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Placebo clinical trials

View clinical trials related to Placebo.

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NCT ID: NCT06140420 Recruiting - Placebo Clinical Trials

Naltrexone for Prolonged Grief Disorder

NPGD
Start date: August 1, 2023
Phase: Phase 4
Study type: Interventional

This is a study to see how effective oral naltrexone is as treatment for prolonged grief disorder (PGD). Participants will take their assigned medication for 8 weeks, with monthly visits to assess symptom severity, social connectedness, and adverse reactions.

NCT ID: NCT05145764 Recruiting - Opioid Use Disorder Clinical Trials

Suvorexant as an Adjunct to Buprenorphine in Persons Who Use Fentanyl

Start date: March 30, 2022
Phase: Phase 2
Study type: Interventional

This is a 4-week, randomized-controlled trial of suvorexant vs placebo in persons with opioid use disorder who have recent fentanyl exposure. Participants will first undergo a 5-day residential phase wherein participants are stabilized on sublingual buprenorphine/naloxone, followed by a 3-week outpatient phase wherein participants are maintained on sublingual buprenorphine/naloxone and transitioned to extended-release buprenorphine).

NCT ID: NCT05024578 Recruiting - Placebo Clinical Trials

Stimulating Brain Waves During Deep Sleep

SBS
Start date: August 12, 2022
Phase: N/A
Study type: Interventional

This study aims to better delineate profiles of insomnia subtypes in people with and without depression or PTSD across simultaneous EEG, heart rate, and body temperature monitoring over multiple days in the natural sleeping environment. Using ambulatory EEG headbands, we also aim to compare the influence of auditory stimulation on slow waves and related objective and subjective sleep measures, as well as mental well-being, daytime fatigue, and cognitive performance in healthy sleepers and people with symptoms of insomnia (with and without psychiatric comorbidities). This is a double-blind randomized control trial. The overall protocol includes a web-based screening interview and home-based data collection spanning over 5 weeks. A subset of participants will be invited for in-lab monitoring via 3 overnight visits.

NCT ID: NCT05007561 Recruiting - Placebo Clinical Trials

Understanding How Opioids Affect the Experiential and Neural Signatures of Social Experiences

Start date: November 16, 2021
Phase: Early Phase 1
Study type: Interventional

The study is a randomized, placebo-controlled design with the opioid antagonist, oral naltrexone. Following random assignment, participants will take 50mg of naltrexone or placebo once a day for 7 days. On days 1 - 7, participants complete reports of their feelings of social connection and mood in order to assess more naturalistic feelings in response to opportunities for social connection outside of the laboratory setting. Additionally, at the end of each day, they complete a physical symptoms questionnaire. On the 7th day, participants will come to the SDSU MRI scanning facility to complete tasks designed to elicit feelings of social connection in the fMRI scanner. After the scan, feelings in response to the scanner tasks will be collected.

NCT ID: NCT04851301 Recruiting - Pain Clinical Trials

Neural Mechanisms of Immersive Virtual Reality in Chronic Pain

Start date: November 1, 2021
Phase: Phase 1/Phase 2
Study type: Interventional

This project examines, in chronic pain, the mechanisms of immersive virtual reality compared to the mechanisms of placebo hypoalgesia. The potential of developing new non-pharmacological premises for low-risk interventions for pain management is high.

NCT ID: NCT03897998 Recruiting - Pain Clinical Trials

Neural Correlates of Hypoalgesia Driven by Observation

Start date: November 1, 2021
Phase: Phase 2
Study type: Interventional

Placebo effects held an ambivalent place in health care for at least two centuries. On the one hand, placebos are traditionally used as controls in clinical trials to correct for biases and the placebo response is viewed as an effect to be factored out in order to isolate and accurately measure the effects of the treatment. On the other hand, there is scientific evidence that placebo effects represent fascinating psychoneurobiological events involving the contribution of distinct central nervous as well as peripheral physiological mechanisms that influence pain perception and clinical pain symptoms and substantially modulate the response to pain therapeutics. Therefore, placebo effects have shifted from being a challenge for clinical trials to a resource to trigger the reduction of pain based on endogenous mechanisms that can be activated in the brain to promote hypolagesia, self-healing, and well-being. This is relevant in acute pain settings given that chronic opioid users die within approximately 2.5 years of being prescribed their first opioid medication to treat acute pain. The overall hypothesis is that observational learning influences neural pain modulation and cognition systems, including processes associated with mentalizing (the ability to cognitively understand mental states of others), empathy (the ability to share an emotional experience), and expectancy (the anticipation of a benefit). The objective is to determine the brain mechanisms of observationally-induced analgesia using brain mapping approaches that target changes in blood oxygenation and oscillatory activity in the brain, thus enabling investigators to draw inferences about the localization and extent of neurobiological activation underlying hypoalgesia driven by observation. Therefore, the investigators designed innovative experiments using pharmacological fMRI, EEG, and combined EEG-fMRI measurements.