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Anxiety Disorders clinical trials

View clinical trials related to Anxiety Disorders.

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NCT ID: NCT05747092 Recruiting - Clinical trials for Anxiety and Depression

Pain Killer, Anxiety and Mucogingival Therapy

Start date: January 14, 2022
Phase: N/A
Study type: Interventional

Is the pain killer consumption after gingival treatment related to the level of patient anxiety or to the type of therapy?

NCT ID: NCT05744336 Recruiting - Anxiety Clinical Trials

Impact of Virtual Reality on Anxiety in Patients Undergoing Interventional Procedures

Start date: March 12, 2023
Phase: N/A
Study type: Interventional

Periprocedural anxiety is a common problem for patients who undergo interventional pain procedures. Virtual Reality (VR) is an immersive experience that has gained acceptance in the medical field as a tool for reducing anxiety and pain for patients.Research Aim: To evaluate the effect of immersive virtual reality (VR) on periprocedural anxiety related to therapeutic cervical epidural steroid injections (ESI). The investigators hypothesize that immersive virtual reality will result in a clinically meaningful anxiety reduction, defined as the proportion of participants with > 50% reduction in Numeric Rating Scale (NRS) anxiety scores when compared to participants in the non-treatment group who will have standard preprocedural waiting time conditions in clinic, but no VR experience. Similarly, the investigators hypothesize a significant reduction in objective sympathetic tone as measured by skin sympathetic nerve activity (SKNA).

NCT ID: NCT05735860 Recruiting - Clinical trials for Music Performance Anxiety

The Application of Virtual Reality Exposure Versus Relaxation Training in Music Performance Anxiety

Start date: January 11, 2022
Phase: N/A
Study type: Interventional

The aim of the study is to investigate the effect of exposure treatment using virtual reality (VR) in musicians with performance anxiety compared to a relaxation technique on anxiety symptoms and corresponding cardiovascular parameters. The prospective, randomized clinical trial will include 46 musicians with musical performance anxiety (MPA). The experimental group will receive four exposure sessions in VR and the control group will receive four progressive muscle relaxation (PMR) sessions. Anxiety symptoms will be measured using a german version of the Performance Anxiety Questionnaire and a behavioral assessment test (BAT) before, after the treatment, and at 6-month follow-up. The cardiovascular reactivity will be assessed measuring the heart rate variability (HRV) throughout the BAT and the blood pressure before and after the BAT. Furthermore, blood and saliva samples will be collected before and after the BAT to assess endocrine stress parameters and epigenetic markers. The following hypotheses are derived: 1) Significant and lasting reduction of subjective MPA symptoms for the experimental group receiving VRET at T1 (post/ shortly after treatment) and T2 (follow-up/ 6 months after treatment) compared to T0 (pre/ before treatment). 2) Significant better reduction of subjective MPA symptoms for the experimental group receiving VRET compared to the control group receiving PMR at T1 (post/shortly after treatment) and T2 (follow-up/ 6 months after treatment) compared to T0 (pre/ before treatment). 3) The postulated effects in hypotheses 1 and 2 go along with a significantly higher HRV representing less cardiac stress during the BAT in case of a successful reduction of anxiety symptoms at T1 (post/ shortly after treatment) and T2 (follow-up/ 6 months after treatment) compared to T0 (pre/ before treatment).

NCT ID: NCT05734768 Recruiting - Clinical trials for Parental Anxiety Following Premature Birth

Impact of Preterm Birth on Symptoms of Anxiety and Depression in Parents, and on the Precursors of Cognition, Including Social Cognition in Their Child

PréDANPa
Start date: November 28, 2023
Phase:
Study type: Observational

In 2018, the World Health Organization (WHO) counted no less than 15 million preterm births each year worldwide, or more than one in ten children. In recent years, the number of newborns surviving preterm birth has gradually increased due to advances in neonatal medicine. However, these rescues are not without consequences. Indeed, to do so, the child is separated from his parents, placed in a stressful, technical and potentially painful environment. This early separation is compounded by medical co-morbidities and sedations that compromise the child's physiology and availability to interact. Extreme prematurity also disrupts the early interactions between the child and his parents, and eventually the relationships with others. Thus, more than 35% of children born prematurely show insecure attachment behavior in their relationships with others. Moreover, premature births are accompanied by numerous somatic, cognitive and social cognitive difficulties. At school age, these children present more learning, social-emotional and behavioral problems. The greater the degree of prematurity, the more marked these difficulties are. They would be associated with an executive and social cognition deficit, inherent to a globally altered cerebral development, in particular the frontal subcortical cerebral regions. On the parents' side, premature birth is also fraught with consequences. Indeed, the idea of an idealized post-natal period gives way to an anxious, even traumatic experience. Notions of guilt are often expressed, as well as major anxiety about the child's survival and "parenting skills". A higher prevalence of signs of parental anxiety, postnatal depression and post-traumatic stress disorder is observed in mothers of premature infants, even up to 18 months after birth. These psychological states influence the parents' ability to interact with their newborn, as well as the content of these interactions. Finally, both parents and newborns see, for different reasons, their ability to interact and to reassure themselves profoundly disrupted by premature birth. Even if since 2010, prematurity has been identified as a "public health problem" by the WHO, studies on the subject still have limitations. Indeed, if we estimate that the prevalence of anxiety and/or depression signs in mothers of premature babies is on average three times higher than in mothers of full-term babies; what about fathers? It seems fundamental to improve our knowledge of the anxious and depressive symptoms that fathers and mothers of premature babies may display, with the aim of providing comprehensive and multidisciplinary care for families in neonatal intensive care units. Similarly, the exact impact of an increase in parental anxious depressive symptomatology on the precursors of cognitive and social cognitive development is not known. Since the environment and stimulation are fundamental to the child's development, what happens when one or both parents have their interaction modified by anxious-depressive symptomatology? Indeed, the rare studies publishing data on the subject are carried out on populations of parents of non-premature children, often non-French-speaking and above all with tools that are not available to French-speaking practitioners in charge of the early detection of developmental difficulties in premature children. Today, it seems necessary to provide data concerning the development of precursors to cognitive and social cognitive development in preterm infants, and to better understand the extent of its interaction with the anxious depressive symptomatology of the mother and father. The investigators therefore formulate the following hypotheses: - Anxious depressive symptomatology, such as signs of parental anxiety, postnatal depression, and posttraumatic stress disorder, would be higher in mothers and fathers of preterm infants than in mothers and fathers of full-term infants at 7 ± 1 weeks after birth. - The level of development of the precursors to cognitive and social cognitive development would be lower in children whose parents present an exacerbated anxious depressive symptomatology.

