8 Clinical Trials for Various Conditions
This multi-center, randomized controlled feasibility trial will assess a 20-week home-based exercise intervention in youth with Multiple Sclerosis (MS). The goal is to determine the feasibility of conducting a larger, definitive trial on exercise training as a non-pharmacological approach to improve disease outcomes in this population. Participants will be randomized to either an Exercise Training group or a Mobility and Flexibility Training group. The investigators will evaluate differences between the two groups in physical activity levels, mediators of physical activity, and psychosocial outcomes. Assessments, including clinical exams, brain MRI, eye tracking, cognitive testing, blood draws, and questionnaires, will occur at baseline and after 20 weeks. Accelerometry will be done at baseline, 10 weeks, and 20 weeks to track physical activity. The primary objectives are to assess the feasibility of recruiting, retaining, and randomizing youth with MS and to evaluate adherence to the exercise intervention and coaching sessions. Exploratory objectives include examining changes in depressive symptoms, cognitive function, blood biomarkers (BDNF and irisin), brain volume, and fitness levels in response to the intervention. Approximately 40 participants will be enrolled from four sites in Canada and the United States. Primary outcomes include feasibility, acceptability, and fidelity measures. Exploratory outcomes include blood biomarkers, brain MRI, cognitive testing, and other neuropsychological measures.
This study has the potential to contribute to a more complete understanding of the independent and combined effects of cannabis use and HIV on the brain and on inflammation. Such knowledge may inform future strategies for treating brain disease and inflammation. Participants will be randomly assigned to one of two groups, both of which will receive the same treatment in a different order over a period of about 6 weeks. The visits include physical examinations, blood tests, and other procedures designed to monitor subject safety and measure the effects of the study drug.
The Economic Impact Study of IVIG treatment for PANS is a part of the Unhide™ Project, which is a research initiative developed by the Brain Inflammation Collaborative. Specifically, the Unhide™ project is a collection of investigations with the overall goal of better understanding the problems with thinking and mood that can sometimes be symptoms of conditions like autoimmune disease, infection-associated chronic conditions like Long COVID, ME/CFS, PANDAS, PANS, and other illnesses. Your contribution to this research will allow us to better describe these symptoms and understand what causes them, how they develop, and how they can best be treated and prevented. This study seeks to assess how PANDAS/PANS affects the financial well-being of families who pursue IVIG treatment, as well as the overall health and quality of life of children with the condition. By gathering data through this survey, we aim to gain important insights into the economic consequences of treating - or not treating - PANS with IVIG, including how it impacts parents' ability to work and children's ability to attend school. Key Eligibility Criteria * Aged 2-89, U.S. resident, fluent in English, and have access to computer and/or smartphone * Suspected or confirmed diagnosis of PANS/PANDAS * Have received IVIG OR have sought and/or been prescribed IVIG but have not received it
This study aims to use a clinically validated metagenomic next-generation sequencing (mNGS) assay to provide a demonstration of precision medicine for diagnosis of acute infectious disease in hospitalized patients. From June 2016 to June 2017, 200 patients will be enrolled from multiple hospitals in California and outside of California. Patients will be evaluated to determine the impact on the mNGS assay on diagnostic yield, hospital costs and clinical outcomes.
The purpose of this study is to determine the effects of triptans and doxycycline on neuroinflammatory markers in acute migraine.
The purpose of this project is to investigate the role of both neural inflammation and pre-existing neurodegenerative pathology in the risk and pathogenesis of post-operative cognitive dysfunction (POCD). To achieve this goal, the investigators will combine blood and cerebrospinal fluid (CSF) sampling, standardized cognitive tests, and dynamic neurophysiological markers of cortical network dysfunction in the form of event-related potentials (ERPs), to assess the link between neurodegeneration and neuroinflammation in the pathogenesis of POCD.
The purpose of the present research protocol is to investigate and identify translocator protein 18kDa, MRI DTI, and EEG/ERPs, markers of Chronic Systemic Symptoms (CSS).
The investigator proposes to perform a Phase I study assessing safety, efficacy, and biomarker response to the therapeutic interventions of Etanercept followed by mifepristone for veterans with Gulf War Illness. The investigator will conduct and repeat the exercise challenge before treatment and on therapy to assess the impact of the interventions on homeostatic regulation and the dynamic model identified in prior studies.