View clinical trials related to Personality Disorders.
Filter by:To investigate which neuronal correlates underlie cortisol-induced enhancement of memory retrieval in PTSD and BPD.
Specialized treatment of personality disorders (PD) in youth has been neglected for a long time, because these disorders were not diagnosed before the age of 18. Since 2013 the age threshold has been dropped in the Diagnostic and Statistical Manual (DSM)-5, and such change is also announced for the International Classification of Diseases (ICD)-11. There is broad consensus from both scientific evidence and clinical experience that specialized early interventions in adolescents with PD are urgently needed. In the last decades a number of specialized psychotherapeutic treatment programs have been developed. Despite their conceptual differences, many of the treatment models have shown significant effects in the treatment of PD in adults. However, the treatment of adolescents with PD remains difficult and further enhancement and development of treatments is needed. Given the different therapeutic approaches available, the present project aims to go beyond the comparison of integral therapeutic models in the classical outcome study design. While outcome research is important to build on the evidence of the effectiveness of an intervention, it contributes little to its understanding and refinement. The aim of the present multi-center project is to compare two therapeutic methods used in routine care: - Adolescent Identity Treatment (AIT) - Dialectic Behavioral Treatment for Adolescents (DBT-A) Treatments will be performed at different study centers and compared using the same measures of outcome. The main outcome will be psychosocial functioning. Additionally, the psychotherapy process will be investigated to explore specific and unspecific mechanisms of the therapeutic process, its outcome and mediators.
Narrative Exposure Therapy (NET) is an evidence-based trauma-focussed treatment, suitable for survivors of prolonged and repeated exposure to traumatic stress and childhood adversity. Patients with Borderline Personality Disorder (BPD) often suffer from a comorbid Posttraumatic Stress Disorder (PTSD) caused by multiple traumatic events. Therapeutic aims are the reduction of PTSD-Symptoms in these patients via activation of associative neural networks related to traumatic experiences and habituation of fear and the placement of traumatic experiences in a reconstructed, detailed and consistent autobiography. This practice enables the processing of and coping with painful memories and the construction of clear contingencies of dangerous and safe conditions, generally leading to significant emotional recovery. The investigators assume that using NET the reduction of PTSD symptom severity is greater compared to treatment by Dialectical-Behavioral Therapy (DBT).
The purpose of the study is to examine the effects of the administration of a drug called DAR-0100A on attention and memory in persons with schizotypal personality disorder (SPD). DAR-0100A has not been FDA approved, however in recent studies has been used to treat cognitive deficits, meaning problems in the way you organize your thinking, in people diagnosed with schizophrenia. Many people who carry a diagnosis of schizotypal personality disorder have trouble with attention and memory. Increasing the presence of a brain chemical called dopamine has been found to help people with schizophrenia with their attention and memory problems. This study will investigate whether the same is true for people with schizotypal personality disorder by using DAR-0100A, a drug that has been shown to help with the cognitive deficits of people with Parkinson's disease by increasing dopamine effects. Information collected in this experiment may lead to a better understanding of the brain mechanisms involved in schizotypal personality disorder and improve treatments for the psychological problems associated with this condition.
Borderline Personality Disorder (BPD), a prevalent psychiatric disorder found in approximately 2% to 6% of the population and 20% of hospitalized psychiatric patients, has proven quite treatment resistant. This study is designed to determine whether patients with BPD can be trained to improve their ability to regulate their emotions and whether this leads to changes in how their brans regulate emotion.
The purpose of the study was to determine whether mindfulness training could be more effective than another active intervention in reducing borderline personality disorder (BPD) symptoms. The main hypothesis was that patients allocated to the mindfulness group would show a greater improvement on global BPD symptomatology. As a second objective, we explored some of the possible underlying mechanisms of both active treatments. For that purpose, changes in decentering, mindfulness facets and cognitive processing of social interactions were also evaluated.
The present randomised clinical trial aims to assess the clinical and neurobiological changes following Metacognitive Interpersonal Therapy -standard approach (MIT-SA) compared with Clinical Structured Treatment (CST) derived from specific recommendations in APA guidelines for borderline personality disorder (BPD). The investigators will assess clinical changes in metacognitive abilities and in emotion regulation and changes in brain activation patterns at the resting state and while they view emotional pictures. A multidimensional assessment will be performed at the baseline, at 6, 12, 18 months. The investigators will take structural and functional Magnetic Resonance Images (MRIs) in MIT-Treated BPD (N=30) and CST-treated BPD (N=30) at baseline and after treatment, as well as a group of 30 healthy and unrelated volunteers that will be scanned once for comparison. Furthermore, blood analyses will be done in order to assess level of BDNF and some hormone levels (oxytocin and vasopressin) before and after treatments.
128 patients between 18 and 76 years who attended the Operative Dentistry Clinic at Dental School, Universidad de Chile, were included in the study. 58 patients were bleaching (experimental group) and 70 patients don't accepted the bleaching procedure (control group) were included in this study and signed a consent form.Experimental group Patients who agreed to be bleaching were treated with 10% carbamide peroxide (CP) gel (Whiteness Perfect, FGM) to each subject With verbal instructions for 3 weeks with daily applications of 1 hour according to manufacturers indications , before and after this procedure was applied again the NEO-FFI personality test form, had 30 minutes to answer it.Control group:Patients who refused to be bleached were administered the personality test NEO-FFI, had 30 minutes to answer it.
In order to identify psychological stress in children and adolescents of mentally ill parents as early as possible, a special intervention program (CHIMPs = Children of mentally ill parents) was developed. The study at hand will implement this intervention program at five sites in Germany and will further evaluate its effectiveness. The CHIMPs intervention is assumed to reduce children's psychopathology and enhance their health related quality of life.
The purpose of this study is to determine wether peer support is effective for the treatment of people with severe mental illness.