The Neurobiology of Two Distinct Types of Progressive Apraxia of Speech
Launched by MAYO CLINIC · Oct 16, 2017
Trial Information
Current as of June 26, 2025
Recruiting
Keywords
ClinConnect Summary
This clinical trial is focused on understanding two different types of Progressive Apraxia of Speech (PAOS), a condition that affects how people communicate. Researchers want to use brain imaging and various tests to see how these two types differ from each other. They are currently looking for participants aged 18 and older who speak English and can provide information about their speech difficulties, which must be assessed by a speech-language pathologist.
To participate, individuals need to show that their speech is getting worse and is still clear enough for proper evaluation. However, those with other serious speech problems or who are pregnant cannot join the study. Participants will undergo tests and imaging, which will help researchers learn more about PAOS and ultimately improve understanding and treatment options for people with this condition.
Gender
ALL
Eligibility criteria
- Inclusion Criteria:
- • 1. All enrolled patients must be over the age of 18, speak English as their primary language, and have an informant who can provide an independent evaluation of functioning.
- • 2. Each new patient must present with a chief complaint of progressive impairment of speech and must have evidence of AOS documented by a speech-language pathologist during routine clinical evaluation.
- • 3. At study entry, all patients must have speech sufficiently intelligible for a confident diagnosis of AOS, dysarthria, and/or aphasia, and for acoustic analysis.
- Exclusion Criteria:
- • 1. Any patient whose speech is not intelligible enough for confident speech-language diagnosis will be excluded from the study.
- • 2. All patients with concurrent illnesses that could account for speech deficits (e.g., traumatic brain injury, strokes, developmental syndromes), and patients meeting criteria for another neurodegenerative disease (e.g., Alzheimer's type dementia57), will be excluded.
- • 3. Patients with aphasia or dysarthria who do not have PAOS, or whose aphasia or dysarthria at study entry is more severe than PAOS, will be excluded.
- • 4. All women who are pregnant, or post-partum and breast-feeding, will be excluded as they are unable to undergo the required imaging. All women who can become pregnant must have a pregnancy test no more than 48 hours before the DaTscan.
- • 5. Patients will also be excluded if MRI is contraindicated (e.g., metal in head, cardiac pace maker), if there is severe claustrophobia, if there are conditions that may confound brain imaging studies (e.g. structural abnormalities, including subdural hematoma or intracranial neoplasm), or if they are medically unstable or are on medications that might affect brain structure or metabolism (e.g. chemotherapy).
- • 6. Patients will be excluded if they do not have an informant, or do not consent to the research.
About Mayo Clinic
Mayo Clinic is a renowned nonprofit medical practice and research institution dedicated to providing comprehensive healthcare and advancing medical knowledge through innovative research and education. With a commitment to patient-centered care, Mayo Clinic conducts numerous clinical trials aimed at exploring new therapies and improving treatment outcomes across various disciplines. Leveraging a multidisciplinary approach, the institution collaborates with leading experts and cutting-edge technology to ensure rigorous scientific standards and ethical practices in all its research endeavors. Through its trials, Mayo Clinic seeks to translate breakthroughs in science into tangible benefits for patients, fostering advancements in medicine that enhance health and quality of life.
Contacts
Jennifer Cobb
Immunology at National Institute of Allergy and Infectious Diseases (NIAID)
Locations
Rochester, Minnesota, United States
Patients applied
Trial Officials
Keith Josephs, MD
Principal Investigator
Mayo Clinic
Timeline
First submit
Trial launched
Trial updated
Estimated completion
Not reported
Similar Trials