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Browse 1,818 clinical trials for parkinson's disease. Find studies that match your criteria and connect with research centers.
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NCT06834191
The goal of this observational study is to learn if immunosuppressive drug treatment influences the clinical course of Parkinson's disease. Recent research suggests that Parkinson's disease may have an inflammatory background. Numerous studies have identified elevated levels of pro-inflammatory markers in people with Parkinson's disease. Therefore, immunosuppressive drugs may potentially affect the course of this disease. The investigators will recruit people with Parkinson's disease, who receive long-term immunosuppressive treatment for other chronic illnesses, into the study group. The study will also recruit people with Parkinson's disease with no history of immunosuppressive drug treatment into the control group. The main question this study aims to answer is: \> Does immunosuppressive drug treatment slow down the onset and/or progression of Parkinson's disease? Researchers will compare Parkinson's disease progression rates and serum inflammatory marker levels between the study and control group, to see if immunosuppressive drug treatment influences the course of Parkinson's disease. The study requires each participant to attend one hospital appointment. This appointment will be approximately one hour long, and will involve: 1. clinical Parkinson's disease motor assessments conducted by the research team -\> participants will be evaluated in the OFF state, meaning they will not have taken their Parkinson's disease medication the day of the assessment; 2. completion of Parkinson's disease symptom scales; 3. a one-time serum sample collection; 4. detailed medical history obtainment from the participant by the research team, with a primary focus on the patient's immunosuppressive treatment history and individual clinical course of Parkinson's disease.
NCT06899022
The goal of this observational and interventional study is to understand how therapeutic deep brain stimulation (DBS) affects attention, perception and cognition in participants with Parkinson's disease (PD) and essential tremor (ET). The main questions it aims to answer are: * Does impaired control of attention and eye movement in PD alter how social cues are perceived and interpreted? * Does therapeutic DBS improve or worsen attentional and perceptual deficits for social cues in PD and ET? * Can DBS be optimized to restore normal attentional control in PD while remaining an effective therapy for other aspects of the disorder. * What do parts of the brain targeted by DBS contribute to the control of attention? Using an eye tracking camera, investigators will study how participants with PD and ET look at and perceive facial expressions of emotion before and after starting DBS therapy, in comparison to a group of healthy participants without ET, PD or DBS. Participants with PD and ET will see and rate morphed facial expressions on a computer screen in three conditions: * Before starting DBS therapy (over approximately 1 hour). * In the operating room, during the standard procedure to implant DBS electrodes, while the participant is awake (for no more than 15 minutes). * After starting DBS therapy, with brief experimental changes of DBS stimulation level and frequency (over approximately 1 hour).