Anxiety Disorders Clinical Trial
Official title:
Generalized Anxiety Disorder and Social Anxiety Disorder: Their Impact on the Processing of Social Emotional Information and Instrumental Learning
Verified date | September 21, 2016 |
Source | National Institutes of Health Clinical Center (CC) |
Contact | n/a |
Is FDA regulated | No |
Health authority | |
Study type | Observational |
The purpose of this study is to increase researchers understanding of the biological basis of
generalized anxiety disorder and social anxiety disorder. They will investigate how the brain
activity associated with specific thoughts and feelings may play a role in these anxiety
disorders. This knowledge will be used to design interventions to help those with these
illnesses.
To qualify for this study, participants must be evaluated via an initial telephone screening
interview and material sent through the mail.
Participants will then be required to make three visits to NIH. During the first visit, they
will be asked questions about their general mood, degree of nervousness, thinking skills, and
behavior. They will undergo a thorough physical exam, including an EKG, blood work,
urinalysis, and a pregnancy test for women of childbearing potential. During the second
visit, participants will spend about 2.5 hours doing various tasks while sitting and looking
at a computer screen. These tasks will guide them to experience specific kinds of thoughts
and emotions. Researchers will attach electrodes to the participants hands to monitor the
amount of electricity conducted by the skin. The third visit will be similar to the second
visit, but participants will perform the tasks while lying in a MRI scanner.
Participants will be compensated up to $400 for their involvement in this study.
Status | Completed |
Enrollment | 497 |
Est. completion date | September 21, 2016 |
Est. primary completion date | |
Accepts healthy volunteers | Accepts Healthy Volunteers |
Gender | All |
Age group | 18 Years to 50 Years |
Eligibility |
- INCLUSION CRITERIA: Age: Participants will be males and females, 18-50 years of age. IQ: IQ, as measured by 4 subscales from the Wechsler Adult Intelligence Scale-Revised (WAIS-R), must be > 80. Medication status: No regular use of psychotropic medication within 2 weeks of the study (or fluoxetine within 8 weeks of the study). No regular use of any benzodiazepine. We intend to identify patients whose GAD/SAD is currently untreated. EXCLUSION CRITERIA: Because factors such as psychiatric disease, or CNS disease, can influence functional brain activity, and pregnancy precludes participation in fMRI studies, these factors are exclusionary. 1. Psychiatric history: Participants will be assessed using DSM-IV criteria via standardized psychiatric interviews conducted by trained examiners (i.e., SCID). Any current suicidal ideation will be exclusionary. 1. Healthy comparison individuals (Group 1): All participants will be free of any current psychiatric disorder as well as lifetime history of psychosis, pervasive developmental disorder, major affective disorder, panic disorder, obsessive compulsive disorder, conduct disorder, ADHD, anorexia. 2. Patients with GAD (Group 2): Any history of an axis I diagnosis excluding SAD but not including adjustment disorder, simple phobia or dysthymia is exclusionary. There must be no current mood disoder (MD) though patients with past MD, which occurred after the onset of GAD, will be admitted to the study. We recognize the difficulty of recruiting patients with GAD without co-morbid SAD and will therefore allow patients who are comorbid into the study in this group. We have faced difficulties with our studies of children with psychopathic tendencies where, although it is possible to identify populations who only meet criteria for ADHD most children who meet criteria for psychopathic tendencies are co-morbid for ADHD. We will adopt a similar strategy to our work with children; i.e., in contrasts of patients with GAD with comparison individuals, we will use SAD symptomatology as a covariate to reduce, and evaluate, the impact of pathology associated with SAD on the data. 3. Patients with SAD (Group 3): Any current history of an axis I diagnosis including GAD, but excluding adjustment disorder, simple phobia or dysthymia is exclusionary. There must be no current mood disorder (MD) though patients with past MD, which occurred after the onset of SAD, will be admitted to the study. 2. History of Drug Abuse: Axis I diagnoses of substance use disorders will be exclusionary. 3. Severe acute and chronic medical illnesses. 4. CNS disease: History of brain abnormalities (e.g., neoplasms, subarachnoid cysts), cerebrovascular disease, infectious disease (e.g., abscess), or other neurological disease, or history of head trauma (defined as loss of consciousness > 3 min). 5. Metal or electronic objects: Metal plates, certain types of dental braces, cardiac pacemakers, etc., that are sensitive to electromagnetic fields contraindicate MRI scans. 6. Claustrophobia: Participants will be questioned about potential discomfort in being in an enclosed space, such as an MRI scanner. 7. Pregnancy status: Because of the potential effects of hormonal changes on brain function as well as the unknown effects of electromagnetic field on the fetus, known pregnancy is an exclusion criterion. |
Country | Name | City | State |
---|---|---|---|
United States | National Institutes of Health Clinical Center, 9000 Rockville Pike | Bethesda | Maryland |
Lead Sponsor | Collaborator |
---|---|
National Institute of Mental Health (NIMH) |
United States,
Adolphs R, Tranel D, Hamann S, Young AW, Calder AJ, Phelps EA, Anderson A, Lee GP, Damasio AR. Recognition of facial emotion in nine individuals with bilateral amygdala damage. Neuropsychologia. 1999 Sep;37(10):1111-7. — View Citation
Ambrogi Lorenzini CG, Baldi E, Bucherelli C, Sacchetti B, Tassoni G. Neural topography and chronology of memory consolidation: a review of functional inactivation findings. Neurobiol Learn Mem. 1999 Jan;71(1):1-18. Review. — View Citation
Bechara A, Damasio H, Damasio AR, Lee GP. Different contributions of the human amygdala and ventromedial prefrontal cortex to decision-making. J Neurosci. 1999 Jul 1;19(13):5473-81. — View Citation
Type | Measure | Description | Time frame | Safety issue |
---|---|---|---|---|
Primary | Association of GAD/SAD with amygdala act | Ongoing |
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