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18 clinical studies listed.

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Cognitive Impairment, Mild

Tundra lists 18 Cognitive Impairment, Mild clinical trials. Each listing includes eligibility criteria, study locations, and direct links to research sites in the Tundra directory.

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NOT YET RECRUITING

NCT07228338

Cholinergic Enhancement of Theta

The goal of this study is to learn about the effects of Cobenfy KarXT (xanomeline and trospium chloride) on episodic memory processing, including specific effects on areas of the brain involved in memory and changes it may have on brain activity. The investigators will do this by testing epileptic patients who are already undergoing intracranial surgery for seizure monitoring, and measuring the activity from the brain areas being assessed. The main questions it aims to answer are 1) whether Cobenfy KarXT changes memory activity based on its agonist effect on muscarinic receptors and acetylcholine, and 2) what the nature of these brain activity changes are. This work builds on previous experiments evaluating cholinergic antagonists. Participants will complete two treatment arms. One of these will be with the drug, and the other will be with a placebo pill, so that the participants are unaware which session the actual drug has been received. Patients will complete a verbal serial recall and/or associative recognition task each of the two days. An anesthesiologist or patient nurse will administer either the drug or the placebo at a critical point which addresses both of the research questions. Researchers will compare the brain activity between the two treatment arms to determine what brain activity changes, and whether there is an additional behavioral effect on memory.

Gender: All

Ages: 18 Years - 75 Years

Updated: 2026-04-09

1 state

Epilepsy
Seizures
Cognitive Impairment, Mild
+2
RECRUITING

NCT07470216

Cognitive Assessment And Post-Operative Complications After Surgery: Linking Anaesthesia And Risk

Many older people can experience confusion, memory problems, or a decline in their thinking after major surgery. These problems are sometimes called 'postoperative neurocognitive disorders' or PND and can affect recovery and a person's ability to live independently. The investigators want to find out the best way to study these problems in older patients undergoing surgery. This is a 'feasibility study', which means we are testing the research methods. The investigators want to see if it is possible to ask participants to do memory tests and give blood samples before and after their operation. The investigators are hoping to include around 40 patients over 2 years in this study. The investigators will compare performance in memory (cognitive assessment) findings before and after surgery and link this to data taken from the anaesthetic, including the types of drugs used, duration, brain features from processed electroencephalogram monitoring and standard recommended monitoring. In addition the investigators will link this to blood sample markers of brain health and function (biomarkers). The results of this study will help the investigators plan a much larger study in the future, with the ultimate goal of making surgery safer for the brain.

Gender: All

Ages: 70 Years - Any

Updated: 2026-04-08

1 state

Cognitive Impairment
Cognitive Impairment, Mild
Cognitive Impairment, Progressive
+3
RECRUITING

NCT06584110

Buddy-Up Dyadic Physical Activity Program for Persons With Dementia and Family Caregivers

The global cost of dementia is over 818 billion, and a further rise is expected in the next decade. While family caregiving is the backbone of the formal care service, promoting "living well with dementia" needs to extend to a dyadic perspective to address the needs of persons with dementia (PwD) and their caregivers. Unique to dementia caregiving, imbalanced exchange in the assistance, interaction, relationship and autonomy between the partners in a care dyad always challenges their social interaction and relationships. Such eroding dyadic dynamics not only worsens the mental health of caregivers, but also compromises the quality of caregiving, fosters more dementia deterioration, and eventually complicates the caregiving process. Nevertheless, least attention is directed to dyadic dynamics in promoting living well with dementia. Partner exercise is designed in a way which requires collaboration of two members to enable the workout of each other. In addition to the benefits of exercise on dementia symptom control and caregiver's stress management, partner exercise provides a meaningful encounter to encourage reciprocity, collaboration and relationship closeness within the care dyad. This is a sequential mixed-method study including a multicenter RCT to evaluate the effects of the 16-week enhanced BUDPA and a descriptive qualitative study to explore the care dyad's overall engagement experience and perceptions. The study will be conducted in 8 elderly community centres operated by four NGOs. The primary aim of the study investigates the effects of a 16-week enhanced BUDPA program on the health and dyadic dynamic of the persons with dementia and their family caregivers (Objective 1-3). The secondary aim explores dyads' overall experience in program engagement, particularly in terms of perceived benefits, challenges, and experience in self-directed practice (Objective 4). The primary outcomes include PwD's cognitive function and caregivers' mood status. We hypothesize that the 16-week enhanced BUDPA program will be more effective than usual care immediately post-test (T1: week 16) and 3 months (T2: week 29) and 6 months thereafter (T3: week 42) in: 1. improving cognitive function, NPS and HRQL of persons with mild to early-moderate dementia. 2. improving the affect, positive aspects of caregiving, and HRQL of family caregivers. 3. improving the dyadic dynamic between the person with dementia and family caregiver in a dyad.

