View clinical trials related to Substance-Related Disorders.
Filter by:The purpose of this study is to determine the influence of drug testing on risk and protective factors of substance abuse among adolescents; examine whether drug and alcohol testing among high school athletes leads to reduced drug and alcohol use; and assess the use of drugs and alcohol among student athletes and non-athletes.
The purpose of this study is to determine whether Integrated Treatment is effective in the treatment of anxiety and/or depression with co-occurring substance use disorders.
The purpose of this research study is to determine whether Carvedilol, an FDA approved beta blocker, when administered for an 8-week period to veterans currently undergoing treatment for methamphetamine dependence (1) improves their ability to stay in treatment longer, (2)eases the aversive symptoms that accompany stimulant withdrawal, and (3) increases the time they remain abstinent from methamphetamine.
The overarching goal of this project is to have a consolidated consent and evaluation procedure that will lead potential subjects to the most appropriate clinical trial or human laboratory study (and its consent process) for their presenting concerns or interests. A second purpose is to have a consolidated intake data base on which secondary analyses can be conducted.
Adolescent substance abuse results in significant negative outcomes and extraordinary costs for youths, their families, communities, and society. Moreover, rates of psychiatric comorbidity among substance abusing youth range from 25% up to 82%, and youths with a dual diagnosis have worse outcomes and are more than twice as costly to treat than their counterparts with no comorbidity. This project was a pilot test of a new treatment, OPTION-A, which was adapted from Multisystemic Therapist (MST) and other evidence-based interventions to specifically treat youth presenting for outpatient treatment of comorbid substance use and internalizing disorders. The project was a randomized controlled pilot trial comparing the experimental treatment to usual services in the community.
GSK598809 is being developed to facilitate overcoming an addiction to nicotine and to help people stop smoking. This study will investigate if GSK598809 is safe and tolerated in people who smoke and will also look at blood levels of GSK598809 and nicotine.
GSK598809 is being developed as an innovative treatment for substance dependence and potentially other compulsive behavioral disorders. This study will evaluate the safety, tolerability and pharmacokinetics of repeat doses of GSK598809 in healthy volunteers.
This study examines whether isolated doses of d-cycloserine enhance the efficacy of an exposure-based cognitive-behavioral treatment for chronic and treatment refractory substance dependence.
This study is designed to evaluate the relative efficacy of a novel treatment (CBT-IC) versus a standard individual drug-counseling treatment. The novel treatment emphasizes exposure to emotional cues for drug use as part of a comprehensive, yet brief, treatment strategy. These treatments are delivered to opiate-dependent, often poly-substance dependent, individuals in a comprehensive methadone maintenance program who have failed to respond adequately to current treatments.
The goal of this randomized controlled trial is to evaluate the efficacy of telephone-administered motivational interviewing (TAMI) to enhance VA mental health treatment engagement among veterans of Operations Enduring Freedom (OEF) and Iraqi Freedom (OIF) who screen positive for mental health disorders on telephone assessment. The investigators will evaluate whether TAMI results in improved mental health treatment engagement, decreased mental health symptoms and increased quality of life among OEF/OIF veterans with mental health disorders. The long-term aim of this study is to conduct rapid assessment and intervention to prevent chronic mental illness and associated disability among our newest generation of veterans.