Plain-English translation of NCT05885295 on ClinicalTrials.gov ↗ · Source last updated · Translation generated · How we translate trials
Read our Stroke research guide →Researchers at Imperial College London are creating a new digital assessment tool called IC3 to detect thinking and memory problems in stroke survivors. The tool includes 22 short tasks that can be done on a computer in about an hour, and doesn't require a specialist to administer it. The study will test this tool in 700 people and compare it to existing assessment methods.
Many stroke survivors experience problems with thinking, memory, and language that aren't always caught by current tests. This research aims to create a faster, easier, and more affordable way to detect these problems so that people can get the right support and treatment sooner.
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If you join, you'll complete a series of thinking and memory tests on a computer, answer questionnaires about your health, and potentially have brain imaging (MRI scans) done. The cognitive tests take about 60 to 70 minutes to complete. Researchers will track your progress and cognitive recovery over the first year after your stroke, with follow-up assessments to see how you're doing over time.
AI-generated summary from trial data · Jun 1, 2026 · Not medical advice
United Kingdom
Imperial College London
Enrollment target
~700 participants
Started
December 2021
Primary completion
May 2028
Age range
18 Years and older
Last updated on clinicaltrials.gov in June 2023.
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