Mindfulness for Pain
The general scope of the study involves meditation and its effects on pain management, narcotic use, and emotional well-being. Half of the participants will receive access to a meditation app, which they will be asked to use for at least 10 minutes every day for 6 weeks, while the other participants will be in the waitlist group and will receive a subscription to the meditation app after the 6 week study period ends. All participants will be asked to complete a set of questionnaires
NCT03495726 — Chronic Pain
Status: Completed
http://inclinicaltrials.com/chronic-pain/NCT03495726/
Compassion Meditation and ReliefLink App for Suicidal, Low-Income, African Americans
The purpose of this study is to conduct a pilot randomized controlled trial (RCT) with low-income, suicidal African American women and men that compares the relative effectiveness of compassion meditation (CM) versus a support group (SG) .
NCT03463980 — Suicidal Ideation
Status: Terminated
http://inclinicaltrials.com/suicidal-ideation/NCT03463980/
Compassion Meditation for Cancer Survivor-Caregiver Dyads: Feasibility and Preliminary Efficacy of Cognitively-Based Compassion Training (CBCT®) for Solid Tumor Cancer Survivors and Their Informal Caregivers
Survivors of solid tumor cancers and their informal caregivers (family, friends) experience impairments in health-related quality of life (HRQOL) including disruptions in psychological, physical, social, and spiritual well-being. Our prior work demonstrates that impairments in depression, anxiety, fatigue, and negative affect experienced by cancer survivors across time are interdependent those experienced by their informal caregivers. These findings suggest that interventions directed simultaneously toward both members of the cancer survivor-caregiver dyad may be especially impactful in improving HRQOL in cancer survivors and informal caregivers. Although a number of interventions have been developed and tested to support the survivor or the caregiver, few have attempted to simultaneously intervene with both to improve HRQOL within the collective survivor-caregiver dyad. CBCT®, Cognitively-Based Compassion Training (already piloted by members of this team with breast cancer survivors, is an 8-week manualized meditation-based program that starts with attention and mindfulness training and builds to contemplation about compassion for the self and others. The proposed pilot feasibility study builds upon this work to intervene with caregivers in addition to survivors of solid tumor cancers. The major aim of the proposed project is to test the feasibility and acceptability of CBCT® for survivors of solid tumor cancer and their informal caregivers after the end of cancer treatment. The project will also determine in a preliminary manner whether or not CBCT® (compared to a cancer health education [CHE] comparison group) has a positive impact on different measures of HRQOL (e.g. features of depression and anxiety, fatigue, social isolation), stress-related biomarkers of inflammation and cortisol, and assessments related to healthcare utilization. IMPORTANT READER NOTE: ==> A prior version of this study protocol on clinicaltrials.gov incorrectly stated information about interpretation of scores of the Morisky Medication Adherence Scale-8 (MMAS-8). ==> Individuals interested in using the MMAS-8 are directed to https://morisky.org for information about the scale, as well as for licensing and other requirements for using the MMAS-8 in their research or clinical practice. Dr. Pace and his colleagues sincerely regret any incorrect information posted previously about the MMAS-8 on this clinicaltrials.gov trial website.
NCT03459781 — Cancer Survivors
Status: Completed
http://inclinicaltrials.com/cancer-survivors/NCT03459781/
EEG Changes With Meditation: A Proposal to Analyze EEG Changes With a Simple, Online, Guided Meditative Tool.
Simple meditation and EEG changes
NCT03459690 — Meditation
Status: Completed
http://inclinicaltrials.com/meditation/NCT03459690/
Meditation Strategies, Attention, and Mobility in Older Adults
Approximately 30% of community-dwelling older adults experience one or more falls per year, resulting in injuries, loss of independence, and reduced quality of life. While there are known physiological risk factors for falls, including poor balance and altered gait patterns, it is now recognized that impaired cognitive functioning is also a risk factor for falls. Within the broad construct of cognition, one specific domain that has been focused on in the falls literature is attention. The literature suggests that improving attention in those at-risk for falls may reduce older adult's risk of falling.
NCT03417635 — Mobility Limitation
Status: Completed
http://inclinicaltrials.com/mobility-limitation/NCT03417635/
The Role of the Endocannabinoids During the Analgesia Caused by Hypnosis and Meditation
Introduction: Many interventions such as hypnosis, mindfulness meditation, conditioned pain modulation and placebos have been shown to effectively reduce pain both in the laboratory and in clinical settings. However, little is known about their neurophysiological mechanisms of action. Analgesia induced by these techniques is thought to be based on opioidergic and non-opioidergic mechanisms (potentially endocannabinoid mechanisms). Objective: Our main objective is to evaluate the effect of hypnosis, meditation, conditioned pain modulation and placebo on blood concentrations of endocannabinoids (anandamide, 2-arachidonylglycerol, N-palmitoyl-ethanolamine, N-oleoylethanolamide), endogenous opioids (β-endorphins, met / leu-enkephalins, and dynorphins) and norepinephrine in healthy adults. Methods: This study is based on a single-group pre-experimental research design in which two experimental sessions including hypnosis or meditation, conditioned pain modulation and placebo interventions will be completed by all participants. In order to have a better description of the sociodemographic and clinical characteristics of the sample, information will be collected by questionnaires or tests filled by participants at baseline, including: age, sex, language, culture, religion, salary, menstrual cycle of women, medication (if any), mood, anxiety, pain catastrophizing, mindfulness, hypnotic susceptibility, and DNA information. