Clinical Trials Directory

Trials / Completed

CompletedNCT05211752

Eye Movements Recording Using a Mobile : Comparison to Standard Video-oculography in Young Athletes

Eye Movements Recording Using a Smartphone: Comparison to Standard Video-oculography Data in Young Athletes

Status
Completed
Phase
Study type
Observational
Enrollment
46 (actual)
Sponsor
Association de Recherche Bibliographique pour les Neurosciences · Academic / Other
Sex
All
Age
15 Years – 20 Years
Healthy volunteers
Accepted

Summary

This study aims to compare measurements obtained through the e-VOG application (mobile application, usable on smartphones or tablets, to measure eye movements) with measurements from the standard video-oculography device (Eye-Tracker®T2), in young athletes.

Detailed description

e-VOG Young athletes is a collaborative study between the Memory Center of the Rainier III Center (Princess Grace Hospital, Monaco), the Neurology Department of Nice University Hospital (France), and the AS Monaco Football Academy medical team. Memory Center of the Rainier III Center is expert in eye-tracking and is equipped with a standard video-oculography device (Eye-Tracker®T2), which records eye movements at a high frequency and measures saccades parameters (latency, speed, amplitudes etc...). e-VOG is a mobile application, home-developed by the Neurology Department team of Nice University Hospital, to measure eye movements. Based on literature, investigators hypothesize that video-oculography could integrate assessment protocols for head trauma occurring during sports practice. The nomadic nature of the e-VOG application would make possible to assess oculomotor behaviors to a subject who has just suffered a trauma and who is suspected of having a concussion. From this perspective, it seems necessary to firstly validate baseline values of the e-VOG application in a population of athletes without major health problems, and who have not presented concussion.

Conditions

Interventions

TypeNameDescription
OTHEReVOG (Mobile VideoOculoGraphy)* Eyes movements assessed with e-VOG (mobile application, that uses the face detection features of the front camera to detect and record eye movements). * Study duration is about 20 minutes, the day the subject performs his standard video-oculography examination in routine care (using Eye-Tracker®T2)

Timeline

Start date
2022-01-18
Primary completion
2022-02-22
Completion
2022-02-22
First posted
2022-01-27
Last updated
2022-05-18

Locations

1 site across 1 country: Monaco

Source: ClinicalTrials.gov record NCT05211752. Inclusion in this directory is not an endorsement.