View clinical trials related to Alcohol Drinking.
Filter by:The main purpose of this study is to see whether heavy drinking will interfere with a specific pathway, called FXR signaling in the liver. The abnormality of this pathway may lead to liver injury in some patients who drink heavily.
Recent reports have shown that alcohol misuse is a particularly serious problem among the 18 to 25 year old age group. Previous medication trials with SSRI antidepressants among young adults with co-occurring depressive disorders, including our own recent trials with SSRI medications, have produced disappointing results, especially for decreasing the level of alcohol consumption. Mirtazapine is a non-SSRI medication with a unique structure and mechanism of action. Recent study results suggest that mirtazapine is more effective than other antidepressants for treating non-comorbid depression. A few recent studies with mirtazapine have been conducted among subjects with comorbid AUD/MDD, and those studies have demonstrated efficacy for mirtazapine for decreasing the depressive symptoms and the alcohol craving of subjects with comorbid AUD/MDD. However, those studies did not measure level of alcohol consumption, so it is unclear whether mirtazapine decreases the level of alcohol use of that comorbid population. The results of our own very recent open label pilot study suggest robust within-group efficacy for mirtazapine for decreasing both the level of alcohol use and the depressive symptoms of comorbid subjects. However, that pilot study did not include a placebo control group, so the efficacy of mirtazapine versus placebo for decreasing the level of alcohol use among persons with comorbid AUD/MDD remains unclear. This grant submission proposes to conduct a first double-blind, placebo-controlled pilot study to provide a preliminary assessment of the efficacy of mirtazapine versus placebo for decreasing both the alcohol use and depressive symptoms of young adults with comorbid AUD/MDD. If results (effect sizes) from the proposed study are found to be promising concerning outcome differences between the mirtazapine and placebo groups, then we will use those findings to apply for an R01 study to definitively assess the efficacy of mirtazapine for treating young adults with AUD/MDD.
The purpose of this study is to determine whether extensive internet based cognitive behavior treatment program with guidance is a more effective method to treat individuals with alcohol use disorders than a briefer cognitive behavior treatment program without guidance.
This study evaluates the effectiveness of a brief intervention for the reduction of alcohol use among risky alcohol users in primary care delivered by paramedics. Half of the participants will receive a brief intervention and half will receive written guidelines on safe alcohol use.
Adolescent substance abuse (SA), which includes the consumption of alcohol, cigarette smoking, the consumption of drugs and other behaviors, is a significant public-health issue in the world today. Recent data showed that prevalence of SA among adolescents in Croatia and surrounding countries (i.e. former Yugoslav republics) is alarming and needs serious intervention. It is hypothesized that participation in physical-exercise-and-sport (PE&S) will reduce the tendency of young people to abuse substances. However, the literature to date has not consistently validated the perception PE&S factors are factors which could buffer SA among children and adolescents. One of the probable reasons for evident inconsistencies on findings about relationship between PE&S and SA is a cross-sectional nature of studies done so far. Therefore, the main rationale (i.e. problem) of this study is lack of current knowledge about influence of the PE&S on SA among adolescents. The main objective of this study is to prospectively investigate the influence of PE&S on SA among adolescents aged 17 to 18 years old. Aims of the project are: (1) to define prevalence and trends of SA among adolescents aged 17 to 18 years old; (2) to define prevalence and trends of PE&S participation; (3) to establish interrelationships which exist between socio-demographic, psychological, educational-factors, and PE&S (predictors); (4) to identify multivariate and univariate associations between: socio-demographic and SA, psychological factors and SA, PE&S and SA, educational - scholastic factors and SA.Expected results of the project are: (1) definition of the prevalence of SA among adolescents; (2) definition of the adolescents' participation in PE&S; (3) identification and interpretation relationships which exist between and within studied predictors of SA (educational factors, socio-demographic factors, PE&S, psychological factors); (4) identification of the influence of studied predictors on SA.
The investigators will examine clinical alterations in learning and automated approach behaviour and their neurobiological correlates in alcohol-dependent patients and healthy social drinkers and assess whether they are affected by a Zooming Joystick Training (ZJT; randomized "verum" versus "placebo" training) which trains subjects to habitually push alcohol pictures away. The investigators will test whether activations following treatment predict relapse rate (primary outcome measure) and the prospective amount of alcohol intake (secondary outcome measure) within a six-month follow-up period. Using fMRI, the investigators will use the Pavlovian-to-Instrumental-Transfer (PIT) paradigm established during the first funding period to distinguish the effects of appetitive, aversive, and drug-related Pavlovian cues on automated instrumental approach behaviour and to assess ZJT training effects comparing functional activation before and after ZJT training. The investigators will also scan subjects during performance of a short standard working memory task. Behaviourally, aspects of impulsivity will be assessed with the Value-Based Decision Making (VBDM) Battery. Scanning will be repeated after ZJT training to assess its effects on the neural correlates of Pavlovian-to-Instrumental transfer (PIT).
The purpose of this study is to determine whether (a) a brief alcohol intervention, (b) a brief bystander and social norms intervention, or (c) a brief alcohol and a brief bystander and social norms intervention are effective at reducing alcohol use and sexual-related behaviors among college men mandated to receive an alcohol intervention by their university.
The purpose of this study is to assess the effectiveness and implementability of ICT for co-occurring alcohol use and mental health disorders within community addiction treatment, as delivered by routine community addiction clinicians.
BACLOPHONE is a prospective multicenter cohort study, conducted in two nearby French regions (Hauts-de-France and Normandie). BACLOPHONE consists of the monthly phone-based monitoring of 792 patients during their first year of baclofen prescription for alcohol use disorder. The main objective of the study is to determine the rate of patients who stop baclofen due to an adverse event (AE) in the first year of treatment.The BACLOPHONE study also aims to determine which types of AEs and serious AEs are actually liable to baclofen, and which other types are more likely the consequence of confounding factors, e.g., concomitant alcohol, psychotropic medications or substance uses, and comorbidities.
The objective of this study is to investigate the prevalence of energy drink, alcohol and substance use among university students; to explore whether there is a relationship between energy drink consumption and alcohol-substance use in university students or not and to evaluate effect of impulsiveness and sensation seeking on this relationship.