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NCT05653466
Adaptive Trial Scheduling in Naming Treatment for Aphasia
Conditions: Aphasia, Stroke
Sex: All
Ages: 18 Years – N/A
Phase: NA
Enrollment: 32
Sponsor: University of Pittsburgh
Location: United States
Summary
Aphasia is a language disorder caused by stroke and other acquired brain injuries that affects over two million people in the United States and which interferes with life participation and quality of life.
Anomia (i.e., word- finding difficulty) is a primary frustration for people with aphasia.
Picture-based naming treatments for anomia are widely used in aphasia rehabilitation, but current treatment approaches do not address the long-term retention of naming abilities and do not focus on using these naming abilities in daily life.
The current research aims to evaluate novel anomia treatment approaches to improve long-term retention and generalization to everyday life.This study is one of two that are part of a larger grant.
This record is for sub-study 2, which will evaluate the benefits of adaptive trial spacing.
Eligibility Criteria
Inclusion Criteria:Existing diagnosis of chronic (>6 months) aphasia subsequent to left hemisphere stroke.Impaired performance on 2/8 sections of the Comprehensive Aphasia Test.Must have access to a high-speed internet connection and be able to participate in telehealth.Exclusion Criteria:History of other acquired or progressive neurological disease.Significant language comprehension impairments (per performance on the CAT - individuals will be excluded if their spoken language comprehension mean modality T- score on the CAT falls below 40).Unmanaged drug / alcohol dependence.Severe diagnosed mood or behavioral disorders that require specialize mental health interventions.
Source: ClinicalTrials.gov (NCT05653466). StuddyBuddy aggregates publicly available trial information.