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NCT ID: NCT00935090 Suspended - Lymphoma Clinical Trials

3'-Deoxy-3'-[18F] Fluorothymidine PET Imaging in Patients With Cancer

Start date: September 2009
Phase: N/A
Study type: Interventional

RATIONALE: Diagnostic procedures, such as 3'-deoxy-3'-[18F] fluorothymidine (FLT) PET imaging, may help find and diagnose cancer. It may also help doctors predict a patient's response to treatment and help plan the best treatment. PURPOSE: This phase I trial is studying FLT PET imaging in patients with cancer.

NCT ID: NCT00427323 Suspended - Clinical trials for Sleep Initiation and Maintenance Disorders

Light Exposure to Treat Sleep Disruption in Older People

Start date: June 2006
Phase: N/A
Study type: Interventional

The purpose of this study is to test whether shifts in the timing of the biological clock to a later hour (phase delay shifts of the human circadian system) can be produced in response to four successive evenings of light exposure, and whether that phase shift will result in greater evening alertness and greater nighttime sleep efficiency. Three different light sources will be compared: 1) standard fluorescent light; 2) blue-enriched light; 3) incandescent fluorescent light.

NCT ID: NCT00396734 Suspended - Clinical trials for Opioid-Related Disorders

The Effects of Pharmacotherapy on Brain Mechanisms Underlying Cocaine Dependence.

Start date: April 2007
Phase: N/A
Study type: Interventional

The overall aim of this project is to use an advanced brain imaging technique, PET, in order to monitor the progress of pharmacotherapy with modafinil or topiramate for cocaine dependence in methadone-maintained patients who use cocaine in addition. Comparisons will be made within the cocaine dependent methadone maintained subjects, between the start and end of treatment, and between the two medications. This is the first systematic research study of pharmacological treatment for cocaine dependence in Israel. This study is of major clinical use, with implications for the treatment of cocaine dependence in poly-drug abusers in Israel. Successful pharmacotherapy for cocaine dependence is expected in reduction in cue-induced subjective craving and in glucose metabolism in brain areas elicited by cocaine craving. Metabolic activity in regions that are activated by craving should be correlated with dopamine DRD2 receptor occupancy in all patients.