NCT ID: NCT05729373 Recruiting - Clinical trials for Generalized Anxiety Disorder

A Clinical Study That Will Measure How Well SEP-363856 Works and How Safe it is in Adults With Generalized Anxiety Disorder

Start date: March 8, 2023
Phase: Phase 2/Phase 3
Study type: Interventional

A clinical study that will meaure how well SEP-363856 works and how safe it is in adults with Generalized Anixety Disorder. This study will be accepting both male and female subjects between the ages of 18 years and 65 years old. The study will be held in Approximately 50 global study centers and approximately 15 additional centers for a separate Japan population. Participation in the study can be up to approximately 12 weeks.

NCT ID: NCT05729347 Recruiting - Anxiety Clinical Trials

Treatment of Parental Anxiety Virtual Reality (VR)

Start date: June 1, 2023
Phase: N/A
Study type: Interventional

The purpose of this study is to determine if non-invasive distracting devices (Virtual Reality headset) are more effective than the standard of care (i.e., no technology based distraction) for preventing anxiety in parental and pediatric populations

NCT ID: NCT05723328 Recruiting - Bipolar Disorder Clinical Trials

Music Therapy Advocacy Recording Intervention (MTAR) on Internalized Stigma

Start date: April 25, 2023
Phase: N/A
Study type: Interventional

This study will use a systematic music therapy intervention on patients with mental illness trying to help them with their internalized stigma.

NCT ID: NCT05718661 Recruiting - Anxiety Clinical Trials

The Effect of Virtual Reality on Preoperative Anxiety Before Abdominal Surgery

Start date: December 1, 2022
Phase: N/A
Study type: Interventional

Hospitalization, medical interventions to be performed, and uncertainties specific to surgical intervention create a certain level of anxiety in the patient. It is known that being in the hospital negatively affects the coping mechanisms of the patient. In the pre-surgical period, the nurse's practices that will facilitate the patient's coping with the situation and managing his anxiety have a positive effect on anxiety during and after surgery and on anxiety-related symptoms. For these reasons, it is aimed to determine the effect of virtual reality on pre-surgical anxiety in this study.The hypothesis of the study is that watching videos with virtual glasses will reduce preoperative anxiety.

NCT ID: NCT05718271 Recruiting - Anxiety Disorder Clinical Trials

Effects of Verbal Instructions on Fear Extinction and Extinction Retrieval

Start date: February 2, 2023
Phase: N/A
Study type: Interventional

The goal of this study is to examine if verbal instructions can improve fear extinction learning and extinction retrieval in patients with anxiety disorders (AD) and healthy controls.

NCT ID: NCT05717946 Recruiting - Depression Clinical Trials

The Influence of Probiotic Supplementation on the Severity of Anxiety and Depressive Symptoms, as Well as the Function and Composition of Gut Microbiota, Metabolic, Inflammation, and Oxidative Stress Markers in Patients With Depression

Start date: January 4, 2021
Phase: Phase 2
Study type: Interventional

The aim of this study is to gather empirical evidence which will enable to evaluate the impact of probiotic supplementation on the severity of anxiety and depressive symptoms, function, and composition of gut microbiota, metabolic parameters, inflammation, and oxidative stress markers in patients with diagnosed depressive disorders. The designed study will be prospective, randomized, placebo-controlled, and double-blind. The intervention period will last 8 weeks for each patient. The study will be conducted on 100 patients in total, who will be randomly divided into two groups, consisting of 50 patients each. Patients included in Group I (PRO-D) will receive one capsule daily containing a probiotic mixture at a daily dose of 3×109 colony-forming units (CFU). The probiotic will be composed of two bacteria strains: Lactobacillus helveticus Rosell®-52, Bifidobacterium longum Rosell®-175, and excipients: potato starch, magnesium stearate, and the capsule shell, made of hydroxypropylmethylcellulose. Patients included in Group II (PLC-D) will receive daily the same capsule, containing only excipients: potato starch, maltodextrin, and the capsule shell. The color, smell, and taste of the placebo will not be different from those included in the probiotic capsule. Patients will be considered compliant if they consume >= 80% of the supplements. The primary outcome measures will be the severity of depressive anxiety and stress symptoms assessed with Montgomery-Åsberg Depression Rating Scale (MADRS) and the Depression, Anxiety, Stress Scale (DASS) with subscales scores, the quality of life level assessed with the WHOQOL-BREF instrument. The secondary outcomes measures will include: blood pressure (BP), body mass index (BMI) and waist circumference (WC) measures, fasting glucose (fGlc), HDL cholesterol (HDL-C), triglycerides (TG), white blood cells count (WBC), neutrofiles, serum levels of C-reactive protein (CRP), the level of faecal SCFAs, faecal microbiota α-diversity and the level of oxidative stress parameters (total antioxidant capacity (TAC) and malondialdehyde (MDA)) in the blood serum.