View clinical trials related to Bipolar Disorder.
Filter by:This pilot effectiveness trial will evaluate the feasibility, acceptability, and effectiveness of a structured peer support program based on the Certified Peer Specialist Program of the Depression and Bipolar Support Alliance (DBSA).
Bipolar disorder (BD) is a serious, disabling, and highly recurrent illness. The perinatal period dramatically increases risk for mood episodes in women with BD, but pregnancy complicates pharmacologic treatment decisions and efficacy. This study will be the first to systematically develop and pilot test an adjunctive psychosocial intervention to assist in treatment of BD during the high-risk perinatal period.
As a practice that incorporates elements of physical exercise, controlled breathing, and meditation, yoga is gaining increasing acceptance as an adjunctive intervention for many psychiatric disorders. Although yoga has been frequently recommended as a symptom management strategy for bipolar disorder (BD), and although there is some preliminary evidence that yoga may be helpful in alleviating depressive symptoms, there are no systematic studies on the benefits - and potential risks - of the practice of yoga in BD. The primary aim of the proposed study is to develop and evaluate the feasibility, acceptability, and safety of an adjunctive yoga intervention for bipolar depression in a 10 week pilot randomized controlled trial (RCT).
Converging evidence suggests that patients with bipolar disorder suffer from deficits in neurocognitive functioning that persist, despite remission of acute affective symptoms. These impairments contribute directly to functional disability, highlighting the need for interventions above and beyond standard treatments in order to achieve a full inter-episode recovery. The current study aims to investigate the safety and efficacy of a dopamine agonist (pramipexole), on these persistent cognitive abnormalities in euthymic bipolar patients using a placebo-controlled, adjunctive, 12-week trial design.
The FLAME Study is a 16-week clinical trial to study treatment with lamotrigine or fluoxetine in bipolar I, II and bipolar schizoaffective depressed adults. The purpose of the trial is to have a better understanding of whether individuals with a particular gene type and other inherited biological markers will have a good response to fluoxetine or lamotrigine, or alternatively, would be more likely to have side effects to this medication.
Insulin is a hormone produced by the body to regulate blood sugar. Insulin resistance is a state when the body is not using insulin correctly, and more insulin is needed to maintain normal blood sugar. Insulin resistance is common in bipolar patients and even more common in bipolar patients treated with antipsychotics. Insulin resistance from antipsychotics can lead to type 2 diabetes, metabolic syndrome and cardiovascular disease and is known to lead to worse psychiatric outcomes (less mood stability) and lower life expectancies in bipolar disorder. Abnormal regulation of the folate cycle is known to play a role in antipsychotic-induced insulin resistance and the main endpoint to the folate cycle is the production of methyl donors for DNA methylation. DNA methylation is critical as it regulates how genes are expressed. Thus, changes in DNA methylation may play a role in the disease process of antipsychotic-induced insulin resistance. The purpose of this study is to examine the differences in the DNA methylation of candidate tissues known to have a role in the development of insulin resistance. The three groups of bipolar patients to be studied are 1) antipsychotic treated patients with impaired glucose tolerance, 2) antipsychotic treated patients with normal glucose tolerance and 3) lithium treated patients with normal glucose tolerance. Group 1 will be compared to groups 2 and 3 in order to assess how DNA methylation in the skeletal muscle and fat tissue changes due to medication effects (group 2 vs. 3) and medication side effects (group 1 vs. 2). Secondary analyses include the analysis of how fats are processed in skeletal muscle and fat tissue in relation to antipsychotic-induced insulin resistance and the correlation of DNA methylation across different tissues. The investigators hypothesize that antipsychotic-induced insulin resistance is to due changes in the way DNA is expressed (through epigenetic changes) which causes further changes in the way fats are processed in the body eventually leading to insulin resistance. This work is based on preliminary findings however further work is needed to identify the true mechanisms behind antipsychotic-induced insulin resistance and in particular, the main tissue in which this mechanism occurs.
Studies show the presence of immuno-inflammatory disturbances in individuals with Bipolar Disorders (BD). Increased levels of circulating proteins known as cytokines that promote inflammation have been consistently reported in individuals with bipolar disorders. A particular cytokine referred to as Tumor Necrosis Factor (TNF)-alpha is among those cytokines that have been consistently identified across depressive, manic, and euthymic periods. Disturbances in inflammation however, are not seen in all individual with bipolar disorder. Those individuals with signs of inflammation also often present with higher prevalence of medical disorders that are also associated with inflammation. Those individuals with significant signs of inflammation may respond to anti-inflammatory treatments. In this study, individuals with bipolar depression who exhibit signs of high inflammation will be enrolled and treated with either an anti-inflammatory biologic known as infliximab or placebo (saline).
The purpose of this study was to evaluate the efficacy, safety, and pharmacokinetics of switching FK949E (sustained-release quetiapine) 50-mg and 150-mg tablets to the other tablet at the equivalent total daily dose in bipolar disorder patients with major depressive episodes.
The goal of the Pediatric Bipolar Registry (PBR) is to provide a comprehensive assessment regarding the diagnosis and treatment of pediatric bipolar disorder to children and adolescents with any current mood state and/or children/adolescents who are offspring of a parent with bipolar disorder (BD) type I or II and their families.
Children between the ages of 5-17 years old who have or display symptoms of emotional dysregulation (explosiveness, mood swings, irritability, and/or violent behavior) are invited to participate in a 12-week research study to determine the effectiveness and safety of the natural treatment N-acetylcysteine (NAC) for children with emotional and behavioral problems. After undergoing a comprehensive evaluation by medical doctors with a specialty in this area, children who are found eligible to participate in this research study will be treated with NAC. Following the evaluation period, this research study requires 12 weekly visits, either in our office or over the phone, in an effort to closely monitor each child's response to the medication. Eligible participants will receive study-related evaluations and weekly study visits with our study doctors at no cost.