View clinical trials related to Bipolar I Disorder.
Filter by:The purpose of this study is to determine whether Bipolar I Disorder refractory treatment with Quetiapine monotherapy could be better potentiated with Lithium or Aripiprazole. The investigators hypothesized that Lithium or Aripiprazole would provide similar compliance and tolerability in maintenance treatment.
The purpose of this study is to determine whether creatine monohydrate is effective as an adjuvant treatment for bipolar depression.
The purpose of this study is to compare which of the two mood stabilizers (drugs that help to steady/stabilize mood in patients with bipolar disorder (BD)), lithium and divalproex, is more effective in patients with bipolar disorder over 26 weeks. The study will also compare if lithium or divalproex used alone versus lithium or divalproex used with quetiapine versus lithium or divalproex used with lamotrigine is more effective when symptoms of depression develop.
This is an open-label, multi-center,12 week extension study designed to evaluate the longer term safety, tolerability and effectiveness of lurasidone, flexibly dosed, adjunctive to lithium or divalproex for the treatment of subjects with bipolar I disorder, who have either completed the core study D1050296 or experienced a protocol defined recurrence of a mood event in the double-blind phase of the core study D1050296
The objective of this study was to prove the bioequivalence of Roxane Laboratories' Quetiapine Fumarate 300 mg Tablet under fasted steady state conditions.
The objective of this study was to prove the bioequivalence of Roxane Laboratories' Quetiapine Fumarate 25 mg Tablet under fed conditions.
This will be a randomized, double-blind, placebo-controlled trial to assess the time to recurrence of any mood episode in subjects with bipolar I disorder who have maintained stability on aripiprazole IM depot for at least 8 weeks. This trial will include male and female subjects 18 to 65 years of age, inclusive, with a diagnosis of bipolar I disorder, according to DSM-IV-TR criteria and confirmed by the Mini International Neuropsychiatric Interview (MINI), who have experienced at least one previous manic episode of sufficient severity to require hospitalization and/or treatment with a mood stabilizer or antipsychotic agent in addition to their current manic episode. All subjects must be experiencing a manic episode (per DSM-IV-TR criteria) with a YMRS total score ≥ 20 at trial entry. Both inpatients and outpatients are eligible for this trial. This trial will consist of a screening phase followed by 4 treatment phases. Subjects will undergo screening for eligibility, followed by a conversion to oral aripiprazole monotherapy phase, if needed, an oral aripiprazole stabilization phase, a single-blind aripiprazole IM depot stabilization phase, and, a double-blind, placebo-controlled phase.
The proposed pilot study is a placebo-controlled, parallel group, randomized clinical trial comparing two treatment strategies in adolescents with mania and prominent psychotic features. One group will receive a second generation antipsychotic (SGA) and placebo and the other will receive a SGA and lithium. The primary double-blind phase of the study will last 8 weeks, followed by a 24-week extension-phase.
Participants who have completed the 3-week trial P05691 (NCT00764478) can be screened for eligibility for this 26-week extension study in which they will continue treatment. The primary purpose of this trial is to evaluate the long-term safety of asenapine.
This is a multi-center, randomized, placebo-controlled, flexible-dose, parallel-group study designed to evaluate the efficacy and safety of lurasidone (in combination with lithium or divalproex) for the maintenance treatment of bipolar I disorder in subjects with or without rapid cycling and /or psychotic features.