Gender: All

Ages: 18 Years - Any

Updated: 2026-04-06

Cognitive Impairment, Mild
Dementia, Mild
Dementia
+1
RECRUITING

NCT06669546

Effects of Real vs. Soundless Acoustic Stimulation During Deep Sleep on Brain Activity, Memory, and Blood Biomarkers in Older Adults (60-85) With Mild Memory Impairment

This study aims to explore a non-invasive way to improve memory and slow cognitive decline in older adults by enhancing sleep quality. Dementia, a leading cause of death worldwide, is often associated with disturbed sleep, particularly the loss of deep, slow-wave sleep (SWS). SWS is important for memory and clearing waste from the brain. Poor SWS can worsen memory loss and allow harmful waste to build up, which may increase the risk of dementia. The investigators are testing whether phase-locked auditory stimulation (PLAS) can improve SWS in people at a mild stage of cognitive impairment. PLAS uses short sounds played at specific moments to strengthen slow-wave brain activity during sleep. The investigators previous laboratory based research has shown that this can improve memory and help with clearing waste from the brain. Now, the investigators want to test this in a real-world setting, over a longer period, which is unfeasible in a laboratory setting. In this study, 60 older adults will use home-use devices that deliver either real or sham (soundless) PLAS across two different 4-week periods. Memory will be tested using engaging "serious games." Before and after each experimental period, blood samples will be taken to measure dementia-related markers, and cognitive batteries will be performed. The investigators expect that PLAS will improve sleep, and that this will have a downstream effect on memory and brain clearance, potentially slowing the process of cognitive decline. If successful, this could lead to the development of an affordable treatment that helps people maintain brain health and prevent dementia.

Gender: All

Ages: 60 Years - 85 Years

Updated: 2026-04-03

Cognitive Decline
Alzheimer Disease
Subjective Cognitive Decline (SCD)
+2
RECRUITING

NCT07237009

Effects of Personalized Digital Reminiscence Therapy on Patients With Neurocognitive Disorders

This study aims to observe the effects of daily personalized digital reminiscence sessions, conducted with the help of a digital conversational agent, and to determine whether these sessions lead to improvements in symptoms such as apathy and depression. The researchers therefore seek to observe whether this daily use can improve certain aspects of well-being, such as motivation, mood, sleep quality, quality of life, and engagement with the tool. The study also aims to assess whether simple reminders delivered via the application are sufficient to encourage regular use without external assistance. Participants will: * Use the reminiscence app for 25 days for 10-15 minutes. * Have a primary caregiver help personalize the app by sharing family memories, other relatives may optionally contribute in a private group. * Complete brief questionnaires at the start and during follow-up routine visits (for example, apathy and depression scales, sleep, and quality of life).

Gender: All

Ages: 60 Years - Any

Updated: 2026-03-09

Neurocognitive Disorders, Mild
Cognitive Impairment, Mild
Depression Mild
+2
RECRUITING

NCT06639282

Repurposing Siponimod for Alzheimer's Disease

Collaboration with multiple sclerosis (MS) specialty colleagues led us to formulate the central hypothesis that Siponimod could lower the rate of brain atrophy in Alzheimer's disease (AD) subjects. To test our central hypothesis, we will carry out an 18-month Phase II, double-blind, randomized, twoarmed, placebo controlled, proof-of-concept clinical study in early AD subjects (i.e. mild AD) who will be receiving an escalating dose of Siponimod or placebo in the ratio 2:1 for 12 months, followed by a 6-month washout period. The primary outcome measures are safety and tolerability of Siponimod in mild AD subjects. The secondary outcome measures are the rates of brain atrophy derived from volumetric MRI (vMRI) as a proxy for neurodegeneration conducted at baseline, 6, 12, and 18 months. The tertiary outcome measures are the changes in cognition and the levels of AD-associated (e.g., Aβ and tau) and inflammatory biomarkers in CSF after Siponimod exposure. In an exploratory effort, we will also measure plasma inflammatory markers during the entire duration of the study to investigate whether one or more of these markers can be used as dynamic surrogate markers of treatment response. Using our unique experience with the repurposing of immunomodulatory drugs for AD (and NCT #04032626), in the present project we are using elements of clinical trial design that we believe were successful and made some adjustments to fit the pharmacologic and toxic properties of Siponimod.

Gender: All

Ages: 50 Years - 85 Years

Updated: 2026-03-04

1 state

Alzheimer Disease
Mild Alzheimer Disease
MCI With Increased Risk for Alzheimer Disease
+1
ACTIVE NOT RECRUITING

NCT05637801

A Pivotal Study of Sensory Stimulation in Alzheimer's Disease (Hope Study, CA-0011)

This is a randomized, double-blind, sham-controlled, adaptive-design pivotal study of sensory stimulation in subjects with mild to moderate Alzheimer's disease. Up to approximately 670 subjects will be randomized to 12 months of daily treatment with either Active or Sham Sensory Stimulation Systems. Efficacy will be measured using the Alzheimer's Disease Cooperative Study- Activities of Daily Living (ADCS-ADL) assessment and a combined statistical test (CST) of the ADCS-ADL and the Mini-Mental State Exam (MMSE).

Gender: All

Ages: 50 Years - 90 Years

Updated: 2026-02-05

25 states

Alzheimer Disease
Alzheimer Disease 1
Alzheimer Disease 2
+32
ENROLLING BY INVITATION

NCT07298876

Low-intensity Hippocampal Transcranial Ultrasound Stimulation for Managing Cognitive and Sleep Dysfunction in Preclinical Alzheimer's Disease

Background: Sleep disturbances, as a common symptom, can jeopardize the brain health and cognitive function and even lead to cognitive impairments in older adults. The co-occurring sleep disturbances cognitive complaints can significantly affect brain functions, and even be implicated as a key contributing factor in the development of prodromal Alzheimer's disease (AD). At present, very few non-pharmacological therapies are developed for managing these comorbidities in older adults. Focused low-intensity transcranial ultrasound stimulation (TUS) enables to stimulation the deep brain structures, such as hippocampus, with optimized focality and specific frequency. Objectives: 1) To investigate the safety, feasibility and efficacy of a 2-week focused low-intensity hippocampal TUS on the severity of sleep disturbances and cognitive impairments in elderly patients; 2) to determine the sample size of a full-scale randomized clinical trial of low-intensity TUS in patients with preclinical AD; 3) to evaluate the effects of low-intensity TUS on the severity of sleep quality and cognitive functions at 2, 6 and 10 weeks after the treatments. Design: A 2-week randomized, double-blind, controlled clinical trial. Methods: Chinese right-handed preclinical AD patients with sleep disturbances (aged from 60 to 90 years) will be randomly assigned to a 2-week intervention of either low intensity TUS or sham TUS, with 10 participants per arm. Before intervention, T1-weighted magnetic resonance imaging (MRI) data is used to construct individual realistic head model. Comprehensive assessments, including sleep quality, cognitive performance and plasma p-tau217, Aß42 and Aß40 will be conducted at baseline, 2nd week, 6th week and 10th week. Program adherence and adverse effects will be monitored throughout intervention.

Gender: All

Ages: 60 Years - 85 Years

Updated: 2025-12-23

1 state

Sleep Disturbances
Aging
Cognitive Impairment, Mild
RECRUITING

NCT07284446

Depressive Symptoms, Cognitive Impairment, and Outcomes in Hospitalized Chronic Heart Failure Patients

The goal of this observational study is to learn about the prevalence of depressive symptoms and cognitive impairment and their association with worse outcomes in a cohort of hospitalized patients between the ages of 18 ang 85 years with chronic heart failure. The main question it aims to answer is: • Does the presence of depressive symptoms and cognitive impairment lead to worse outcomes in a cohort of hospitalized patients with chronic heart failure? Participants who are hospitalized due to exacerbation of chronic heart failure will answer survey questions to assess their cognitive function and depressive symptoms.

