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Primary Insomnia clinical trials

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NCT ID: NCT00792298 Completed - Primary Insomnia Clinical Trials

Phase IIB 2-Period Crossover Polysomnography Study in Participants With Primary Insomnia (MK-4305-006)

Start date: November 5, 2008
Phase: Phase 2
Study type: Interventional

A cross-over, polysomnography study to test the safety, tolerability and effectiveness of different doses of suvorexant (MK-4305) in the treatment of patients with primary insomnia.

NCT ID: NCT00784875 Completed - Primary Insomnia Clinical Trials

An Efficacy Study of Compound LY2624803 in the Treatment of Patients With Chronic Insomnia

SLUMBER
Start date: October 2008
Phase: Phase 2
Study type: Interventional

The purpose of this study is to compare an investigational drug (LY2624803) with placebo and with zolpidem in the treatment of outpatients with chronic insomnia.

NCT ID: NCT00770510 Completed - Primary Insomnia Clinical Trials

A Phase II/III Study of SEP-190 (Eszopiclone) in Patients With Primary Insomnia (Study 190-126)

Start date: September 2008
Phase: Phase 2/Phase 3
Study type: Interventional

The purpose of this study is to investigate and evaluate the efficacy of Eszopiclone in Japanese participants with primary insomnia.

NCT ID: NCT00683436 Terminated - Primary Insomnia Clinical Trials

Efficacy and Safety Study of Adipiplon, Placebo and an Active Control in Primary Insomniacs

Start date: May 2008
Phase: Phase 2
Study type: Interventional

This will be a multi-center, randomized, blinded, comparative, placebo-controlled, 4 arm crossover study in patients with primary insomnia.

NCT ID: NCT00680771 Completed - Primary Insomnia Clinical Trials

The Psychoneuroimmunology of Insomnia

Start date: March 2008
Phase: N/A
Study type: Observational

Chronic insomnia affects approximately 8-9% of the population. The prevalence of this disorder rises dramatically across the lifespan, especially so in women. When it is chronic, insomnia is associated with increased fatigue, cognitive impairment, mood disturbance, physical complaints, diminished quality of life and increased health care consumption. There is also more limited evidence (based on epidemiologic studies or experimental studies in healthy subjects) that insomnia and/or sleep loss may be a risk factor for hypertension and/or cardiovascular disease and increased mortality. Despite its prevalence and consequences, the pathophysiology of insomnia and, specifically, the pathway by which morbidity risk is conferred, has been relatively unstudied. With respect to medical illness in particular, insomnia may confer risk in several ways, including: 1) an inherent compromise in the restorative/conservative function of sleep, 2) the deleterious effects of "hyperarousal" and/or HPA axis abnormalities on end organ integrity and function, and/or 3) diminished immunocompetence. This study focuses on the last of these possibilities, the relationship between immune function and sleep. The study compares immune response to a vaccine challenge in two groups: good sleepers and patients with chronic insomnia. The primary study hypothesis is that the insomnia group will have a decreased rate of adaptive immune response to the vaccine challenge than that of the good sleeper group.

NCT ID: NCT00680199 Completed - Primary Insomnia Clinical Trials

Information Processing at Sleep Onset and During Sleep in Patients With Insomnia

COTE
Start date: June 2008
Phase: N/A
Study type: Observational

Chronic insomnia is thought to occur as a result of hyperarousal. While there is a wealth of data to support this position, there is a lack of research to define how hyperarousal interferes with sleep initiation, maintenance, and the perception of sleep quality and quantity. We propose to use Event-related Potential (ERP) techniques to evaluate information processing at sleep onset and during sleep. ERP measures of information processing have been well established in good sleepers; they have not been, however, applied to the problem of insomnia. The goal of the project is to examine the premise that the occurrence and severity of insomnia is fundamentally related to a neurobiologic preparedness to "attend to" and "identify" environmental stimuli. Following an extensive screening, patients with insomnia and good sleepers will participate in two experimental conditions, requiring that they spend four nights in the sleep laboratory over a two week period. ERP data will be gathered prior to, following, and during sleep. The ultimate objectives for this line of research are to determine 1) if insomnia is associated with a failure to inhibit information processing at sleep onset and/or during sleep, 2) if the failure to inhibit information processing at sleep onset and/or during sleep is associated with the occurrence and/or severity of insomnia symptoms, 3) what brain regions are functioning differently so as to give rise to information processing abnormalities, and 4) the extent to which pharmacologic and/or Cognitive Behavioral treatment for insomnia alters information processing abnormalities and/or the associated brain activity.

