View clinical trials related to Insomnia Type; Sleep Disorder.
Filter by:This study aims to investigate the effect of 50 mg and 100 mg per day oral CBD product versus a placebo over 8 weeks on insomnia severity in adults aged 18-65 years old with insomnia symptoms.
This study aims to determine the efficacy of digital Behavioural Therapy for Insomnia (dBTi) compared to online sleep health education (control) at reducing insomnia symptom severity (Insomnia Severity Index: ISI) in older adults (50+ years) with subjective cognitive impairment from baseline compared to week 8.
The purposes of this study are a) to investigate the effect of a personalized and computerized cognitive stimulation program on sleep quality, cognitive performance, and quality of life; and b) verify if cognitive stimulation can be used as a non-pharmacological alternative to improve the quality of sleep in individuals who have insomnia.
The purpose of this study is to identify if healthy cookies high in linoleic acid can change sleep quality and sleep architecture, blood fatty acid composition and be consumed with high compliance after eight weeks of consumption. The hypothesis is that consumption of healthy cookies for 8 weeks will improve sleep quality, increase linoleic acid in the blood and be consumed with greater than 80% compliance.
According to previous studies, the quality of subjective sleep in women is generally worse than that of men. Although studies have shown that menopausal women who use hormone therapy can improve sleep disorders, the limited benefits of hormone therapy are reported, the duration of treatment and efficacy required is uncertain. The suspicions of the safety of hormone therapy have deterred many menopausal women. Systematic review and meta-analysis show that acupuncture and related therapies (including electro-acupuncture, ear needle, body acupoint massage and ear acupoint massage, etc.) used in the study of insomnia treatment have a significant therapeutic effect. However, for the reason that most of them are invasive treatments, patients receiving such treatment are often afraid and hesitated. This study will apply the low-energy laser acupuncture treatment trials to menopausal women with insomnia. Sixty perimenopausal female volunteer subjects with 45-60 years of age who have been assessed and screened for sleep disorders will be recruited and participate in this experiment. After completing the basic data and various related scales, the subjects will undergo a double-blind, randomly allocated and controlled clinical trials. The experimental procedure is that the subjects will be placed in a soundproof, lying on a comfortable bed. After the instruments setting ready, subject receives the monitoring of 5-minute heart rate variability (HRV) measurements before and after the near-infrared laser acupuncture (10mWx10) treatment, a total of 30 minutes experimental process. The results of the analysis will be based on the Pittsburgh Sleep Quality index (PSQI) questionnaire, the Insomnia Severe Index scale (ISI) data as the main assessment results for analysis. The Menopause Rating Scale, (MRS), the Beck Depression Inventory Index scale (BDI-II) and the signal measurements of heart rate variability will be analyzed as secondary assessment grounds. Data of the questionnaires will be analyzed by the statistical method of Pair-t test for the comparison of the data before and after trial. The signal data of heart rate variability are analyzed by the two way ANOVA method. We expect that by way of combination of low-energy laser light irradiation method and theory of effective acupoints for insomnia can effectively improve the quality of sleep in peri-menopausal women.
Insomnia is a prevalent and under-recognized disorder in adolescence, particularly in girls, with long-term repercussions for mental and physical health. This study assesses manifestation of autonomic hyperarousal and vulnerability to insomnia using a sample of male and female adolescents with and without Diagnostic and Statistical Manual (DSM-5) Insomnia Disorder. Outcomes from this study have the potential to inform prevention and treatment interventions for insomnia that can be implemented at a young age before chronic negative sequelae of this common disorder manifest.