View clinical trials related to Bipolar Disorder.
Filter by:This study was planned to determine the predictive effects of impulsivity and coping skills on quality of life in patients with bipolar disorder. The sample of the study, which was carried out in a descriptive design, will consist of 80 patients who applied to Adıyaman Besni State Hospital Psychiatry Outpatient Clinic with a diagnosis of bipolar disorder according to Diagnostic and Statistical Manual of Mental Disorders-5 and who were in the euthymic period according to the doctor's control. It was planned to collect the data by applying the Personal Information Form prepared by the researchers, "Brief Quality of Life in Bipolar Disorder", "Barratt Impulsivity Scale -11 Short Form" and "Coping Attitudes Evaluation Scale". The data will be evaluated with descriptive statistics, Mann-Whitney U-test, Kruskal Wallis test, Pearson correlations and regression analyses using Statistical Package for the Social Sciences 22 software. Scale use and ethics committee permission were obtained from the responsible authors of the scales before the study.
An open-label, randomized, active control inpatient trial to evaluate the efficacy and tolerability of sublingual dexmedetomidine for the treatment of agitation in inpatients with schizophrenia or bipolar disorder as measured by the Positive and Negative Syndrome Scale - Excited Component (PANSS-EC) and Agitation-Calmness Evaluation Scale (ACES). Lorazepam will serve as the active control.
This is a 2x2, within-subjects, cross-over trial to test the anti-depressant effects of acute exercise in 20 participants with bipolar depression. Participants will complete four experimental sessions, two with an exercise challenge and two with a resting control condition in a counterbalanced order. Participants will receive either 800mg of ibuprofen or placebo before exercise or rest in order to test whether blocking the inflammatory response to exercise interferes with the neural and psychological effects of exercise.
The investigators aim to examine the effect of the ketogenic diet on brain activity, metabolism, and emotions in adults with Bipolar Disorder (BD).
The goal of this clinical trial is to compare engagement in treatment in coordinated specialty care (CSC) to five extra care elements (CSC 2.0) in first-episode psychosis. The main question it aims to answer is: • Does the addition of certain elements of care increase the number of visits in treatment for first-episode psychosis? Participants will either: - Receive care as usual (CSC) or - Receive care as usual (CSC) plus five additional care elements (CSC 2.0): 1. Individual peer support 2. Digital outreach 3. Care coordination 4. Multi-family group therapy 5. Cognitive remediation Researchers will compare the standard of care (CSC) to CSC 2.0 to see if participants receiving CSC 2.0 have more visits to their clinic in their first year.
Major Depression is often resistant to treatment, and all of the currently marketed anti-depressants can cause significant side effects and may precipitate mania. The aim of this proposal is to perform a proof-of-concept RCT testing Palmitoylethanolamide (PEA) as a treatment for unipolar or bipolar depression, randomizing 100 patients to 6-week treatment with PEA 1200 mg/d or matching placebo. There are several rationales for this study: (A) PEA acts at the peroxisome proliferator-activated receptor-alpha (PPAR-α), stimulating Allo biosynthesis. Allo is an endogenous, positive allosteric modulator of GABA-A receptors in glutamatergic neurons, including cortical and hippocampal pyramidal glutamatergic neurons and may be one of the endogenous regulators of depression and anxiety. (B) Sage Therapeutics has developed Allo which is FDA approved to treat post-partum depression, and is testing a molecular modification which can be administered orally for post-partum depression and unipolar depression, with mixed efficacy results. Pregnenolone, a precursor of neurosteroids, has also been reported to improve bipolar depression. Based on animal models, PEA increases Allo synthesis in areas of the brain thought to be involved in anxiety and depression. It may also favor the biosynthesis of sulfated forms of Allo and congeners that inhibit tonic rather than phasic NMDA-mediated excitatory neurotransmission. Showing that PEA-induced selective inhibition of tonic NMDA neurotransmission improves depression might enable development of steroid-based NMDA-inhibitor therapeutics. In addition, PEA-induced Allo upregulation potentiates GABA-A receptor-mediated inhibition. The NMDA and the GABAergic mechanisms may act in concert to improve behavioral outcomes. Since PEA increases Allo in the brain where it is endogenously formed, it might be more effective compared with exogenous administration, which is not site specific. There is evidence of a role of inflammation in depression; PEA has potent immunoregulatory and anti-inflammatory effects by directly activating PPAR-α, which has a protective role against neuroinflammation by inhibiting the signaling mediated by toll-like receptor 4.There is one published study which shows that PEA has an antidepressant effect in unipolar depression, 58 patients were randomized to receive 1200 mg/d of PEA or placebo added-on to citalopram, showing clinical improvements in patients receiving PEA.