NCT ID: NCT00664664 Completed - Primary Insomnia Clinical Trials

Subjective Study to Assess the Efficacy of APD125 in Patients With Sleep Maintenance Insomnia

Start date: April 2008
Phase: Phase 2
Study type: Interventional

This study is designed to compare 2 doses of APD125 (20 mg and 40 mg) with placebo in otherwise healthy adults with primary insomnia primarily with complaints of maintaining sleep. Participants will be required to maintain a daily sleep dairy for up to 3 weeks while on study.

NCT ID: NCT00662155 Completed - Primary Insomnia Clinical Trials

The Role of Partial Reinforcement in the Long Term Management of Insomnia

ADER
Start date: July 2006
Phase: N/A
Study type: Interventional

The lack of scientific attention devoted to the placebo effect as a phenomenon in its own right probably reflects the paucity of theoretical positions within which to organize the existing data and design new research. The proposed investigation 1) is an attempt to advance from a descriptive to an experimental analysis of the placebo effect, taking into account classical conditioning effects, and 2) examines the clinical implications of partial reinforcement as it is applied to the treatment of insomnia. Subjects with primary insomnia will be treated with zolpidem for a period of one month and then randomized to one of four groups for a period of 12 weeks: one receiving full dose zolpidem on a nightly basis (continuous reinforcement), one receiving full dose zolpidem on 14 of 28 nights where placebo is provided on non-drug nights (partial reinforcement), one receiving full dose zolpidem on 14 of 28 nights where no pills are imbibed on non-drug nights (intermittent dosing), and one receiving 5 mg dose zolpidem on a nightly basis (continuous reinforcement with half the standard dose). Following treatment, subjects will be entered into an extinction protocol during which they will 1) continue on the schedule assigned during the experimental period, 2) receive only placebo, or 3) receive neither drug nor placebo. Sleep and daily functioning will be monitored on a daily basis via sleep diaries for the duration of the study. It is hypothesized that, holding cumulative dose constant, a partial schedule of reinforcement will enable patients to better maintain their clinical gains as compared to subjects that receive either continuous reinforcement with half the standard dose or half the frequency of use. Relevance: The proposed research is not an attempt to offer a behavioral alternative to drug treatment; it is an attempt to acknowledge and capitalize on a behavioral dimension in the design of drug treatment protocols. The value of the proposed research resides in its capacity to provide for the long term treatment of insomnia in a manner that increases the durability of pharmacotherapy while reducing the overall amount of medication required. If proven effective in the current application, this new approach to pharmacotherapy and placebo effects is likely to stimulate new interdisciplinary research for the treatment of a variety of chronic diseases.

NCT ID: NCT00640848 Completed - Insomnia Clinical Trials

Almorexant in Primary Insomnia

Insomnia
Start date: May 2006
Phase: Phase 1
Study type: Interventional

The aim of the study is to determine the minimum effective dose of ACT-078573 on sleep efficiency and to assess the effects of different doses of ACT-078573 on other PSG parameters.

NCT ID: NCT00608985 Completed - Primary Insomnia Clinical Trials

Almorexant (ACT 078573) in Adult Subjects With Chronic Primary Insomnia

RESTORA 1
Start date: March 2008
Phase: Phase 3
Study type: Interventional

A polysomnography study to evaluate the effect, safety and tolerability of oral administration of almorexant (ACT 078573) in adult subjects with primary insomnia.