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Dysmorphia clinical trials

View clinical trials related to Dysmorphia.

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NCT ID: NCT06219421 Not yet recruiting - Orphan Diseases Clinical Trials

Automatic Phenotyping of Patients on 2D Photography

AIDY2
Start date: March 1, 2024
Phase:
Study type: Observational

The field of artificial intelligence is booming in medicine and in the field of diagnosis. The data can be varied: x-rays, pathology sections, or photographs. It is considered that 30 to 40% of the 7000 rare diseases described to date cause craniofacial dysmorphia. Their detection sometimes requires the trained eye of a geneticist, because certain phenotypic traits are subtle. These diagnostic difficulties and the fact that certain diseases are extremely uncommon lead to considerable diagnostic delays

NCT ID: NCT05258409 Recruiting - Eating Disorders Clinical Trials

Evaluating Body Acceptance Programs for Young Men

Start date: August 16, 2022
Phase: N/A
Study type: Interventional

While eating disorders in males are often overlooked, up to 7 million men in the United States will experience an eating disorder in their lifetime. Critically, men are less likely to seek treatment for an eating disorder compared to women. Therefore, prevention programs that target male-specific eating disorder risk factors prior to the development of an eating or appearance-related disorder are crucial in reducing eating disorders in this population. Preliminary work by our group established the initial efficacy of a novel program, the Body Project: More than Muscles (MTM) compared to assessment-only control. This study will replicate and extend this research by comparing MTM to a time and attention matched control used in previous eating disorder prevention work, media advocacy (MA).

NCT ID: NCT04687228 Completed - Eating Disorders Clinical Trials

Evaluating Body Acceptance Programs for Young Men

Start date: February 15, 2021
Phase: N/A
Study type: Interventional

While eating disorders in males are often overlooked, up to 7 million men in the United States will experience an Eating Disorder in their lifetime. Critically, men are less likely to seek treatment for an Eating Disorder compared to females. Therefore, prevention programs that target male-specific Eating Disorder risk factors prior to the development of an eating or appearance-related disorder are crucial in reducing eating disorders in this population. Preliminary work by our group established the initial efficacy of a novel program, the Body Project: More than Muscles (MTM) compared to assessment-only control. This study will replicate and extend this research by comparing MTM to a time and attention-matched control used in previous eating disorder prevention work, media advocacy (MA).