NCT07182396 · RECRUITING

Effects of Video Games and Ball Tossing on Eye Hand Coordination in Elderly With Mild Cognitive Impairment.

This trial is testing whether playing video games or doing ball-tossing exercises can improve eye-hand coordination in older adults with mild cognitive impairment (MCI). Researchers will measure coordination using a standardized visual-motor test before and after the interventions. This is a Phase N/A trial, meaning it is a practical comparison study rather than a drug test — it is exploring which activity works better, not evaluating a medication.

You may qualify if

  • Older population aged from 60years and above
  • Normal/ normal to corrected vision
  • MoCA Score of 18-25 for screening / MCI patients
  • Can do Independent ADLS
  • Beery VMI Score: 80 and above score

You're excluded if

  • History of head trauma, loss of consciousness, stroke, rapid cognitive decline
  • Diagnosis of mental illness/neurocognitive disorders
  • Diagnosed Vestibular disorders
  • Hearing, vision and communication impairments

The sponsor's own eligibility wording, lightly reformatted. The study team makes the final eligibility decision — worth discussing with your doctor.

Eligibility criteria as of 2025-09-19

View full record on ClinicalTrials.gov

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