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Mental Disorders clinical trials

View clinical trials related to Mental Disorders.

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NCT ID: NCT02064452 Completed - Clinical trials for Attention Deficit Hyperactivity Disorder

Evaluating an Online Parenting Support System Disseminated by Pediatric Practices

Start date: May 2014
Phase: N/A
Study type: Interventional

This study will experimentally evaluate an internet-based version of the Triple P Positive Parenting Program, the Triple P Online System (TPOS), which presents the Triple P content in an interactive, video-enriched, and personalized format with 3-levels of flexible dosage, and will compare it against usual community services. Thirty pediatric clinics involving 100 practitioners in 9 counties across western Washington will be recruited and randomized to receive (a) access for their patients to the Triple P Online System and training in how to effectively promote TPOS and advise parents on their children's behavior problems or (b) Usual Care Community-Waitlist Control, in which parents will be assisted with an appropriate referral for services in the community.

NCT ID: NCT02053714 Completed - Diabetes Clinical Trials

Improving Diabetes Outcomes for Persons With Severe Mental Illness

Start date: December 2013
Phase: N/A
Study type: Interventional

Persons with severe mental illness are at great risk for developing type 2 diabetes (T2DM). Unfortunately, persons with mental illness and T2DM are less likely to receive recommended diabetes monitoring and are more likely to have poorly controlled diabetes, which leads to microvascular and macrovascular complications later in life. Evidence-based diabetes self-management education and support interventions have yet to be adapted for persons with mental illness and there have been no randomized controlled trials (RCTs) to examine their feasibility and efficacy. The purpose of this study is to assess the feasibility of conducting a RCT of a diabetes self-management intervention for persons with severe mental illness and T2DM.

NCT ID: NCT02051192 Completed - Clinical trials for Obsessive-compulsive Disorder

Brief Behavioral Treatment for Anxiety in Young Children

PLET
Start date: January 2014
Phase: Phase 1/Phase 2
Study type: Interventional

Behaviorally and cognitive-behaviorally based therapeutic techniques (BT; CBT) that incorporate exposure therapy useful for treatment of anxiety disorders among typically developing children. Although a large amount of data demonstrate the effectiveness of of BT and CBT approaches for treating anxious youth, there is a gap in the literature for the effectiveness of these approaches for children under the age of seven. Evidence increasingly suggests that family factors such as accommodation and parenting style contribute significantly to the presence of anxiety symptoms as well as treatment outcomes, particularly in young children. These findings stress the importance of using a treatment approach in which parents are directly involved in education, parent training, and generalization of treatment effects. Therefore, this study aims to evaluate a new treatment program, parent-led behavioral treatment, for children ages 3 to 7 years of age who have a principal anxiety disorder diagnosis.

NCT ID: NCT02050854 Completed - Schizophrenia Clinical Trials

Open-Label Observational Pilot Study to Evaluate the Pharmacokinetics of Aripiprazole in Subjects With Bipolar 1 Disorder or Schizophrenia

Start date: December 2013
Phase: N/A
Study type: Observational

The purpose of this study is to evaluate the pharmacokinetics of aripiprazole in subjects with Bipolar 1 Disorder or Schizophrenia who have a history of suboptimal aderence and are currently on treatment with oral aripiprazole.

NCT ID: NCT02047539 Terminated - Clinical trials for Clinical High Risk for Psychosis

Randomized Controlled Trial of Aspirin vs Placebo in the Treatment of Pre-psychosis

Start date: January 2015
Phase: Early Phase 1
Study type: Interventional

The primary objective of this study is to determine whether aspirin is effective in alleviating symptoms of the clinical high risk (CHR) syndrome for psychosis. The investigators further aim to determine whether it may delay or prevent the onset of psychosis in those currently experiencing CHR symptoms. As secondary measures the investigators aim to collect laboratory studies of inflammation markers and genetic samples to determine whether certain genetic profiles correlate with risk for psychosis, or response to aspirin treatment.