Gender: All

Ages: 18 Years - 85 Years

Updated: 2025-12-16

Congestive Heart Failure Chronic
Cognitive Impairment, Mild
Depressive Symptoms Mild to Moderate in Severity
RECRUITING

NCT06955494

ENACT Program on Auditory Perception and Function, Cognitive Function and Health-related Quality of Life

Although previous studies indicated that tackling hearing loss may have a secondary benefit in improving cognitive function and delaying the onset of dementia, a more integrated care approach to optimize both hearing and cognitive function may be needed for individuals who already developed cognitive decline. To address the dual care needs for PwMCI and hearing impairment, it may be possible to integrate auditory training into cognitive training, as both of them are activity-based and focus on increasing the attention and working memory of an individual to engage in the auditory communication process. Moreover, auditory instruction is one of the core mediums in delivering cognitive training activities. It is highly possible to integrate the auditory training curricular to the corresponding administration process. To tackle the enhanced support need of individuals with dual functional impairment to engage in an integrated training protocol, strategies including a goal-oriented approach and peer support can be integrated to optimize the empowerment network. Including family members in the training is also important, as the auditory-communication process in everyday life would take place in the social interactional context. This is a pilot mixed-method pilot study comprising a randomized controlled trial and a post-trail qualitative interview. A total of 62 participants will be recruited from two community centers. The inclusion criteria include mild cognitive impairment according to Petersen's criteria; with at least one-side hearing impairment as defined by a score of 2- or 3-digit test greater than the norm value on the integrated Digit-in-Noise (iDIN test); has a smartphone to access the online training materials; not received formal cognitive and auditory training in the past 6 months. After the baseline outcome evaluation, they will be randomized to receive the 12-week ENACT program or the usual care control. The nurse-led ENACT program comprises three phases, including i) the goal-oriented health counselling phase, ii) the peer-assisted group-based auditory-cognitive training phase, and iii) the family-engaged active-communication training phase. The outcome evaluation on hearing function, perceived benefit of auditory training, cognitive function, and HRQoL will be assessed at baseline, in the 12th and 18th weeks. Qualitative interviews will be conducted

Gender: All

Ages: 60 Years - Any

Updated: 2025-12-03

Hearing Loss
Cognitive Impairment, Mild
ENROLLING BY INVITATION

NCT06723015

Tau PET Outcomes With Anti-amyloid Immunotherapies

This is an imaging study of patients with mild Alzheimer's disease receiving amyloid-targeting therapy and under the care of neurologists at Mayo Clinic in Rochester, MN.

Gender: All

Ages: 50 Years - 90 Years

Updated: 2025-11-18

1 state

Cognitive Impairment, Mild
Dementia, Mild
Alzheimer Disease
RECRUITING

NCT04262206

Pragmatic Evaluation of Events And Benefits of Lipid-lowering in Older Adults

PREVENTABLE is a multi-center, randomized, parallel group, placebo-controlled superiority study. Participants will be randomized 1:1 to atorvastatin 40 mg or placebo. This large study conducted in community-dwelling older adults without cardiovascular disease (CVD) or dementia will demonstrate the benefit of statins for reducing the primary composite of death, dementia, and persistent disability and secondary composites including mild cognitive impairment (MCI) and cardiovascular events.

Gender: All

Ages: 75 Years - Any

Updated: 2025-11-05

35 states

Cognitive Impairment, Mild
Dementia
Cardiovascular Diseases
ACTIVE NOT RECRUITING

NCT04033510

Acute Cognitive Changes During Atrial Fibrillation Episodes (AFCOG)

Objectives: * First, to determine if patients with a history of AF have acute measurable changes in cognitive functioning while in an episode of AF. * Second, to collect basic insight into what specific physiologic (blood pressure, pulse oximetry, heart rate, temperature) and pharmacologic (antiarrhythmic medications, rate control medications, anticoagulants, antiplatelet medications, etc.) factors minimize the neurological impact on patients while they are in AF. It is hypothesized that when using a tablet-based cognitive testing software - Cambridge Cognition (specifically to assess executive function, learning and working memory: Rapid Visual Information Processing test, Spatial Working Memory/Spatial Span Task tests, One touch Stockings of Cambridge test, Cambridge Gambling Task, Multitasking Test/Intra-Extra Dimensional Set shift tests) - a significant difference will be noted between how the patients perform while in atrial fibrillation compared to the patients' performance while in normal sinus rhythm.

