View clinical trials related to Healthy Volunteers.
Filter by:This study aims at assessing neuro-behavioral changes occuring during an intensive ten days meditation retreat. The investigator will study changes in tactile, auditory and pain perceptions as well as changes in cognitive and affective mental contents and their neural markers, as measured by self-reports, EEG event-related potentials, and functional connectivity of resting state fMRI. He will recruit healthy participants with a prior meditation experience. They will be randomly assigned to two groups, one active group who will undergo measurements just before, during and 3 weeks after the retreat. The other group will serve of control for task habituation, control participants will undergo the same measurements, equally spaced in time, but before the retreat. The main hypothesis is that meditation training strengthens meta-awareness, attention capacities resulting in enhanced bodily- and self-awareness during sensory perception and emotion regulation during pain.
The primary purpose of this study is to assess the effect of food on the rate and extent of absorption and the overall bioavailability of a single dose of CTx-1301 25 mg trimodal tablets in healthy adult volunteers.
The purpose of this study is to determine whether portable devices can provide measurements at home similar to those taken in the clinic, in particular in participant with NT1, and to investigate night-to-night changes in sleep patterns using these devices at home. This study may enable future at-home studies and ultimately lead to a decreased burden on the people who need these measurements.
The purpose of this study is to investigate the absorption, the metabolic pathways and the excretion of ICP-022 in healthy male adult participants after administration of a single oral dose of 150 mg of 14C ICP-022.
The purpose of this study is to characterize the effect of a high-fat meal on the PK of TAK-788 administered in healthy participants.
This study evaluates the overall performance of the currently-marketed MybluTM e-cigarette device and pods, as assessed by nicotine uptake, exposure to smoke constituents, safety and consumer satisfaction, over 8 days. The study is designed as an open-label, randomized study in adult smokers. Subjects are invited to participate to a second part of the study, for 5 additional days, to compare the use of MybluTM to the use of subject's usual brand combustible cigarettes.
This study evaluates the overall performance of the currently-marketed MybluTM e-cigarette device and pods, as assessed by nicotine uptake, exposure to smoke constituents, safety and consumer satisfaction, over 8 days. The study is designed as an open-label, randomized study in adult smokers. Subjects are invited to participate to a second part of the study, for 5 additional days, to compare the use of MybluTM to the use of subject's usual brand combustible cigarettes.
A bioequivalence and food-effect study comparing two tablet formulations of tebipenem pivoxil hydrobromide (TBPM-PI-HBr) in healthy adult subjects.
This study was a Phase 1, double-blind, placebo-controlled, randomised study of very low dose LSD. Healthy volunteers aged 55 to 75 years with no use of LSD in the past 5 years were screened within 28 days of randomization. Subjects who met all inclusion and no exclusion criteria and provided written informed consent were randomised a 1:1:1:1 ratio to receive 6 doses of 5 µg, 10 µg, or 20 µg LSD or placebo, at 4-day intervals for 21 days (on Study Days 1, 5, 9, 13, 17, and 21). A follow-up visit was conducted approximately 4 weeks after the last dose of LSD. A total of 48 subjects were enrolled.
The primary objective of this study is to assess the pharmacokinetic characteristics after a single dose of oral PBK-1801 in healthy Korean women for preparing the bridging data for Koreans.