View clinical trials related to Marijuana Abuse.
Filter by:Cannabis use disorders remain a significant public health problem. The pharmacological facilitation of behavioral treatment represents a promising strategy for addressing disordered cannabis use. Cannabis use disorders are recognized to be associated with various vulnerabilities that complicate the course of treatment and that may be amenable to glutamate modulators. The purpose of this single blind open-label trial is to test the feasibility of administering glutamate modulators in conjunction with motivational enhancement therapy (MET) and mindfulness based relapse prevention (MBRP) for cannabis use disorders.
This is a 10 week, open-label, prospective study, involving 10 volunteer participants with cannabis use disorder to test the feasibility and safety of using lorcaserin in addition to the feasibility, likability, and utility of a mobile sensor device in cannabis users. The study will be entirely outpatient. Upon study entry, participants will begin clinic visits at the Substance Treatment and Research Service (STARS) clinic. All consented participants will receive a Fitbit Charge HR device in week 1 to wear for the entire study and receive lorcaserin beginning in week 2 for a total of 8 weeks (weeks 2-9). At the beginning of week 10 following discontinuation of lorcaserin, the participants will continue to wear the Fitbit Charge HR device for this final week following completion of the medication trial. All participants will visit the clinic twice weekly to provide urine toxicology on THC, report on adverse events, complete additional assessments (outlined below), and upload de-identified data from the Fitbit Charge HR device to the secure encrypted Fitabase database. Study assessments will be collected at baseline, throughout the study, and 1 week following medication discontinuation. All participants will also receive medical management, a medication adherence focused psychosocial intervention that facilitates compliance with study medication and other study procedures, including adherence to wearing the Fitbit Charge HR device, and promotes abstinence from cannabis and other substances. Progressive voucher incentives will be provided for compliance with visit attendance and study procedures.
The proposed protocol is a double-blind, placebo-controlled inpatient and outpatient study,looking at the clinical treatment of cannabis use disorder. The treatment study is a total of 12 weeks. There will be two options offered to participants for week 1 of the treatment study. 1) Patient will go inpatient for 5 nights and after discharge from the inpatient phase will complete the 11-weeks of outpatient treatment or 2) patients who cannot complete the inpatient phase due to work or other obligations will complete the treatment 12-week study outpatient. 80 patients seeking treatment for cannabis use disorder will be enrolled into either the inpatient/outpatient or only outpatient study. This combined design will provide a comprehensive understanding of clonazepam's effects on individuals with cannabis use disorder across a range of outcome measures while also testing the medication's ability to prevent relapse in cannabis-abstinent patients.
This study examines how marijuana use affects processes related to recovery from chronic posttraumatic stress disorder (PTSD). Half the participants will be individuals with chronic PTSD and heavy marijuana use and half will be individuals with chronic PTSD and no marijuana use. This study will assess how individuals with PTSD with heavy or no marijuana use perform on a discriminative conditioning and extinction paradigm designed to measure fear extinction learning, and how they respond to a brief daily imaginal exposure treatment in regards to PTSD symptom reduction.
The purpose of this pilot project is to pilot-test a combined cannabis and smoking cessation treatment. The intervention combines mobile technology with behavioral strategies, counseling, and medications.
This study will evaluate the impact of regular use of cannabis on the spatial sensitivity of magnocellular system (visual event-related potential, visual ERP). Secondary purposes of this study are to evaluate the impact of regular use of cannabis on the temporal sensitivity of magnocellular system (visual event-related potential), on the dynamics of cortical visual processing during face perception test (visual event-related potential) and on functioning of retinal photopic and scotopic systems (electroretinogram). The ancillary study is a genetic analysis of a group of candidate genes that aims to identify biomarkers for changes in visual processing. This will allow to distinguish among more homogeneous and specific groups in future studies on larger cannabis user population. This ancillary study concerns all participants subject to their informed consent (facultative study).
This study was authorized by the California Legislature (Assembly Bill 266, the Medical Marijuana Regulation and Safety Act to help with detection of driving under the influence of cannabis. One hundred and eighty healthy volunteers will inhale smoked cannabis with either 0% (placebo), 5.9%, or 13.4% Δ9-tetrahydrocannabinol (THC) at the beginning of the day, and then complete driving simulations, iPad-based performance assessments, and bodily fluid draws (e.g., blood, saliva, breath) before the cannabis smoking and a number of times over the subsequent 6 hours after cannabis smoking. The purpose is to determine (1) the relationship of the dose of Δ9-THC on driving performance and (2) the duration of driving impairment in terms of hours from initial use, (3) if saliva or expired air can serve as a useful substitute for blood sampling of Δ9-THC, and (4) if testing using an iPad can serve as a useful adjunct to the standardized field sobriety test in identifying acute impairment from cannabis.
The purpose of this study is to evaluate the efficacy of a Substance-Free Activity Session (SFAS) as a supplement to a brief motivation intervention (BMI) in reducing marijuana use and drug-related consequences in college student
The purpose of this study is to investigate if individuals with a cannabis use disorder have an impaired cerebellar function by assessing possible alterations to their implicit adaptation during a visuomotor rotation task.
The proposed protocol is a double-blind, placebo-controlled outpatient study of the safety and benefit of Extended-release mixed amphetamine salt (Adderall-XR, MAS-XR) in the treatment of individuals with Cannabis Use Disorder (CUD) and Attention-deficit/Hyperactivity Disorder (ADHD). The investigators plan to enroll 50 and randomize 40 of these patients in the trial. The primary objective of the study is to determine the efficacy of MAS-XR in promoting cannabis abstinence among individuals with CUD and in promoting a decrease of ADHD symptoms.