The goal of this clinical trial is to investigate the effect of a four-weeks, intensive virtual reality (VR)-based cognitive remediation (training) programme involving simulated daily-life challenges on cognition and functional capacity in symptomatically stable patients with mood disorders (depression or bipolar disorder) or psychosis spectrum disorders (F20-F29; e.g. schizophrenia or schizotypal disorder). The investigators hypothesize that VR-based cognitive remediation vs. a VR control treatment has a beneficial effect on cognition after four-weeks treatment completion (primary outcome assessement time) measured with a novel ecologically valid VR test of daily-life cognitive functions (The CAVIR test; primary outcome measure), a verbal learning and memory composite score based on a traditional neuropsychological test and a performance-based measure of daily functioning (secondary outcome measures). Finally, for exploratory purposes, the study will examine neuronal underpinnings of treatment effects, and effects on additional measures of cognition, functioning and self-ratings scales (tertiary outcomes).
The purpose of this study is to assess the pharmacokinetics, safety, and tolerability following multiple ascending oral doses of ABBV-932 or placebo in healthy adult participants, participants with Generalized Anxiety Disorder (GAD), and participants with bipolar disorder (BPD).
Bipolar disorder (BD) affects between 1-3% of the world's population. People with BD experience episodes of mania or hypomania and in most cases, they experience periods of depression which can cause difficulties in daily life. Psychological therapies for people experiencing depression without mania or hypomania are widely available, but there is little research into how effective these therapies are for people with BD. Behavioral activation therapy (BA) is based on behavioral theory and has been proven to be an effective treatment for unipolar depression. It helps people re-establish healthier activity patterns and sleep regulation, especially in BD for mood stabilization. BA is theoretically and clinically well matched to the treatment of bipolar depression, but there is still very little research into offering BA to people with BD. The first aim of the current research is to implement BA for people with depression in Bipolar Disorder and study if it is feasible for this patient group. The second aim is to do a pilot study on the effectiveness of the treatment for this patient group. The research will be implemented with people seeking treatment at the specialized service for bipolar disorder at Landspítali University Hospital in Iceland. The participants will receive treatment as usual and the BA will be adjunctive. At least ten people, that are currently experiencing Bipolar Depression and are willing to take part, will receive up to 20 individual therapy sessions of BA that have been adapted for Bipolar Depression (BA-BD), and will complete regular questionnaires and interviews. The study will be a replication study to validate the previous study's findings by Kim, W. et al., 2022 in another setting.
SHAKTI (from the Sanskrit word for "power") is a 5-year natural history, longitudinal, prospective study of a cohort of 6,000 participants that will help uncover the socio-demographic, lifestyle, clinical, psychological, and neurobiological factors that contribute to antidepressant treatment response (remission, recurrence, relapse and individual outcomes in depressive disorders) and resilience. As this is an exploratory study, we will assess a comprehensive panel of carefully selected participant specific parameters - socio-demographic (age, sex, gender, race, ethnicity, economic); life habits (physical activity, substance use); clinical (medical history, anxious depression, early life trauma), biological (biomarkers in blood, saliva, urine, stool), behavioral (cognitive, emotional), neurophysiological (EEG), and neuroimaging (magnetic resonance imaging; MRI) with the goal of developing the most robust predictive models of depression treatment response and of outcomes.