# Do Combinatorial Training Lead to Better Cognition and Daily Participation in TBI Persons With Cognitive Impairments

> **NCT04051528** · NA · UNKNOWN · sponsor: **Chang Gung Memorial Hospital** · enrollment: 50 (estimated)

## Conditions studied

- Trauma, Brain
- Cognitive Deficit

## Interventions

- **PROCEDURE:** aerobic exercise training
- **PROCEDURE:** computerized cognitive training
- **PROCEDURE:** guiding training

## Key facts

- **NCT ID:** NCT04051528
- **Lead sponsor:** Chang Gung Memorial Hospital
- **Sponsor class:** OTHER
- **Phase:** NA
- **Study type:** INTERVENTIONAL
- **Status:** UNKNOWN
- **Start date:** 2020-06-03
- **Primary completion:** 2021-07
- **Final completion:** 2022-01
- **Target enrollment:** 50 (ESTIMATED)
- **Last updated:** 2021-06-21


## Primary source

ClinicalTrials.gov registry: https://clinicaltrials.gov/study/NCT04051528

## Citation

> US National Library of Medicine, ClinicalTrials.gov registration NCT04051528, "Do Combinatorial Training Lead to Better Cognition and Daily Participation in TBI Persons With Cognitive Impairments". Retrieved via AI Analytics 2026-06-02 from https://api.ai-analytics.org/clinical/NCT04051528. Licensed CC0.

---

*[Clinical trials dataset](/datasets/clinical-trials) · CC0 1.0*
