View clinical trials related to Chronic Insomnia.
Filter by:The purpose of this study was to examine the impact of Chinese medicine on melatonin levels in patients with insomnia
This study investigates the impact of Aalpha-s1 casein hydrolysate (ACH; Lactium®) on sleep quality in individuals with chronic insomnia, employing both subjective sleep profiles and objective polysomnography (PSG) recordings.
Prospective observational crossover study of 150 consenting adult patients who are undergoing chronic pain management. For insomnia treatment, each patient ingests prescribed doses of Lemborexant or Zopiclone or Clonidine on alternate nights. Each patient uses a special validated sleep diary to collect data including pain score, sleep score, sleep duration, sleep medication type, and adverse effects. Each patient completes the diary for 3 continuous weeks. Pain is measured using the numeric pain rating scale. Sleep score is measured using the Likert sleep scale. A change in the pain or sleep scores by 2-points is considered significant.
The purpose of this study is to assess the safety and efficacy of Traditional Chinese medicine (TCM) according to Yin Yang theory for treatment of chronic insomnia .
This randomized, open, parallel controlled study aims to explore the clinical effectiveness of smartphone-based digital Cognitive behavioural therapy for insomnia(dCBT-I). Patients who diagnosed chronic insomnia disorder and proficient in using mobile phone intended to receive CBT-I. Participants will be random allocation into Group dCBT-I and Group Sleep Education. Primary outcome is the insomnia severity as measured using the Insomnia Severity Index (ISI).
In this non-randomized treatment feasibility pilot we want to explore if a simplified version of CBT-i as a non-therapist-guided digital tool can work; if the digital tool is perceived as user friendly and if participants' insomnia severity is improved following four weeks of treatment.
It has been reported that dexmedetomidine, alpha-2 adrenoceptor agonist, can activate endogenous neural sleep pathways in the central nervous system. This randomised, double-blinded and controlled trial was designed to investigate whether dexmedetomidine can improve/treat chronic insomnia patients. Its effects on sleep quality and improvement, EEG and circadian rhythm, brain connectivity, cognition and biomarker changes are determined.
Insomnia is common in the older population, over 50% of older adults have sleep complaints, and 20-40% are reported to have insomnia. In HK, 38% of adults have reported insomnia. Insomnia is associated with increased mortality and morbidity. As the worldwide population continues to age, insomnia in older adults will increasingly cause substantial economic burdens on healthcare systems and society. Cognitive behavioral therapy for insomnia (CBT-I) is currently the first-line clinically recommended non-pharmacological treatment for insomnia in older persons. Our group has been actively studying the health-enhancing effects of tai chi. Tai chi has various health benefits including fall prevention, osteoarthritis management, cardiorespiratory fitness and improvement of sleep. In the present study, the investigators want to validate the clinical effectiveness of tai chi on improving insomnia in older adults. This study aims to exam whether three months of CBT-I or three months of tai chi have similar robust effects in treating insomnia in older adults. The investigators want to validate the clinical effectiveness of tai chi on improving insomnia in older adults. The CBT-I and tai chi classes will be held twice a week with each lasting for 60 mins. The treatment is three months with 12-month follow-up. The primary outcome of this study is the insomnia severity index (ISI) score at post-intervention measure, which examining sleep-onset and sleep maintenance difficulties, satisfaction with current sleep pattern, inference with daily functioning.
90 individuals with chronic insomniacs and 30 healthy normal sleepers will have their sleep monitored by the SleepScore Max for 10 weeks. Individuals with chronic insomnia will be randomized into one of three groups (30 subjects in each): a test intervention group, a passive control group, and an active control group. The purpose of the study is to examine if the SleepScore max provides a accurate measurement of sleep relative to a validated, wrist-worn sleep monitor and if a integrated coaching feature within the SleepScore Max facilitates improvement in sleep relative to other gold standard treatment methods.
The purpose is to determine whether brief behavioral treatment is effective for insomnia in cancer survivors.