View clinical trials related to Bipolar Disorder.
Filter by:Serious mental illnesses require years of monitoring and adjustments in treatment. Stress, substance abuse or reduced medication adherence cause rapid worsening of symptoms, with consequences that include job loss, homelessness, suicide, incarceration, and hospitalization. Treatment visits can be infrequent. Illness exacerbations usually occur with no clinician awareness, leaving little opportunity to make treatment adjustments. Tools are needed that quickly detect illness worsening. At least two thirds of Veterans with serious mental illness use a smart phone. These phones generate data that characterize sociability, activity and sleep. Changes in these are warning signs for relapse. Members of this project developed an app that monitors and transmits these mobile data. This project studies passive mobile sensing that allows Veterans to self-track their activities, sociability and sleep; and studies whether this can be used to track symptoms. The project intends to produce a mobile platform that monitors the clinical status of patients, identifies risk for relapse, and allows early intervention.
Growing evidence has supported rapid and robust antidepressant effects with subanesthetic doses of intravenous (IV) ketamine for treatment resistant depression (TRD). However, no completed or ongoing randomized control trials (RCTs) have evaluated the effects of repeated doses of IV ketamine for a homogenous sample of patients with treatment-resistant bipolar disorder (TRBD). The primary research goal is to determine the acute antidepressant efficacy, safety and tolerability of four repeated sub-anesthetic doses of IV ketamine in moderate to severe TRBD. Secondary aims include evaluating effects of IV ketamine on suicidal ideations, quality of life, function and duration of effects. Herein, a two-site (University Health Network and Ontario Shores Centre for Mental Health Sciences), phase II, double-blinded, midazolam-controlled, two-week RCT evaluating the efficacy, safety and tolerability of four flexibly-dosed adjunctive ketamine infusions (0.5-0.75mg/kg infused over 40 minutes) for acute treatment of moderate to severe TRBD (type I & II) is proposed. The primary outcome will be Montgomery-Åsberg Depression Rating Scale (MADRS) scores, determining the between group difference in change from baseline to day 14, using analysis of covariance (ANCOVA), with 14-day MADRS as the outcome and baseline MADRS and stratification variables (sex, bipolar type) as covariates. Secondary outcomes include evaluating response and remission rates, safety, tolerability (including treatment-emergent mania), and effects on suicidality, anxiety, quality of life, function and the duration of effects (to day 28).
Theta Burst Transcranial Magnetic Stimulation (TBS) in dorsolateral prefrontal cortex (DLPFC) has shown efficacy and safety as an adjuvant strategy for resistant to treatment depression (RTD) in daily sessions during 4-6 weeks (20-30 sessions). Current investigation in TBS aims to design intensive treatment protocols so as to achieve earlier responses and higher rates of efficacy. However, the implementation of TBS in the Public National Health Service requires cost-effective protocols that ensure and facilitate patients adherence to treatment, and whose design is based on clinical and neuroimaging biomarkers of response so as to adequately select candidate patients. The aim of this study is to assess the efficacy and safety of novel bilateral and unilateral intensive and spaced protocols of TBS in outpatients with unipolar and bipolar RTD compared with sham stimulation. Specific objectives: I) Comparison of mood change, response and remission of depressive illness at the end of TBS protocol in the groups and maintenance of its effect at 3 months; II) Characterization of neuroimaging cerebral connectivity networks and cerebral metabolism patterns of patients with RTD related to the effects of bilateral or unilateral TBS; III) Identification of clinical and demographic predictors contributing to response to TBS; IV) Analysis of the interaction between clinical, demographic and neuroimaging predictors so as to determine a RTD profile of patient that can benefit from TBS.
BIPGEN is a cross-sectional study on the genetics of bipolar disorder. As a subproject of BIPGEN, BIP-COVID is a cross-sectional genetics study about risks & resilience in the COVID-19 (Coronavirus disease) pandemic in bipolar disorder (BD) and healthy controls at the Medical University of Graz. Study participants with BD and controls from the well-established BIPLONG and BIPGEN studies will undergo a special BIP-COVID visit, which will include a COVID-19 specific online Lime survey about the psychological burden in the COVID-19 crisis, a COVID-19 antibody test (IgM and IgG), inflammation markers and isolation of DNA from fasting blood. Genotyping of DNA will be done with the GSA V.3 array. Genetic analyses (Polygenic Risk Scores of I. Stress or Major Depression and II. COVID-19 infection established with the programs PLINK, PRSice and R) will be used to analyze the genetic mechanisms of COVID-19 pandemic associated psychological symptoms and COVID-19 infection risk. Systems biology methods will be used to depict protective pathways against COVID-19 infection (e.g. Lithium pathways) and against COVID-19 associated psychiatric symptoms.
