View clinical trials related to Insomnia.
Filter by:This Stage II randomized, controlled, longitudinal trial seeks to assess the acceptability, feasibility, and effects of a driving decision aid use among geriatric patients and providers. This multi-site trial will (1) test the driving decision aid (DDA) in improving decision making and quality (knowledge, decision conflict, values concordance and behavior intent); and (2) determine its effects on specific subpopulations of older drivers (stratified for cognitive function, decisional capacity, and attitudinally readiness for a mobility transition). The overarching hypotheses are that the DDA will help older adults make high-quality decisions, which will mitigate the negative psychosocial impacts of driving reduction, and that optimal DDA use will target certain populations and settings.
This study combined the insomnia syndrome with PSG, fMRI, neuroactive substance detection, and infrared heat map, observing the electrophysiological changes of insomnia patients with different syndromes,localizing brain function excitation zone and changes in neuroactive substances,and the response of the visceral function to the infrared Image,which reveal the biological material basis of insomnia syndrome, and analyze it's correlation with infrared Image, providing a scientific, objective and visual technical method for TCM diagnosis and treatment of insomnia.
The study is a clinical pilot study that examine the preliminary effect of cognitive-behavioral therapy for insomnia (CBT-I) in adolescents with comorbid psychiatric disorders. Participants (n=25) are recruited from three psychiatric clinics (n=19) and one pediatric pain clinic (n=6). After diagnostic assessment, participants that fulfil inclusion criteria are offered the CBT-I intervention. Pre-post and 3-months follow-up assessments include subjective measures of insomnia symptom severity, sleep parameters (collected through sleep-wake diaries), symptoms of depression and anxiety and daytime functioning.
Insomnia is highly prevalent in prisoners and is a risk factor for poor mental well-being, depression, suicidality and aggression, all common concerns in this vulnerable population. Improving sleep management options in prison offers the potential to impact positively on a number of these common risk factors. The study aim is to asses psychological intervention for insomnia in prisons.
This study is a longitudinal clinical trial designed to characterize sleep patterns in individuals with Inflammatory Bowel Disease (IBD) as well as to assess the feasibility of sleep intervention (Cognitive Behavioral Therapy for Insomnia (CBT-I)) in individuals with both insomnia and Inflammatory Bowel Disease (IBD).
18-55 years old 100 patients, who are planned to undergo for planned ureteroscopy will be participated in the study. In the preoperative room patients will be asked to participate to the study. If they accept 4 item Jenkins-Sleep Questionaire will be asked to them.Patients will be divided to two groups , with or without insomnia according to their answers to the questionaire. General anesthesia will be performed to all patients. At the end of operation anesthesia time,operation time, time of eye opening, time of transfer to the recovery room will be recorded in the operating room. Pain scores and recovery scores will be evaluated in the recovery room.
Investigators will evaluate the efficacy of postoperative oral suvorexant treatment on nighttime wakefulness after persistent sleep onset (WASO) among adult cardiac surgical patients recovering in the cardiac intensive care unit (ICU). The study include patients ≥ 60 years old undergoing coronary artery bypass graft surgery (CABG), with or without valve surgery (aortic or mitral). Patients will receive either oral suvorexant or placebo for 7 nights starting the night after extubation. The primary hypothesis is that suvorexant compared with placebo decreases WASO, as measured by a specialized electroencephalogram (EEG), the SedLine monitor, during the first night in the cardiac ICU. Investigators will also assess total sleep time (TST), time to sleep onset (TSO), and postoperative delirium and delirium-free days.
This study aims to conduct a randomized control trial to validate the treatment effect of e-based cognitive behavioral therapy for Insomnia (eCBT-I) on insomnia disorder, and explore whether eCBT-I could prevent depression and suicide in youths with insomnia and subclinical depression. In addition, to further explore the mechanisms underlying the association between insomnia treatments and psychiatric disorders, this study will evaluate whether changes in candidate factors including insomnia symptoms, poor sleep hygiene, sleep-related unhelpful thoughts and maladaptive behaviors, circadian rhythm disruption and chronic sleep deprivation will mediate the effect of eCBT-I on prevention of depression and suicide.
The purpose of this study is to evaluate the safety, tolerability and efficacy of V117957 in subjects with alcohol use disorder (AUD) who experience insomnia associated with alcohol cessation, compared to placebo.
The investigators will answer the question of whether treating insomnia using Cognitive Behavior Therapy for Insomnia (CBT-I) can improve perceived cognitive impairment (PCI) in cancer survivors compared to a waitlist control group. The investigators will recruit 124 people with insomnia and cognitive complaints who have completed cancer treatment at least 6 months prior to the study.