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Bulimia Nervosa clinical trials

View clinical trials related to Bulimia Nervosa.

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NCT ID: NCT05724394 Active, not recruiting - Eating Disorders Clinical Trials

Feasibility Trial of Getting Better Bite by Bite for Eating Disorders

CaGBBB
Start date: April 28, 2023
Phase: N/A
Study type: Interventional

This is a mixed method feasibility randomized controlled trial to explore the feasibility and acceptability of therapist delivered, culturally adapted, manualized Ca-GBBB intervention for Eating Disorders (EDs) - Bulimia Nervosa (BN) and Bing Eating Disorder (BED) in Pakistan.

NCT ID: NCT04625959 Active, not recruiting - Bulimia Nervosa Clinical Trials

Optimizing Mindfulness and Acceptance Based Behavioral Treatment for Bulimia Nervosa and Binge Eating Disorder

Start date: June 5, 2020
Phase: N/A
Study type: Interventional

The current study will use a full factorial design to identify the independent and combined effects of four core MABT components when combined with standard behavioral treatment for BN and BED. The primary aim of the study will be to evaluate the independent efficacy of Mindful Awareness, Distress Tolerance, Emotion Modulation, and Values-Based Decision Making on eating pathology (at posttreatment and at 6 and 12-month follow-ups). Secondary aims will be (1) to test target engagement of each MABT component, i.e., to confirm that each treatment component impacts both the variable which it targets and self-regulation and that improvements in these are associated with improvements in outcomes and (2) to test the hypotheses that the efficacy of each component is moderated by related baseline deficits in self-regulation (e.g. individuals with worse distress tolerance at baseline are most likely to benefit from conditions that include the Distress Tolerance component). A final exploratory aim will be to quantify the component interaction effects, which may be partially additive (because components overlap and/or there is diminishing return), fully additive, or synergistic (in that components may partially depend on each other).

NCT ID: NCT04127214 Active, not recruiting - Anorexia Nervosa Clinical Trials

The ITA Model of Integrated Treatment of Eating Disorders

ITAMITED
Start date: November 2, 2017
Phase:
Study type: Observational [Patient Registry]

This is a naturalistic study implementing a routine assessment to monitor the evolution of the patients with eating disorders being treated in various centers of "ITA salud mental" in Spain.

NCT ID: NCT03946540 Active, not recruiting - Anorexia Nervosa Clinical Trials

Longitudinal Follow Up of Eating Disorder Treatment

L-FED
Start date: July 14, 2019
Phase:
Study type: Observational

The research proposed here seeks to delineate the outcomes of people who have received treatment for an eating disorder at a specialist eating disorder service in childhood or adolescence (hereafter 'former patients'). This will inform our understanding of the maintenance of treatment effects beyond initial trial follow-ups, and together with data collected during treatment will allow for identification of factors predicting chronicity which will inform further treatment development.

NCT ID: NCT03808467 Active, not recruiting - Anorexia Nervosa Clinical Trials

Cognitive Training for Patients With Eating Disorders

TCRTRCT
Start date: March 1, 2019
Phase: N/A
Study type: Interventional

Eating disorders are severe mental illnesses, mainly affecting adolescent- and young adult women. The prognoses for eating disorders are relatively poor, and a large part of patients with these illnesses do not benefit from available conventional therapies. After decades of research into the causes of eating disorders, there is now compelling evidence for specific neuropsychological difficulties in patients affected by eating disorders. These neuropsychological difficulties are characterized by cognitive and behavioral rigidity (poor set-shifting abilities), as well as difficulties related to central coherence, planning and impulse control. Surprisingly, few therapies specifically target these difficulties, and they are rarely incorporated into treatment. Cognitive Remediation Therapy has shown promising results as an adjunctive therapeutic intervention for patients with anorexia Nervosa. The primary aim of this randomized controlled trial is thus to investigate the effect of Cognitive Remediation Therapy on neuropsychological function, symptoms of eating disorders and general mental health, quality of life and motor activity in women with both eating disorders (transdiagnostic) and these specific cognitive difficulties.

