View clinical trials related to Alcohol Use Disorder.
Filter by:The purpose of this study is to determine whether oxytocin will decrease craving to use drugs/alcohol and stress reactivity following exposure to laboratory-induced stress among Active Duty Service Members with a dual diagnosis of alcohol/substance use disorder (ASUD) and post-traumatic anxiety.
Evaluate the efficacy of CBT4CBT and clinician-delivered CBT relative to standard treatment for reducing alcohol use
This study combines functional MRI with medication treatment in order to understand the neural mechanisms by which disulfiram, a currently approved medication for alcohol use disorder, changes behavior. Disulfiram is a medication that prevents drinking by causing a highly unpleasant physical reaction when alcohol is consumed while it is being taken. Thus, it provides a means for studying the general neural mechanisms by which awareness of risks impacts behavior change in alcohol use disorder.
This study is a double-blind, randomized clinical trial using a two group medication design consisting of the combination of VAR (1 mg twice daily) + NTX (50 mg once daily) and VAR (1 mg twice daily) + PLA (matched to NTX), for smoking cessation in a sample of heavy drinking daily smokers who want to quit smoking and reduce drinking.
Alcohol use is the third greatest cause of disability and death for US adults. Care for unhealthy alcohol use is lacking in most primary care settings. This project will implement two types of evidence-based care for unhealthy alcohol use in the 25 primary clinics of a regional health system—Group Health (GH). These include preventive care and treatment. Preventive care consists of alcohol screening, and for patients who screen positive, brief patient-centered counseling. Treatment for alcohol use disorders includes offering shared decision making and motivational counseling designed to enhance engagement in one or more treatment options: counseling, medications, and/or specialty treatment. During a pilot phase, the research team at Group Health Research Institute partnered with Group Health leaders and front line clinicians to design, pilot test, and iteratively refine an implementation strategy in 3 Group Health primary care clinics. Objective This study uses state-of-the-art implementation strategies to integrate evidence-based alcohol-related care into 22 primary care clinics (detailed below). This study is a pragmatic stepped-wedge quality improvement trial to evaluate its impact on: 1. The proportion of patients who have primary care visits who screen positive for unhealthy alcohol use and have documented annual brief alcohol counseling; 2. The proportion of patients who have primary care visits who have AUDs identified, and a) initiate and b) engage in care for AUDs. Secondary outcomes will include: 1. The proportion of patients who have primary care visits who have documented annual alcohol screening with the AUDIT-C; and 2. The proportion of patients who have primary care visits who screen positive for severe unhealthy alcohol use and have AUDs assessed and/or diagnosed;
The purpose of this research is to examine the effects of long-term aerobic exercise of moderate intensity on psychological, physiological, biochemical, physiological and alcohol-related parameters in heavy drinkers, in order to investigate possible biochemical mechanisms by which exercise may be a healthy alternative to alcohol abuse.
The purpose of this research is to examine the effects of exercise of different intensities on psychological, physiological, biochemical, physiological and alcohol-related parameters in individuals with alcohol use disorders (heavy drinkers and alcoholic patients) in order to investigate possible biochemical mechanisms by which exercise may be a healthy alternative to alcohol abuse. For that purpose, a control group of individuals that do not exceed the limits for moderate alcohol use will be included.
The investigators will examine clinical alterations in learning and automated approach behaviour and their neurobiological correlates in alcohol-dependent patients and healthy social drinkers and assess whether they are affected by a Zooming Joystick Training (ZJT; randomized "verum" versus "placebo" training) which trains subjects to habitually push alcohol pictures away. The investigators will test whether activations following treatment predict relapse rate (primary outcome measure) and the prospective amount of alcohol intake (secondary outcome measure) within a six-month follow-up period. Using fMRI, the investigators will use the Pavlovian-to-Instrumental-Transfer (PIT) paradigm established during the first funding period to distinguish the effects of appetitive, aversive, and drug-related Pavlovian cues on automated instrumental approach behaviour and to assess ZJT training effects comparing functional activation before and after ZJT training. The investigators will also scan subjects during performance of a short standard working memory task. Behaviourally, aspects of impulsivity will be assessed with the Value-Based Decision Making (VBDM) Battery. Scanning will be repeated after ZJT training to assess its effects on the neural correlates of Pavlovian-to-Instrumental transfer (PIT).
The proposed study is a pilot prospective, parallel groups, randomized, double blind, sham training-controlled, 9-session (over 3 weeks) clinical trial of AABM in 32 male and female veterans entering treatment for AUD at the VA Medical Center at San Francisco, California, between ages 18-65. The study consists of screening, 3-week AABM training, Week-4 post-test, and Week-12 follow-up. Assessment of inhibitory control, alcohol approach bias and craving will be administered at baseline and Week-4. Immediately following screening, patients will be randomly assigned to receive 9 sessions of real or sham AABM training (16 subjects each) taking place over three weeks. Following the 3 weeks of training, patients will complete a Week-4 post-test which includes assessment of alcohol approach bias, inhibitory control, and craving and a Week-12 follow-up assessing drinking behavior.
This study will examine the clinical effectiveness and health economic profile of services to link hospital patients with substance use disorders to addiction treatment, promote their medical stabilization, and reduce hospital re-admissions.