View clinical trials related to Gambling Problem.
Filter by:The study is a randomized trial of gambling screening plus feedback (intervention) or gambling information (control) conditions, with data collection at baseline (T1) and a 3-month follow-up (T2). Two participant recruitment strategies (i.e., Hoosier Lottery cohort and MTurk Workers cohort) will allow the investigators to compare how recruitment source relates to post-intervention gambling behavior change intentions and assorted gambling-related behavior changes. The investigators also seek to understand how experiences with screening vary for minoritized and non-minoritized people who gamble.
Background: Gambling disorder (GD), is a behavioral addiction based on keeping play despite medical, economic and social consequences. GD is characterized by progressive and persistent brain circuits alterations (reward, stress, memory, impulse control and cognitive functions), so a possible treatment could be based on neuromodulation of specific brain areas. Repetitive transcranial magnetic stimulation (rTMS) is a non-invasive brain stimulation, which provides magnetic stimuli on certain brain areas parts with short and long-term effects. rTMS has the FDA approval for some neurological (headache) and psychiatric (treatment-resistant depression, obsessive-compulsive disorder) disease. Nowadays several evidence in scientific literature lead to a promise use of rTMS also in addiction field with a possible indication also for GD. Objectives: the main outcome is to assess symptoms related to GD (craving, play frequencies, money lost) before and after rTMS stimulation on left dorsolateral prefrontal cortex (DLPFC). Eligibility: Healthy, right-handed adults ages 18-65 with a diagnosis of GD. Design: This is a randomized, sham-controlled study. The study includes two phases:1) a rTMS continued treatment phase and 2) a follow-up without rTMS stimulation (30 days). In order to be enrolled, participants will be screened with: - Questionnaires - Medical history - Physical exam - f-MRI After being enrolled, baseline behavioral and imaging data will be collected. In particular, participants will submit: - Questionnaires - Functional MRI - Cognitive tasks During the continued rTMS phase, participants with gambling disorder will be randomized to receive real or sham rTMS. RTMS will be delivered during 5 outpatient treatment days, (3 times/die). After the last stimulation and at the end of the 30-days of follow-up period, subjects will undergo the neurocognitive and psychometric evaluation. Twenty randomized patients of whole enrolled group will undergo fMRI at baseline and at the end of arTMS treatment phase. Treatment includes: - rTMS: A weak electrical current passes through a coil placed on the head. During each stimulation day, participants will receive three rTMS sessions (13 min), with a 50 min of interval. - fMRI: Participants lie on a table that slides into a cylinder that takes pictures of the brain. They respond to images while in the scanner. - Repeat of screening tests and questionnaires
Gambling craving is involved in the development, maintenance and relapse of gambling disorder. Yet, it lacks research regarding evidence-based interventions available to mitigate craving in patients displaying gambling disorder. The elaborated intrusion theory of desire (EIT) is a cognitive model of craving which offers important avenues for the development of psychological interventions, as it clearly describes the processes at play in craving experiences (e.g., mental imageries, working memory). Recent research evidenced that the elaborated intrusion theory is relevant to account for gambling craving experiences. According to this model, craving (and desire) is the result of an elaboration process where "desires thoughts" (mental images and thoughts), induced by internal (e.g., frustration) and/or external (e.g., advertisement) triggers, require attentional and cognitive resources. The principle of interference-based techniques is to move the resources allocated to the elaboration of intrusive desire thoughts to a competing task (e.g., clay modelling, competitive mental imagery, Tetris) in order to monopolize the resources underlying craving, thus preventing its elaboration and reducing its vividness and overwhelming nature. Several studies have shown the efficacy of such techniques to reduce substance-related craving. Yet, data obtained on clinical samples remain scarce. Preliminary data have been obtained prior to this application. In order to investigate the relevance of interference-based techniques, an experimental study was conducted in community gamblers. In two conditions (19 gamblers per condition), gambling craving was first induced via a short mental imagery session and a computer-generated gambling simulation task. Then, the experimental group was asked to perform an interference task consisting of creating a vivid mental image of a bunch of keys. The control group completed a task in which they had to pop and count bubble wrap. The analyses revealed that induced craving decreases significantly in both groups. However, participants that are considered problem gamblers showed a greater decrease of their craving in the experimental condition. This previous "proof of principle" study supports that interference-based techniques are potentially promising interventions to reduce craving in problem gambling. It also warrants further research as no data is available in clinical population. The current project consists in a pilot study aiming to test the efficacy of interference-based techniques in a sample of gambling disorder patients. The investigators decided to adopt a multiple single case design, as this methodology is ideal in the sense that it helps to understand the whole process of an interference-based intervention among a small number (10) of outpatients with a gambling disorder, without control group. Ecological Momentary Assessment will be used to allow intervention no naturally occuring craving. In addition to be easily implementable in a clinical design, this design will provide sufficient evidences before possibly, in a second time, further validation of these techniques using a randomized-control trial.