Informations générales
  • Catégorie de maladie Autre (BASEC)
  • État du recrutement recrutement pas encore commencé (BASEC/ICTRP)
  • Lieu de l’étude
    Berne, Genève
    (BASEC)
  • Responsable de l'étude Adrian Guggisberg adrian.guggisberg@hug.ch (BASEC)
  • Source(s) de données BASEC: Importé de 19.01.2026 ICTRP: N/A
  • Date de mise à jour 19.01.2026 09:00
HumRes67357 | SNCTP000006611 | BASEC2025-00765

Vision Training with Neurofeedback

  • Catégorie de maladie Autre (BASEC)
  • État du recrutement recrutement pas encore commencé (BASEC/ICTRP)
  • Lieu de l’étude
    Berne, Genève
    (BASEC)
  • Responsable de l'étude Adrian Guggisberg adrian.guggisberg@hug.ch (BASEC)
  • Source(s) de données BASEC: Importé de 19.01.2026 ICTRP: N/A
  • Date de mise à jour 19.01.2026 09:00

Résumé de l'étude

Visual field deficits are a common consequence of acquired brain injuries and affect people of all ages. These visual problems make daily life more challenging – for example, when reading, driving, or moving safely. However, there is currently no effective therapy to improve visual field deficits. Previous training methods have focused on maximizing brain activity during a task. However, new findings show that the best performance is achieved when the brain is already in a state of high communication before the task. Our research shows that people can learn to enhance communication between brain regions through neurofeedback. Studies have shown that neurofeedback can help people after a stroke: it improves the collaboration of brain areas important for movement – and can thus help to increase mobility. Building on these results, this study investigates whether EEG neurofeedback can support the visual center in the brain to improve vision in patients with chronic visual field deficits. The main goal of the study is to evaluate the effectiveness of neurofeedback in improving visual field deficits. More specifically, we examine the development of visual ability (expansion of the visual field, contrast sensitivity). The neurofeedback method has already been studied with healthy participants at Inselspital Bern, but it is not yet approved in Switzerland for the treatment of visual field deficits. This study aims to show whether neurofeedback can improve visual ability in patients with chronic visual field deficits.

(BASEC)

Intervention étudiée

This study investigates how EEG neurofeedback works. Electrodes on the scalp measure brain activity, and participants receive immediate feedback – in the form of sounds. The sounds indicate how well they succeed in activating certain areas of the brain. The goal is to improve collaboration between the visual areas of the brain to promote vision. Additionally, all participants undergo a magnetic resonance imaging (MRI) scan. This helps us to fine-tune the neurofeedback to the brain more accurately.

(BASEC)

Maladie en cours d'investigation

Visual field deficits after stroke

(BASEC)

Critères de participation
- Chronic and stable visual field deficits - 12 months or more after a stroke - Age between 50 and 70 years - Ability to provide informed consent (BASEC)

Critères d'exclusion
- Inability to concentrate during longer therapy sessions - Eye diseases affecting the visual field - Non-MRI-compatible metal in the body - New stroke during the study period - Presence of a spatial processing disorder (neglect) (BASEC)

Lieu de l’étude

Berne, Genève

(BASEC)

non disponible

Sponsor

Adrian Guggisberg Service de Neurorééducation, Hôpitaux Universitaires de Genève

(BASEC)

Contact pour plus d'informations sur l'étude

Personne de contact en Suisse

Adrian Guggisberg

+41 (0) 22 372 37 00

adrian.guggisberg@hug.ch

Service de Neurorééducation, Hôpitaux Universitaires de Genève

(BASEC)

Informations scientifiques

non disponible

Nom du comité d'éthique approbateur (pour les études multicentriques, uniquement le comité principal)

Commission cantonale d'éthique de Genève

(BASEC)

Date d'approbation du comité d'éthique

30.09.2025

(BASEC)


Identifiant de l'essai ICTRP
non disponible

Titre officiel (approuvé par le comité d'éthique)
Neurofeedback-based Visual Restoration Therapy (BASEC)

Titre académique
non disponible

Titre public
non disponible

Maladie en cours d'investigation
non disponible

Intervention étudiée
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Type d'essai
non disponible

Plan de l'étude
non disponible

Critères d'inclusion/exclusion
non disponible

non disponible

Critères d'évaluation principaux et secondaires
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non disponible

Date d'enregistrement
non disponible

Inclusion du premier participant
non disponible

Sponsors secondaires
non disponible

Contacts supplémentaires
non disponible

ID secondaires
non disponible

Résultats-Données individuelles des participants
non disponible

Informations complémentaires sur l'essai
non disponible

Résultats de l'essai

Résumé des résultats

non disponible

Lien vers les résultats dans le registre primaire

non disponible