View clinical trials related to Anorexia.
Filter by:The objective of this study is to identify the patterns of brain activity in reward circuitry that promote symptoms of anorexia nervosa. This project will compare weight-restored individuals with anorexia nervosa to a non-eating disorder control group on reward brain circuitry patterns in response to typically rewarding cues (i.e., entertaining videos) and disorder-specific restrictive eating cues (i.e., low-fat food choice) using fMRI. In addition, this study will examine which neurobiological reward responses among weight-restored individuals with anorexia nervosa predict objective restrictive eating (measured by laboratory meal intake) and longitudinal risk of relapse one year later.
Anorexia Nervosa (AN) is a serious and often chronical eating disorder characterized by an extreme effort for weight loss and intense fear of becoming fat despite the obvious thinness. The treatment is very difficult and not always effective. That´s the reason why we are looking for new ways of the therapeutic approach. Transcranial direct current stimulation (tDCS) is a neuromodulation technique, which modulates the neuronal excitability. According to previous research it has a potential to help people with Anorexia Nervosa. The device for the tDCS has two electrodes, an anode (the excitatory one) and a cathode (the inhibitory one). We put them on the skull into the different positions, in dependence on the fact, if we want to excite or on to inhibit the parts of the brain under the electrodes. There are several hypothesis how could the tDCS help in patients with AN. One of them speaks about the hyperactivity of the right hemisphere in Anorexia Nervosa. Therefore could the anodal (excitatory) tDCS over the left hemisphere and the cathodal (inhibitory one) help in resetting the inter-hemispheric balance.
A randomized controlled clinical trial will be conducted to assess the efficacy of the FDA approved drug , mirtazapine , in treatment of cancer associated anorexia cachexia syndrome. Two arms will be compared . Arm A will involve 50 patients with confirmed advanced cancer receiving mirtazapine 15 mg once daily for 8 weeks & Arm B will involve another 50 patients with confirmed advanced cancer receiving placebo for 8 weeks. Both arms will be compared to assess efficacy of mirtazapine in appetite stimulation primarily and to assess other outcomes secondarily which will be discussed later in details.
Eating disorders (ED) comprise a multitude of symptoms involving a disturbed body image and a preoccupation with food or bodyweight. EDs are often difficult to treat, in part due to the lack of motivation for improvement. Anorexia nervosa (AN) has the highest mortality rate of any psychiatric disease, and less than half of patients will recover from the disease. Studies have found that patients suffering from AN have impaired health-related quality of life (HRQoL) compared to the general population. It has also been suggested that despite improvement in clinical parameters, patients report deterioration in HRQoL, which is in line with a study finding low agreement between patient perceived outcome and clinician assessed characteristics. To evaluate the patients' perception of their disease, it is important to develop reliable and valid assessment tools. Previously generic questionnaires have been used to assess HRQoL in Danish ED patients, as no disease-specific questionnaires have been developed. Translating and validating a disease-specific questionnaire would provide a useful tool in assessing current treatment and in developing new treatment options. This study aimed to develop a Danish version of an internationally disease-specific HRQoL questionnaire. Furthermore, HRQoL is assessed in patients who have gone through shorter or longer treatment.
The PROLED study is a prospective and longitudinal study of patients with Eating Disorders. Annual interviews and collection of biological samples are done, as well as during changes in disease course e.g. during hospitalization. Included are qualitative interviews, psychometric tests, questionnaires which are used to collect data on psychopathology. There is also collection of blood, urine and faeces.
The present study is a placebo-controlled randomised study on the effects of estrogen replacement upon AN-associated psychopathology, several neurocognitive domains and appetite-regulating circuits in female patients with AN. The investigators aim at assessing peripheral concentrations of neuroendocrinological components of the Hypothalamus-Pituitary-Gonadal (HPG) and Hypothalamus-Pituitary-Adrenal (HPA) axis, as well as appetite-regulating hormones in AN and to examine associations with AN-associated psychopathology and neurocognitive performances before (baseline), during and after inpatient psychotherapy of female patients receiving concomitant treatment with estrogens (vs. placebo).
Deep brain stimulacion (DBS) clinical study in the subcallosal cingulate (CSG) and accumbens nucleus (NAc) for 8 patients with treatment-refractory, cronic and severe anorexia nervosa (AN) patients. The main objective is to show efficacy and safety. Studies show that SSG and NAc are strategical targets in the pathophysiology and the hypothetical surgical treatment in AN patients. The patients distribution (4 patients in each target) it will made by the AN type and the comorbidity associated, the reasons are: 1- It is well known the comorbidity treatment imoportance in the AN evolution, 2- The two differentes types of AN have differents clinical behaviour and prognosis, 3- Studies show efficacy in TOC and DM patients with NAc DBS and in DM patients with CSG DBS. The main variable is BMI. After a 6 months stabilization evaluation phase will be followed (only in patients that have increase 10% BMI) by a double-bind, crossover phase, where patients will receive 3 months with stimulation turned on and 3 month with turned off. All patients will have a 12 months follow up. The study secondary objectives are to know the relation btween the stimulacion answer (increase 10% BMI) and the differents variables, specially AN type, associated cormobidity, selected target and preoperative MRI tractography study.
Pilot study to assess energy turnover at end of inpatient treatment in 10 patients with Anorexia nervosa.
OBJECTIVE: Anorexia Nervosa (AN) is a complex disorder of unknown etiology that is characterized by disordered eating behaviors and specific psychopathology. In the course of anorexia around 50% will recover in the first 10 years, 25% will continue to experience symptoms but will be able to function, and 25% will go to develop chronic course, and by definition become severe treatment resistant(Tr). There is little if anything to offer to this population where the range of treatment options is limited to weight restoration interventions. Transcranial magnetic stimulation (rTMS) is a non-invasive intervention, which presents a particular interest in people with severe TrAN, specifically because of its ability to target deeper areas of the brain, such as insula, which has been argued to be a possible trait marker for AN. METHODS: This pilot study will test the efficacy and safety of deep-rTMS delivered with the H-coil in subjects with long standing treatment resistant severe anorexia nervosa (TrAN).
The purpose of this research study is to analyze the microorganisms residing in the gut of patients with anorexia nervosa. Research has begun to link changes in the intestinal microbiota with diseases such as inflammatory bowel disease (IBS), asthma, and obesity, but although some studies have investigated the intestinal microbiota in overweight/obese individuals, very little is known about the intestinal microbiota in underweight individuals. The investigators aim to identify the enteric bacterial groups associated with adiposity, BMI, anxiety, and stress in patients with anorexia nervosa.