View clinical trials related to Hyperactivity Disorder.
Filter by:The goal of this randomized controlled trial is to develop and to implement a multiple family narrative therapy intervention consisting of parent-child relationships training among Chinese families of children with attention deficit hyperactivity disorder (ADHD). The intervention aims to reduce the psychological distress of parents and their child, thus improving parent-child relationships, and the trial aims to assess the effectiveness of MFNT among them. A RCT design supplemented by qualitative interviews will be used to evaluate the effectiveness of multiple family narrative therapy intervention on family welfare.
This is a multi-center, prospective, randomized, open-label, controlled trial with two parallel arms and blinded endpoint assessment. It aims yo compare the 6-month efficacy of a group CBT program versus body-mediated intervention (meditation) children (7-13 years) with ADHD-associated FASD and emotional dysregulation via a measurement of the Aggressive Behaviors subscale score of the Dysregulation Profile subset of the CBCL scale.
Inhibitory control allows individuals to suppress unwanted actions and to resist irrelevant stimuli. It is thought to be a core deficit in Attention-deficit/hyperactivity disorder (ADHD). The present study aims at evaluating this deficit in adults with ADHD. Executive and inhibitory capacities, as well as the neural mechanisms underlying inhibitory control, will be assessed in adults with ADHD and two control groups of participants.
ADHD is a common disorder, leading to a significant disability that often persists in adulthood. ADHD is characterized by attentional disturbances that are difficult to asses with standard neuropsychological tests. Attention tends to stall after a certain time of fatigue (i.e. an attention lapse). The aim of this study is to study the electroencephalographic (EEG) characteristics of these attention lapses in a sustained attention task, comparing ADHD patients with healthy subjects.