View clinical trials related to Anxiety Disorder.
Filter by:Background: - Baclofen is a drug used to control muscle stiffness in people with neurological diseases. Some studies suggest that baclofen may reduce alcohol craving and use. It helps to reduce anxiety in alcoholics, which in turn can help to reduce cravings. Researchers want to see if baclofen can be a safe and effective treatment for alcoholics who have high anxiety levels. Objectives: - To see if baclofen is safe and helpful for people who have alcoholism and high anxiety levels. Eligibility: - Individuals between 21 and 65 years of age who have been diagnosed with alcoholism and anxiety issues. - Participants must not be taking anti-anxiety medication. Design: - Participants will be screened with a physical exam and medical history. Blood and urine samples will be collected. Tests of alcohol dependency and anxiety levels will also be given. - Participants will be divided into two groups. One group will take baclofen. The other group will have a placebo. - About 1 week after the screening visit, participants will have a study visit. They will answer questions about their behavior and mood. They will then start to take either baclofen or a placebo. Participants will take the study drug three times a day, every day. - After 1 week on the study drug, participants will have an overnight stay at the National Institutes of Health. They will have blood tests and answer questions about mood and behavior. They will also have tests that involve choosing to drink alcohol and answering more questions about cravings. - Participants will stop taking their study drug over a 3-day period. - A final follow-up visit will be required 1 week after the overnight study visit. Participants will receive information about other alcohol abuse treatment programs.
The development of easily disseminated and efficacious treatment of psychiatric disorder is an important goal for translational neuroscience research. To that end, Attention Bias Modification Treatment (ABMT), a novel intervention targeting threat-related attention biases, has been shown to reduce anxiety in adults. To date, only one RCT study examined whether ABMT reduces clinical anxiety in children {Eldar, 2012 #32}, and no study has examined whether ABMT augments the efficacy of Cognitive Behavioral Treatment (CBT), the treatment of choice for anxiety disorders. Studying this question in youth is particularly important given that the onset of most anxiety disorders is during childhood, and early interventions may reduce long-term affliction. The current study is the first randomized control trial designed to examine the augmenting effects of ABMT on CBT among clinically anxious youth. The purpose of Attention Bias Modification Therapy (ABMT) is to implicitly shape anxiety-related biases in attention orienting. ABMT uses the dot-probe task as a therapeutic tool. During training, the target location is systematically manipulated to increase the proportion of targets appearing at the location opposite the patient's bias. For example, in a training protocol intended to reduce threat bias, targets would appear more frequently at locations of neutral than threat stimuli. Although CBT is an effective treatment for anxiety disorders, combining it with other treatment such as ABMT could result in additional treatment effects. CBT and ABMT are two interventions targeting different aspects of anxiety and therefore could potentially complement one another. While CBT modifies explicit and voluntary attention through verbal intervention, ABMT alters implicit and involuntary attentional biases. If ABMT augments CBT, the integration of the two treatments can have few significant benefits: First, it will combine the explicit learning of CBT with the implicit learning of ABMT and by that reduce the number of patients who respond poorly to CBT or do not respond at all. Second, computer-based training of attention may be more acceptable than traditional in-person therapy formats for some children and adolescents and can raise the cooperation in therapy. Finally, the CBT setting and the therapist presence can help to insure that ABMT is delivered consistently The current study was designed to examine the ABMT augmentation effects on CBT for children with anxiety disorders. This study is the first randomized control trial in clinically anxious youth. Participants were randomly assigned to one of three conditions: 1. Training condition (CBT+ABMT), 2. Placebo condition (CBT+ ABMT-Placebo) 3. Control condition (CBT alone). We hypothesize that participants in the training condition will show the greatest improvement in anxiety symptoms.
This pilot clinical trial studies cognitive behavioral therapy in treating anxiety in patients with stage IV non-small cell lung cancer and their caregivers. Cognitive behavioral therapy may reduce anxiety and improve the well-being and quality of life of patients who have stage IV non-small cell lung cancer and their caregivers.
This randomized clinical trial studies educational counseling in improving communication and quality of life in spouses and breast cancer patients. An outpatient education and behavior skills training program may help spouses and patients with breast cancer communicate better and improve quality of life. It is not yet known whether educational counseling is more effective than an educational booklet in improving communication and quality of life.
The aim of the present study, is to evaluate the effect of a supported employment intervention, IPS-modified for people with mood and anxiety (IPS-MA) on employment or education, when offered to people with onset mood or anxiety disorders who are not likely to be able to return to work within three month. The hypothesis is that the IPS-MA method is associated with a shorter recovery period and more people returning to work or education, compared to treatment as usual.
This study compares both clinical effectiveness and cost-effectiveness of a brief, intensified therapy and diagnostic method for patients with mood and/or anxiety disorders with Treatment As Usual (TAU) at five outpatient Mental Healthcare Centers in the Netherlands.
The aim of this project is to create fear conditioning paradigm within which the relative strengths of various novel pharmacological and behavioral interventions can be tested. These interventions are intended to reduce the fearfulness associated with fear conditioning by blocking a memory process known as reconsolidation. In fear conditioning, a "conditioned" stimulus (CS) is paired with an aversive "unconditioned" stimulus (US) such as an electric shock, until presentation of the CS alone comes to elicit a fear conditioned response (CR). The investigators hypothesize that by using a more highly prepared CS (i.e. video of spiders); more sensitive subjects (individuals with stronger acquired CRs); and additional experimental probes for the presence of the latent CR, the investigators may develop a normal human paradigm that is not plagued by previously observed floor effects (i.e. intervention is 100% effective), within which both the established techniques of propranolol and delayed extinction will produce significant, but only partial, CR reduction. This would leave room to test and compare potentially more powerful candidate reconsolidation-blocking or memory-updating interventions. To achieve these aims, subjects will undergo a four-day fear conditioning and delayed extinction protocol. Skin conductance response data will be gathered across the different phases of the experiment.
Seniors who receive supportive services face a variety of psychosocial vulnerabilities that put them at risk for depression. One group with very high risk is older adults receiving aging services through Medicaid waiver programs. This 3-year research uses a randomized controlled clinical trial to assess the effectiveness of brief behavioral therapies (problem solving therapy [PST] and Brief Behavioral Therapy for Insomnia [BBTI]) to prevent depression in seniors receiving aging services.
This randomized clinical trial studies healing touch or guided imagery in treating pain, fatigue, nausea, and anxiety in patients undergoing chemotherapy. Healing touch and guided imagery may help treat complications caused by chemotherapy. It is not yet known whether healing touch or guided imagery is more effective in treating pain, fatigue, nausea, and anxiety in patients undergoing chemotherapy
The objective of the study is to evaluate the pharmacokinetics of vortioxetine and its metabolites in connection with multiple oral dosing in child and adolescent patients with a DSM-IV-TR diagnosis of Depressive or Anxiety Disorder