NCT ID: NCT02037581 Completed - Schizophrenia Clinical Trials

Integrated Care Including Assertive Community Treatment in Early Psychosis

ICEP
Start date: June 2011
Phase: N/A
Study type: Interventional

Improvement of clinical long-term outcome through the implementation of early detection and intervention within a specialized network of integrated care (ACT and hometreatment) for adolescents and young adults with a first episode of psychosis between 12 and 29 years.

NCT ID: NCT02035865 Completed - Cognition Disorders Clinical Trials

Mood and Cognitive Outcome After Heart Transplantation (the MOODHEART Study)

Start date: December 2013
Phase:
Study type: Observational

The investigators aim at characterizing neuropsychiatric consequences of heart transplantation (HTX) and at assessing the impact of depressive symptoms after HTX on mortality and cardiac allograft vasculopathy (CAV).

NCT ID: NCT02035553 Completed - Clinical trials for Alzheimer's Disease Psychosis

A Study of the Safety and Efficacy of Pimavanserin in Patients With Alzheimer's Disease Psychosis

Start date: November 2013
Phase: Phase 2
Study type: Interventional

This study will evaluate the safety and efficacy of pimavanserin 40 mg compared to placebo in patients with Alzheimer's disease psychosis.

NCT ID: NCT02035202 Completed - Schizophrenia Clinical Trials

Real-Time Mobile Cognitive Behavioral Intervention for Serious Mental Illness

Start date: October 2013
Phase: N/A
Study type: Interventional

The purpose of this study is to evaluate the effectiveness of a mobile real-time cognitive behavioral intervention for serious mental illness (SMI) and to identify the facilitators, barriers, and costs of implementation. We would like to determine whether the addition of a mobile phone monitoring software program to a brief behavioral intervention for bipolar disorder or schizophrenia improves symptoms arising from the disorders. In this study we will be assessing the feasibility, acceptability and short term effect of the mobile phone enhanced intervention for bipolar disorder and schizophrenia.

NCT ID: NCT02034253 Completed - Schizophrenia Clinical Trials

Glutamate, Brain Connectivity and Duration of Untreated Psychosis

DUP
Start date: January 2014
Phase:
Study type: Observational

The early stages of schizophrenia are associated with significant decreases in social and intellectual abilities, with more declines in chronic disease. Studies have identified relationships between duration of untreated psychosis (the duration between the onset of positive symptoms and treatment) and worse long term outcomes. However, the neurobiology of this phenomenon and its implications for response to antipsychotic medications remain poorly understood. Glutamatergic excess altering brain connectivity might provide an explanation for why those with longer duration of untreated psychosis have worse clinical outcomes. The investigators propose to use neuroimaging to study 67 first episode psychosis subjects before and after sixteen weeks of treatment with risperidone, a common antipsychotic. We will measure (1) glutamate and (2) structural and functional brain connectivity and test the hypotheses that glutamatergic abnormalities are present in first episode patients and that longer duration of untreated psychosis is associated with greater connectivity abnormalities that set the stage for poor response to treatment. 67 demographic-matched controls will also be recruited as a comparison group - healthy controls will not receive antipsychotic medication. The investigator's previous studies have made progress in the understanding of abnormalities in the glutamate system and brain connectivity in unmedicated patients with schizophrenia and modulation of these by antipsychotic medication. Two indices of glutamatergic dysfunction have been identified. While antipsychotic medications appear to modulate glutamate, the disturbance in the relationship between metabolites is not restored with treatment. In addition, the investigators found that both structural and functional connectivity abnormalities in unmedicated patients with schizophrenia predict patients' response to treatment. To the investigator's knowledge, no other group has performed a study that uses a combination of complementary neuroimaging techniques that will allow generating a broad characterization of glutamatergic function and brain connectivity in first episode psychosis and change with treatment. The results of the proposed studies could suggest a mechanism by which the duration of untreated psychosis is associated with poor treatment response which might lead to new interventions to target the illness.