View clinical trials related to Anxiety Disorder.
Filter by:The proposed design is a single-group open-label trial. Qualified consenting participants with active alcohol dependence and primary or secondary anxiety disorder will receive monitored disulfiram and lorazepam, in the context of a structured Medication Management (MM) model. In weeks 9-15 lorazepam is tapered, and disulfiram is stopped at the end of week 16. Participants who achieve 4 weeks abstinence and meet criteria for a primary anxiety disorder or mood disorder may receive ancillary medication consisting FDA-approved non-benzodiazepine treatment, with specific options for each disorder described in the protocol. Participants requiring continued treatment are referred to clinical treatment in the community at week 16, and bridging prescriptions of anxiolytic/antidepressant medication may be provided. A final follow-up assessment occurs at week 28. The primary outcomes are Percent Days Abstinent (PDA) and retention in treatment. Secondary alcohol outcomes are consequences, drinks per drinking day, remission status, and time to first heavy drinking day. Anxiety outcomes are Hamilton Anxiety Scale scores and anxiety disorder diagnosis.
RATIONALE: Gathering information about how patients respond to stress and measuring stress levels in women with newly diagnosed breast cancer may help doctors provide better methods of treatment and on-going care. PURPOSE: This research study is measuring stress in women with newly diagnosed stage I, stage II, or stage III breast cancer or ductal carcinoma in situ of the breast.
RATIONALE: Acupuncture may help relieve muscle and bone pain caused by aromatase inhibitor therapy, such as letrozole, exemestane, and anastrozole. PURPOSE: This randomized phase II trial is studying acupuncture to see how well it works in reducing muscle and bone symptoms in women receiving letrozole, exemestane, or anastrozole for stage 0, stage I, stage II, or stage III breast cancer.
This study will determine the effectiveness of MK0777 GEM versus Lorazepam in the treatment of patients with generalized anxiety disorder. This is an early phase trial and some specific protocol information is in progress and not publicly available at this time. (Full information is available to trial participants).
RATIONALE: Patients who undergo treatment for head and neck cancer may become anxious and avoid contact with other people. Learning how cancer treatment may cause anxiety in patients with head and neck cancer may help improve the quality of life in these patients. PURPOSE: This clinical trial is studying anxiety and avoidance of others in patients previously treated for head and neck cancer.
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.
RATIONALE: Physical activity may prevent or lessen depression and anxiety and improve quality of life and immune function in patients with colorectal cancer. PURPOSE: This randomized clinical trial is studying how well physical activity helps patients with stage II or stage III colorectal cancer recover from cancer.
The purpose of this research study is to evaluate the safety, tolerability, and efficacy (how well the drug works) of risperidone compared to placebo (an inactive drug) in the treatment of bipolar disorder with panic disorder or generalized anxiety disorder. Risperidone is currently approved by the United States Food and Drug Administration (FDA) for the treatment of schizophrenia and bipolar mania. Risperidone is not currently FDA approved for the treatment of bipolar hypomania with or without panic disorder or generalized anxiety disorder (the condition being investigated in this study).
The purpose of the Strongest Families (formerly Family Help Program)is to evaluate the effectiveness of the Strongest Families distance intervention compared to usual or standard care that is typically provided to children with mild to moderate Anxiety symptomology. This is a single-center trial based at the IWK Health Center. The primary outcome is change in diagnosis.
To evaluate the efficacy of a fixed dose of SR58611A (350mg q12) compared to placebo in patients with GeneralizedAnxiety Disorder (GAD) using escitalopram (10 mg qd) as positive control. To evaluate the tolerability and safety of SR58611A in patients with GAD.