NCT ID: NCT02940613 Active, not recruiting - Bulimia Nervosa Clinical Trials

Using Visual Feedback to Influence Rapid Response in the Treatment of Eating Disorders

Start date: December 2016
Phase: N/A
Study type: Interventional

This study has two aims: 1) to test the validity of an eating disorder symptom checklist against an established clinical interview; and 2) to examine whether providing eating disorder patients with visual graphs of their symptom frequency in the early sessions of active treatment will lead to higher numbers of patients achieving a "rapid response" (65% reduction in symptoms in the first 4 weeks of treatment). Groups where patients receive visual graphs of symptom frequency will be compared with groups where patients do not receive visual graphs of symptom frequency on rates of rapid response to cognitive behavior treatment for eating disorders.

NCT ID: NCT01888406 Active, not recruiting - Obesity Clinical Trials

Binge Eating Self-help Treatment for University Students

BEST4US
Start date: January 2013
Phase: N/A
Study type: Interventional

BEST4US compares the effectiveness of two forms of self-help interventions that target college students, ages 18 years to 22 years, who report binge eating. The overall question is whether one or the other format will prevent excess weight gain and lead to differences in eating behaviors. The two formats are (1) "pure self-help" (receipt of a self-help program via book form or online texts) and (2) a combination of the self-help program and guidance provided by a trained peer coach over the course of 8 weekly sessions.

NCT ID: NCT01693237 Active, not recruiting - Clinical trials for Bulimia Nervosa (BN)

Improving Patient Outcome in Group Therapy for Eating Disorders

F-EAT
Start date: August 2012
Phase: Phase 2/Phase 3
Study type: Interventional

The current trial aims to investigate the impact of continuous feedback on dropout and outcome in group therapy. The hypothesis is that continuous feedback to patient and therapist on treatment progress and alliance will 1) increase adherence and 2) increase treatment outcome.

NCT ID: NCT01567670 Active, not recruiting - Clinical trials for Binge Eating Disorder

Clinical Trial on Binge Eating Disorder, Treatment With Naloxone Spray

BED
Start date: August 2011
Phase: Phase 2/Phase 3
Study type: Interventional

The investigators are studying a new treatment for one subtype of obesity. Obesity is not a disease. It is a symptom of several different diseases. These diseases have distinct etiologies, being caused by aberrations in different mechanisms. Forms of obesity caused by such non-critical mechanisms might be corrected fairly easily and safely. The investigators are interested in overeating and obesity that is caused by the opioidergic system. The opioidergic system appears to be responsible for a subtype of obesity associated with binge eating disorder (BED). People, especially with the right genetic predisposition, can become addicted to foods that release endorphins, in the way that people become addicted to exogenous opiates and other drugs that release endorphins. The particular application in our proposed clinical trial is for intranasal (IN) naloxone. The peak levels of naloxone were similar and the bioavailability of naloxone intranasally was 100% (the same) of that available IV." IN administration of naloxone has since been broadly tested in humans, as well, where it has been shown to be safe, with pharmacokinetics similar to those of naloxone given by injection .

NCT ID: NCT00220662 Active, not recruiting - Anorexia Nervosa Clinical Trials

The Efficacy of Readiness and Motivation Therapy in Individuals With Anorexia Nervosa and Bulimia Nervosa

Start date: June 2000
Phase: Phase 3
Study type: Interventional

This research examines the efficacy of a 5-session individual psychotherapy intervention designed to enhance readiness and motivation for change in individuals with anorexia nervosa, bulimia nervosa, and eating disorder not otherwise specified. It is hypothesized that individuals randomly assigned to receive Readiness and Motivation Therapy (RMT) will have higher readiness and motivation scores and improved eating disorder and psychiatric symptomatology following the intervention than individuals assigned to a no-treatment control condition.