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Eating Disorders clinical trials

View clinical trials related to Eating Disorders.

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NCT ID: NCT02104544 Completed - Clinical trials for Nutrient Intake Disorder

Investigation of DHA Intake in Pregnant and Lactating Women in China

Start date: April 2014
Phase: N/A
Study type: Observational

This is a multi-center, cross-sectional, non-interventional, observational study——an investigation carried out in 816 pregnant (pregnant week 17±2 group and pregnant week 39±2 group; 408 cases in each group) and 408 lactating women (post-natal lactation day 42±7 group) from a total of 4 sites in 3 typical areas (1 coastal regions, 2 inland regions and 1 lake regions) in China to study the correlation between DHA intake and DHA concentrations in blood and breast milk.

NCT ID: NCT02076854 Completed - Eating Disorders Clinical Trials

A Novel Motivational Ecological Momentary Intervention for Anorexia Nervosa

Start date: October 2013
Phase: N/A
Study type: Interventional

The aim of this study is to pilot an innovative motivational text-message intervention for individuals with anorexia nervosa and subthreshold anorexia nervosa. Patients will receive personalized motivational text-messages as an adjunct to cognitive behavioral therapy (CBT). CBT will be provided to patients at no cost for the duration of the study. The investigators hypothesize that the text-messages will help increase motivation to change and kilocalorie intake and decrease eating disordered behavior.

NCT ID: NCT02076464 Completed - Eating Disorders Clinical Trials

Using Technology to Improve Eating Disorders Treatment

Start date: January 12, 2014
Phase: N/A
Study type: Interventional

The purpose is to evaluate a technologically-enhanced, guided self-help program to reduce eating disorder outcomes in college-age women.

NCT ID: NCT02038712 Completed - Obesity Clinical Trials

fMRI and Ghlrein in Obesity and Binge Eating Disorder

Start date: June 2006
Phase: N/A
Study type: Interventional

Binge Eating Disorder (BED) may be associated with he development of obesity. However, the pathogenesis of BED is currently unclear, thus making the development of treatment and prevention strategies for BED difficult. Differences in the mechanisms regulating food intake may go some way to reveal potential mechanisms for BED.The purpose of this study is to investigate the responses of key gut-derived hormones that are associated with the regulation of food intake and functional brain activity to food cues using fMRI in BED patients and weight matched controls.

NCT ID: NCT02029365 Terminated - Infertility Clinical Trials

Transversal, Controlled and Not Randomized Study, Laying on the Desire of Children and Eating Disorders in a Population of Infertile Women

TCA2
Start date: January 2014
Phase: N/A
Study type: Interventional

In France , 15% of couples seek help for problems conceiving . In 10% of cases, infertility remains " unexplained" . Among the causes of female infertility , there are the eating disorders, as well as sexual disorders , these two cases may be linked. In addition, data from the literature seem to suggest that beyond a diagnosis of eating disorders, the feeding behavior of infertile women is more often disturbed than the general population. Moreover, the notions of desire for a child and maternal representations seem essential to address in the comprehensive care of women with infertility but also TCA integrating all conflicting issues reactivated at the time of motherhood. However, little work has been done on this subject. Thus, we propose a study on the desire for children and the eating disorders to infertile women, to update epidemiological data, but also to better characterize this particular patient population. Perspectives of this work are to improve screening measures and support through a joint work of doctors reproductive and psychiatrists.

NCT ID: NCT02021344 Completed - Depression Clinical Trials

Mental Health First Aid for College Students

Start date: September 2009
Phase: N/A
Study type: Interventional

Most college students with mental disorders do not receive treatment, and over 80% of those who die by suicide have never made contact with campus mental health services. Knowledge, stigma, and other health beliefs represent significant barriers to help-seeking for many of these students. However, there have been no large-scale intervention studies for reducing these barriers to mental health treatment on college campuses. This project will fill this gap by determining whether a community mental health education program, Mental Health First Aid (MHFA), is an effective method to increase number of students who seek mental health services on college campuses. MHFA is an international, 12-hour training program that has been shown to increase knowledge of mental illnesses and their treatments, decrease stigma, and increase helping behaviors in community members. However, it has not been tested in a college setting in the United States. To determine the effectiveness of MHFA in US colleges, the proposed project will involve a randomized control trial of the MHFA training program on 32 campuses representing a range of higher education institutions, from community colleges in rural areas to research universities in large, urban areas. The MHFA training program will be administered to peer supports such as residential advisors. Administrative data from campus mental health services and pre- and post-intervention surveys will be used to collect outcome data on service utilization, knowledge, attitudes, and other measures. Data analyses will focus on identifying changes in students' behaviors, knowledge, and attitudes toward mental illnesses that can be attributed to the MHFA training. In addition to testing a novel and timely mental health intervention for college students, this project will result in improved data collection measures for college populations, and will lay the foundation for stronger connections and future collaborations between diverse campus communities. If the MHFA program is successful in reducing stigma and increasing general on-campus awareness and early treatment of emerging mental health problems, then it may provide a cost-effective means for enabling more students to seek early treatments for developing mental health problems.