Gender: All

Ages: 35 Years - 80 Years

Updated: 2025-10-14

1 state

Atrial Fibrillation
Cognitive Symptom
Executive Dysfunction
+3
RECRUITING

NCT05594017

Pharmacological Modulation of Brain Oscillations in Memory Processing

The goal of this study is to learn about the effects of scopolamine (an anticholinergic drug) on areas of the brain involved in memory, and changes it may have on brain activity. The investigators will do this by testing epileptic patients who are already undergoing intracranial surgery for seizure monitoring, and measuring the activity from the brain areas being assessed. The main questions it aims to answer are 1) whether scopolamine changes memory activity solely at encoding (the time when the person perceives and determines to remember an item or event) as has previously been found, or if it also can selectively impact retrieval (when the item or event which has been processed is recalled or remembered), and 2) what the nature of the brain activity changes is. Participants will complete two treatment arms. One of these will be with the drug, and the other will be with a saline solution, so that the participants are unaware which session the actual drug has been received. Patients will complete a verbal and/or spatial task each of the two days. An anesthesiologist will administer either the drug or the saline at a critical point which addresses both of the research questions. Researchers will compare the brain activity between the two treatment arms to determine what brain activity changes, and at what time point during memory formation.

Gender: All

Ages: 18 Years - 55 Years

Updated: 2025-10-03

1 state

Epilepsy
Seizures
Cognitive Impairment, Mild
+2
RECRUITING

NCT05201534

Interventions in Mathematics and Cognitive Skills

The purpose of this study is to investigate neurocognitive mechanisms underlying response to intervention aimed at enhancing, and remediating weaknesses in, numerical skills in children, including those with mathematical learning disabilities (MLD).

Gender: All

Ages: 6 Years - 12 Years

Updated: 2025-08-15

1 state

Math Learning Disability
Child Development
Developmental Disability
+25
NOT YET RECRUITING

NCT07105800

Dance Intervention to Improve Executive Function and Physical Performance in Older Adults With Cognitive Impairment

This pilot study investigates the effects of a music-based dance intervention on executive function and physical performance in middle-aged and older adults with cognitive impairment. Dance, as a form of dual-task training, integrates music, rhythmic movement, and cognitive-motor coordination. When combined with group interaction and partner-guided physical cues, it has the potential to enhance both cognitive and motor functions simultaneously. The intervention features a simple, structured dance sequence designed to stimulate rhythm, attention, and coordination through music-based movement. This study aims to evaluate the feasibility and preliminary efficacy of this approach in improving executive function and lower limb physical performance among individuals with cognitive impairment.

Gender: All

Ages: 55 Years - Any

Updated: 2025-08-06

Older Adults
Cognitive Impairment, Mild
NOT YET RECRUITING

NCT06177028

MCLENA-2: A Phase II Clinical Trial for the Assessment of Lenalidomide in Patients With Mild Cognitive Impairment

This is a randomized, double-blind, placebo-controlled, parallel group study. The use of placebo is appropriate to minimize bias related to treatment expectations of the subject, study partner, and site investigator, as well as to changes in the relationship between the subject and study partner that might occur with the initiation of treatment and expectation of improvement in motor symptoms or cognition. Changes in subject/study partner interactions can impact subject mood and might introduce biases that cannot be quantified. The double-blind use of placebo will also prevent bias in the clinical and scientific assessments.

Gender: All

Ages: 50 Years - 90 Years

Updated: 2025-05-18

Cognitive Impairment, Mild
Cognitive Dysfunction
Amyloid Plaque
+2
ACTIVE NOT RECRUITING

NCT03556280

Multi-Center Study of Sensory Stimulation to Improve Brain Function

The Overture Study is a randomized, controlled, single-blind multi-center clinical trial using the GammaSense Stimulation system to study safety, tolerability, and efficacy in people with mild to moderate cognitive impairment.

Gender: All

Ages: 55 Years - Any

Updated: 2021-08-24

3 states

Alzheimer Disease
Cognitive Impairment
Mild Cognitive Impairment
+7