View clinical trials related to Obsessive-Compulsive Disorder.
Filter by:A research study of the effectiveness and safety of gamma knife ventral capsulotomy in patients with severe intractable obsessive-compulsive disorder (OCD).
The purpose of this study is to determine whether AFQ056 as an add on therapy to SSRIs can have beneficial effects by reducing the total score of Y-BOCS (Yale and Brown Obsessive Compulsive Scale) in OCD patients resistant to SSRI treatment (failed SSRI over 12 weeks at appropriate doses).
The main goal of this trial is to study the feasibility and effectiveness of internet-delivered cognitive behavior therapy for adolescents with obsessive-compulsive disorder.
This study is investigating the usefulness of using functional magnetic resonance imaging (fMRI) to monitor brain activation during deep brain stimulation for Parkinson's Disease, Essential tremor, dystonia, OCD, depression, pain, Tourette's syndrome, and epilepsy. The study may determine the relationship between patterns of brain activation and therapeutic outcome and/or side effects.
Deep brain stimulation (DBS) has been proposed for severe and resistant obsessive-compulsive disorder. This electrical stimulation has been tested on, and shown to be effective at, different targets (subthalamic nucleus, caudate nucleus & nucleus accumbens). However, the efficacies of each target have never been compared directly. This protocol aims to do so, with the hypothesis that subthalamic (STN) stimulation will be more efficacious.
Obsessional compulsive disorder (OCD) is a very debilitating psychiatric problem which affects around one million Canadians and their families. Obsessions are intense preoccupations about bad, harmful, dangerous, shocking or unlucky events which 'may' occur and which drive sufferers to perform time consuming and distressing compulsive rituals to prevent the possible event occurring. The current psychological treatment of choice is cognitive behavior (CBT) therapy which focuses on treating OCD by reducing obsessional anxiety about the likelihood and the consequences of the preoccupying event. A rival cognitive model termed the inference-based therapy (IBT), developed by the principal investigator and co-workers, considers that the OCD begins with the initial doubting inference 'maybe something is wrong' and focuses on changing the reasoning behind this doubting inference which often trumps the common sense conviction that there is no reason to doubt. This clinical trial randomly allocates participants to either IBT or CBT treatment condition or to a third generic mindfulness condition. The latter condition is a non-specific meditational-based training which has shown evidence of reducing stress and anxiety across a number of psychiatric problems including OCD. Two hundred and forty people will be recruited over a 5-year period from two principal sites (Montreal and Gatineau/Ottawa) with which the principal investigator and co-investigators have clinical links. Therapy will be administered by trained professionals following a treatment manual specific to each approach. The therapy will last a maximum of six months or until the point when the person achieves a non-clinical status. The patients will be assessed pre, post, and at six months following treatment on standard evaluation instruments as well as on subjective measures. We expect the IBT to be superior in terms of number of participants responding to treatment, rapidity of improvement and gains at follow-up.
Pediatric Obsessive Compulsive Disorder (OCD) is a chronic, impairing condition that accrues significant concurrent and long-term risk to affected youth. Although empirically supported psychosocial and pharmacological treatments for OCD exist, many children and their families are not able to adequately access these treatments or derive only partial benefit from them. Such findings highlight the importance of developing more effective treatment options which have the potential to be widely accessible to OCD youth. The investigators are proposing to test a computerized attention modification program, AMP, in six youth with OCD in an open case series to gather information regarding protocol acceptability, feasibility and preliminary efficacy. This phase includes the development and refinement of stimuli selection procedures, behavior avoidance task, EEG protocol, and AMP parameters for use with children. Following ascertainment of study eligibility, participants will undergo a baseline assessment consisting of a clinical interview, neurocognitive assessments, EEG, attention bias assessment, and self report questionnaires. Study participants will then receive 12 sessions of AMP treatment over the course of three weeks. All youngsters and their families will be reassessed at treatment endpoint (week 4). Participation will take a total of about 24 hours over the course of six weeks. Participants who are treatment responders may be asked to return approximately 3 months after completing treatment for a follow-up assessment. Preliminary hypotheses: 1) AMP will be acceptable to youth and families and feasible to administer; 2) Youth receiving AMP will demonstrate decreases in threat bias and OCD symptom severity.