NCT ID: NCT01990755 Completed - Anorexia Nervosa Clinical Trials

Neurobiology of Eating Disorders Treatments

NEDT
Start date: May 2010
Phase: N/A
Study type: Interventional

Background. Treatments of eating disorders result too often in partial psychological and physical remission, chronic course, dropout, relapse and death, with no fully known explanations for this failure. In order to clarify this problem, we conducted a three branches study to identify the biochemical background of cognitive-behavioral psychotherapy (CBT), individual psychology brief psychotherapy (IBPP), and psychotherapy-pharmacotherapy with CBT+olanzapine in anorexics (AN) and bulimics (BN) by measuring the levels of plasma homovanillic acid (HVA) for dopamine secretion, plasma 3-methoxy-4-hydroxy-phenylglycol (MHPG) for noradrenalin secretion, and platelet [3 Hydrogen]-Paroxetine-binding Bmax and Kd for serotonin transporter function. The data were then compared with psychopathological and physical alterations. Methods. Branch 1 investigated the effects of 4 months of CBT on plasma HVA, MHPG and [3 Hydrogen]-Par-binding in 14 AN-restricted, 14 AN-bingeing/purging, and 22 BN inpatients. Branch 2 investigated the effects of 4 months of IBPP on plasma HVA in 15 AN and 17 BN outpatients. Branch 3 investigated the effect of 3 months of CBT+olanzapine (5 mg/day) in 30 AN outpatients. The data are analyzed using one-way ANOVA for repeated measures for the changes between basal and post-treatment biological and psychological parameters, two-way ANOVA for repeated measures for the differences in the psychobiological data in the 3 groups, Spearman's test for the correlations between basal and final changes in the psychological and biological scores.

NCT ID: NCT01989871 Not yet recruiting - Breast Feeding Clinical Trials

Adjusted Individual Oral Feeding for Improving Short and Long Term Outcomes of Preterm Infants

Start date: December 2013
Phase: N/A
Study type: Interventional

The authors hypothesize that adjusted individual feeding (AIF) for preterm infant starting from transition to oral feeding (33 weeks corrected age) will result in less episodes of apnea/bradycardia, early achievement of full oral feeding, improved weight gain and shorten hospitalization duration in the short term. In the long term AIF will result in higher scores on the Griffith's developmental scales, decreasing parental anxiety and feeding disorders .

NCT ID: NCT01927042 Completed - Eating Disorders Clinical Trials

Effectiveness of the ECHOs Approach for Patients With Eating Disorders and Their Carers

ECHO
Start date: April 2014
Phase: N/A
Study type: Interventional

Family therapy is considered an empirically supported treatment approach for adolescents and adults with eating disorders. One family based approach, Expert Carers Helping Others (ECHO) is based on evidence that suggests family environment, e.g., carer criticism, can influence an individual's eating disorder symptoms. ECHO aims to improve carer coping, reduce expressed emotion and manage eating disorder symptoms, and has been associated with reduced carer distress, caregiver burden, and an increase in general well being. The current pilot study seeks to evaluate a new condensed version of the ECHO intervention that is delivered entirely in a 2 ½ hour self-help DVD format (ECHOs). Sixty patients and their carers will be recruited from the Capital Health Eating Disorders Service and randomized into either a treatment as usual group (TAU) or a TAU+ECHOs group. Both carers and patients will be assessed along a variety of dimensions including psychiatric symptoms, family functioning, and carer and patient collaboration, at pre-intervention, four weeks later at post-intervention, and then three-months post-intervention. ANOVAs will be used to compare the primary outcomes between the two groups over time. This pilot study will be the first evaluation of ECHOs, which may ultimately boost the efficacy of current treatment for adults with eating disorders and reduce carer distress.

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.