View clinical trials related to Generalized Anxiety Disorder.
Filter by:Sensoril - Extracts of Withania somnifera (Ashwagandha in Ayurvedic Medicine) have shown potent anti-stress, cortisol lowering, GABAergic, serotonergic and antioxidant properties in animal and human studies. Furthermore, controlled, single site human studies have shown the anxiolytic potential of WS extracts.The present study is a Phase II Double-Blind, Parallel Group, Randomized, Placebo Controlled Clinical Trial of Sensoril® for Patients with Generalized Anxiety Disorder. The primary objectives of this study are to assess the efficacy and safety of Sensoril® for patients with moderate or greater severity of symptoms associated with Generalized Anxiety Disorder. The Primary Efficacy endpoint in this study will be determined by a statistically significantly greater improvement from baseline to endpoint in total Hamilton Anxiety Scale scores in the Sensoril® treated group versus those receiving placebo. The secondary endpoints in this study will assess if Sensoril® treatment rather than placebo results in: 1. Greater response rates (≥ 50% improvement in HAM-A total scores from baseline to last value) 2. Greater remission rates (HAM-A total scores ≤ 7) at week 8 3. Greater improvement from baseline to week 8 in HAM -A psychic and somatic anxiety cluster scores. 4. Greater improvements on CGI - severity scores from baseline to last value. 5. A higher percentage of subjects rated as "much improved" or "very much improved" on the CGI - Improvement subscale at the last value. 6. Serum cortisol and DHEA-S levels will be assessed between the two treatment groups. These biomarkers are indices of stress and it is hypothesized that improvement in levels of these stress indices will favor the Sensoril® treated group. Exploratory Endpoint 1. Patient reported outcomes for sleep and calmness will be assessed between the two treatments. Safety Endpoint The safety endpoints will be determined by assessments of adverse and serious adverse events, physical examination, vital signs, EKG, and clinical laboratory measures. Clinical measures with laboratory defined reference ranges and vital signs will be assessed.
The purpose of this study is to determine whether mental health treatment disengagement may be mitigated by reducing barriers to self-management and enhancing self-management skills.
In this randomized, double blinded, Parallel-controlled study, the investigators planned to give Gamisoyosan extract, Gamisoyosan extract powder or controlled medication on Anxiety of generalized anxiety disorder according to dosage form.
The purpose of this study is to determine if cognitive-behavioral therapy (CBT)and supportive therapy delivered by telephone are effective for reducing worry and anxiety in rural older adults with Generalized Anxiety Disorder (GAD).
The purpose of this project is to implement culturally adapted Cognitive Behavioral Therapy (CBT) based interventions in general health settings that are delivered to reduce Generalized Anxiety Disorder (GAD) symptoms, increase levels of functioning, and improve health-related quality of life.
For this trial, the investigators propose a prospective trial of a collaborative care program to identify and treat depression, generalized anxiety disorder, and panic disorder among patients admitted to the hospital for an acute cardiac illness (acute coronary syndrome, congestive heart failure, or arrhythmia). Such assessment and treatment for depression/generalized anxiety disorder/panic disorder will begin in the hospital, and ongoing management will continue for six months following discharge. The investigators hypothesize that this model will lead to increased treatment rates, improved mood, reduced anxiety, and improved medical outcomes in this vulnerable population. If this model is effective, it could be implemented clinically to provide better and more complete care to patients hospitalized with acute cardiac illness, for whom depression and anxiety may be a risk factor for complications and death. This will be a two-arm, single-blind randomized controlled trial, with one-half of patients randomized to collaborative care and one-half randomized to the control condition (usual care). Psychiatric treatment in the intervention arm will be provided in concert with patients' primary care physicians—with primary care physicians prescribing all medications—within a framework supervised by a psychiatrist. The investigators will enroll patients who have any (or all) of the three included psychiatric diagnoses to improve the utility of the intervention. The investigators have chosen to enroll patients with several different cardiac diagnoses. This will allow the researchers to include patients with heterogeneous diagnoses and illness severity to determine if our intervention is effective in a broad population of patients with heart disease. The investigators will study an intervention targeting depression, generalized anxiety disorder, and panic disorder: all three disorders are disabling and associated with adverse cardiovascular outcomes, treatments for the conditions are highly similar, the investigators can treat patients who have more than one disorder, and a prior outpatient program successfully simultaneously addressed more than one mental health condition. The project will involve: (1) screening patients for depression, generalized anxiety disorder, and panic disorder as part of usual clinical care, (2) evaluation of positive-screen patients by a study social work care manager, (3) a multicomponent in-hospital intervention (for collaborative care patients) that involves patient education, specialist-provided treatment recommendations, and a goal of in-hospital treatment initiation, and (4), after discharge, continued phone-based evaluation and care coordination with primary care physicians to provide stepwise treatment in the collaborative care arm. The intervention has been designed to be low-cost, low-burden, and easily generalizable to other settings.
Autism spectrum disorders affect as many as 1 out of 150 children and are related to significant impairment in social, adaptive, and school functioning. Co-occurring conditions, such as anxiety, are common and may cause substantial distress and impairment beyond that caused by the autism diagnosis. Although effective interventions have been developed for typically developing youth with anxiety disorders, this approach needs to be adapted for children with autism. Accordingly, we are proposing a randomized controlled trial to examine the effectiveness of CBT relative to treatment as usual (TAU) in 46 youth ages 7-11 with autism spectrum disorders and comorbid anxiety disorder(s).
The specific aim of this study is to evaluate the efficacy, tolerability, and safety of ziprasidone monotherapy in comparison to placebo in the treatment of ambulatory bipolar disorder with co-morbid lifetime panic disorder or generalized anxiety disorder and current at least moderately severe anxiety.
This study will attempt to identify gene and brain activity markers that predict whether children and adolescents with anxiety disorders will respond to selective serotonin reuptake inhibitor medications or Cognitive Behavioral Therapy (CBT).
The aim of the study is to test whether Generalized Anxiety Disorder (GAD) patients that participate in a Stress Reduction Intervention show a brain activation pattern (assessed by MRI) indicative of improved emotion regulation compared to an active control intervention.