View clinical trials related to Bipolar Disorder.
Filter by:The purpose of this study is to determine whether a Cognitive and Behavioral group Therapy (CBT) + Mindfulness Based Cognitive Therapy (MBCT) decreased relapses and hospitalizations and improved outcomes (depressive and manic symptoms, self-esteem, and quality of life) in a large sample of refractory bipolar I patients on mood stabilizers.
The goals of this study are to evaluate the efficacy of JNJ-18038683 in an 8 week trial to ameliorate the cognitive deficit and reduce residual depressive symptoms in 60 stable bipolar outpatients receiving treatment for depression. JNJ-18038683 will be studied and compared with placebo as adjunctive treatment to standard pharmacologic treatment for bipolar disorder.
The present study has been designed to evaluate the change in serum BDNF level with oxcarbazepine monotherapy in bipolar disorder and to explore the possibility of its neuroprotective effect.
Prospective multicentre observational study for treatment approaches in at-risk individuals. Furthermore the purpose of this study is to test feasibility of a clinical staging model and validate diagnostic tools to identify individuals at risk state for the development of BD.
Controlled trial of the efficacy and safety of valproate, versus risperidone in children, ages 3-7 yr. with Bipolar I or II Disorder, mixed, manic or hypomanic episode.
The MoodNetwork, a patient-powered research network (PPRN), is one of 18 PPRNs participating in Patient-Centered Outcomes Research Institute's (PCORI) PCORnet network. Its objective is to improve the nation's capacity to conduct comparative effectiveness research that reflects questions of greatest importance to patients and other stakeholders. A robust data infrastructure will be built that, in phase one, allows participants to contribute data, including those from participant questionnaires, visualize their own health information in intuitive and helpful ways, and share their aggregated de-identified health information within and outside of the Network.
The investigators programme of research will evaluate an existing physical health care screening intervention with the aim of helping Community Psychiatric Nurses (CPN) to improve the physical health wellbeing of people with a SMI. This pilot clustered randomised controlled trial aims to establish the potential efficacy and acceptability of the Chinese Health Improvement Profile (CHIP) in improving the physical health of people with severe mental illness.
This purpose of this study is to adapt, implement and test the ability of a sophisticated point-of-care electronic health record-based clinical decision support that identifies and prioritizes all available evidence-based treatment options to reduce cardiovascular risk in patients with serious mental illness.
Bipolar disorder (BPD) is often misdiagnosed as unipolar depression. This leads to inadequate treatment and can have negative impact on the course of the disease. There is now preliminary evidence that patients with unipolar and bipolar depression as well as healthy individuals with a heightened risk of BPD can be distinguished from each other based on their brain activity patterns and functional connectivity during resting state. However, the impact of pharmacological treatment on these functional brain measures have not yet been clarified. For common antidepressants it has been shown that they seem to normalise aberrant brain activity patterns and functional connectivity. The problem is that some antidepressants can induce mania or accelerate pathological cycling in depressive patients with unrecognised BPD. Therefore, pharmacological drugs with mood-stabilising properties such as quetiapine are more and more prescribed. Although the effectiveness and tolerability have been proven, the neuronal effects of these adjunctive treatments are not clear. The aim of the study is thus to investigate the impact of quetiapine on measures of brain activity in depressive patients with a heightened risk of BPD. Moreover, the investigators want to examine whether the investigators can distinguish depressive patients with a heightened risk of BPD from depressive patients without a heightened risk of BPD using neuroimaging techniques, and whether these measures can predict the course of the disease.
The investigators will conduct a small pilot study to test the feasibility and acceptability of treating bipolar disorder (BP) in primary care with online psychotherapy delivered both with and without telephone, text, and email support from a clinical helper (CH). The ultimate goal of this work is to provide preliminary data needed to design a larger scale effectiveness study of online psychotherapy for treating BP in primary care.