This study will examine the feasibility and potential efficacy of augmenting SRIs with minocycline. The study will assess whether the addition of minocycline leads to measurable changes in striatal glutamate (Glu) levels. This study will recruit up to 45 youth ages 8-20 diagnosed with clinically significant OCD who have demonstrated no more than minimal response to SRI treatment and are currently on a stable dose of SRI medication for at least 12 weeks. Participants will be randomized to receive either 12 weeks of minocycline treatment or pill placebo. Randomization will be 2:1 so that 2 of 3 participants receive minocycline. Screening for eligibility will take place for 1-4 weeks. Participants will undergo magnetic resonance spectroscopy (MRS) scans to measure striatal Glu levels prior to randomization, and again immediately following the treatment period. During the treatment period, participants will meet initially weekly and then every other week with the study psychiatrist. All participants will be offered three months of open medication treatment following participation. The clinical trial will only be conducted at the New York State Psychiatric Institute (NYSPI) and the MRS scans may be conducted at Weill Cornell Medical Center or NYSPI.
Pediatric obsessive compulsive disorder (OCD) is a relatively common and often severe condition that can become chronic if untreated. One of the most effective treatments for OCD is a type of cognitive behavioral therapy called exposure and response prevention (ERP). ERP involves presenting a patient with feared objects or situations (the content of their obsessional fears) in a gradual manner while helping them use coping techniques to refrain from engaging in rituals (compulsions). Despite several studies suggesting that ERP is an effective treatment for pediatric OCD, many youngsters fail to respond to this treatment, or respond only partially. An exciting recent finding from animal research is the ability of an established antibiotic (traditionally used to treat Tuberculosis), D-cycloserine (trade name: Seromycin) to enhance certain types of learning among rats. The type of learning that is enhanced is called extinction learning and many researchers believe that extinction learning is the equivalent process to what occurs during ERP; it is the process whereby repeated exposure to the object of fear without any bad outcome causes the object to cease being associated with danger. Several clinical trials using ERP and other forms of exposure treatment for adults with anxiety disorders reproduced this finding from the animal literature; pairing DCS with exposure treatment (comparable to extinction learning) resulted in greater fear reduction than when no DCS was administered. The effects of DCS on exposure treatment for anxiety disorders among children has been tested only preliminarily in one study of children with OCD and results were unclear with children who received DCS augmentation showing non-significant but increased levels of improvement as compared with children who did not receive DCS augmentation. In this study, 26 youngsters ages 7-17 with a primary diagnosis of OCD will be recruited and assigned at random to one of the two treatment conditions. Youth in the DCS condition of the study will receive 50 mg DCS 1 hr prior to each treatment session, while youth in the placebo condition receive an identical placebo capsule 1 hr prior to each treatment augmentation session. All participants will receive 180 minutes of CBT for OCD 4 days per week for 2 weeks during their study participation (as included in IOP already). All families complete a thorough evaluation no more than 5 days prior to receiving DCS on their 9th treatment visit in IOP (third week), and at mid-treatment augmentation (after the 12th IOP treatment session), post-treatment augmentation (after the 16th IOP treatment session), and 3-month follow-up (12 weeks after the 16th IOP treatment session). The primary aim of this study is to obtain preliminary data comparing the effects of the acute administration of DCS versus placebo on symptom response to exposure treatment for pediatric OCD. Results from this study will help to inform and refine future studies, and eventually, impact treatments for pediatric OCD.
The goal of this study is to understand whether patients with obsessive-compulsive disorder (OCD) on serotonin reuptake inhibitors (SRIs) who receive a type of Cognitive-behavioral therapy called Exposure and Ritual Prevention (EX/RP) can discontinue their medication if they first do well with EX/RP.