location and peak frequency of tremor related oscillatory activities in VIM (Phase I). The second aim is to compare the acute effects of thalamic CR-DBS to clinically optimized T-DBS (Phase II).

Recruiting15 enrollment criteria

Modulating Cerebellar Activity With Low-intensity Focused Ultrasound Stimulation for Primary Orthostatic...

Orthostatic Tremor

Primary orthostatic tremor (POT) is a rare movement disorder that is manifested through high frequency tremor of weight bearing limbs. This is often accompanied by a debilitating sensation of falling. POT has been linked to abnormal activity of the cerebellum, a structure deep within the brain. However, established non-invasive brain stimulation techniques can only modulate brain activity and plasticity in superficial brain areas with low spatial resolution. This limits their efficacy when targeting the cerebellum. In contrast, low intensity focused ultrasound (LIFUS) is a novel non-invasive brain stimulation technique that permits stimulation with high spatial focality and can reach greater depth compared other methods. Therefore, LIFUS is well suited to modulate cerebellar activity and has the potential to be a superior technique for the management of POT. This study will investigate the effectiveness of MRI-guided bilateral cerebellar LIFUS stimulation for the treatment of POT and evaluate the underlying changes in brain circuits caused by the stimulation. Comparisons between symptoms and connectivity of brain circuits pre- and post-stimulation will be conducted to assess the effects of cerebellar LIFUS. The effects of real stimulation will also be compared to sham stimulation. This study is the first to apply LIFUS for neuromodulation in POT and will be critical in developing therapeutic LIFUS protocols.

Recruiting14 enrollment criteria
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