The validation of biomarkers allowing the discrimination of cognitive and behavioral disorders of psychiatric origin from those of neurodegenerative origin would facilitate diagnosis and improve patient management. Neurofilaments, which are markers of neuronal lysis, appear to be a promising biomarker. In a previous preliminary study, the investigators demonstrated significantly lower concentrations of neurofilaments in CSF of psychiatric patients compared to neurodegenerative diseases. The main objective of this study is to validate the plasma assay of neurofilament light chain as a biomarker for the differential diagnosis of psychiatric or neurodegenerative cognitive impairment. Other biomarkers of interest (Tau, TDP-43, GFAP and UCH-L1) will also be analyzed. A sub-part of this study will also focus on the retrospective analysis of the CSF/Plasma correlations of the different biomarkers mentioned above from tube bottom samples taken in routine care.
Pragmatic, randomised, controlled, parallel-group, superiority trial of ketamine vs. midazolam as an adjunctive therapy for depression. The main purpose of the trial is to assess the mood-rating score difference between ketamine and midazolam from before the first infusion to 24 hours after the final infusion, supplemented by a 95% confidence interval. There will also be a 24-week follow-up after the final infusion session.
Bipolar disorder affects more than 1% of the population. This pathology is considered as one of the most serious psychiatric disorder because of it is high suicide rates. It impacts patients life quality on many aspects, and specially their sleeping and circadian Rhythms. This can lead to more severe symptoms up to for thymic relapses. It was shown that Luminotherapy and Psychoeducation Program have a positive impact on these type of symptoms.
Post-acute sequelae of SARS-CoV-2 infection can cause multiple system function disorders, and complicated symptoms last for an extended period. The virus can cause this continued infection, or the virus causes immune system function disorder and post-infectious autoimmune disease. The clinical symptoms can be smell loss, taste loss to liver function disorder, kidney function failure, different. No matter how complicated the systems showed in the clinic, all of the symptoms are due to the specific cells being damaged. Our clinical study is focused on recovering the damaged structure and function of the cells that could restore the organ function back to normal or close to normal
Electroconvulsive therapy (ECT) is a highly effective treatment for some psychiatric disorders like major depressive or bipolar disorder, but may lead to agitation and delirium after the procedure in up to 65% of patients. This can have negative side effects and be dangerous for patient and attending staff. Clonidine, a central-acting alpha2-receptor agonist, is an approved antihypertensive medication with known sedative side effects. Clonidine's newer but more expensive successor, dexmedetomidine, has recently shown its potential to reduce this kind of delirium. The investigators therefore hypothesise that pre-treatment with 2 mcg/kg clonidine prior to electroconvulsive therapy will significantly reduce the incidence of postictal delirium. This potentially makes a highly efficient treatment for patients with otherwise refractory psychiatric illness safer and more accessible.
Investigators will conduct a confirmatory efficacy trial of Interpersonal and Social Rhythm Therapy (IPSRT) delivered via telehealth for offspring of bipolar parents (OBP; age 12-18, n=120) at elevated risk for BP onset via risk calculator score. All participants receive a baseline clinical assessment of psychiatric symptoms and sleep disturbance (via objective and subjective methods), followed by a feedback session. Youth are then randomized to receive 8 sessions of IPSRT or a manualized Healthy Lifestyle Behaviors Program (HL) delivered via secure videoconference. As clinically indicated, youth are offered Community Treatment Referral (CTR) for any psychiatric symptoms/disorders identified at intake. Primary outcome domains over 18 months include mania and affective lability. Investigators will also further investigate the hypothesized mechanism underlying IPSRT (i.e., sleep/circadian disruption) across levels of analysis, and the contribution of interpersonal stress to sleep/circadian disruptions. Application of Implementation Science methods throughout maximizes ultimate scalability and feasibility if efficacious. Investigators will also examine whether passive cellphone sensing may serve as a portable, cost-effective measure of mechanisms and outcomes to enhance ultimate dissemination.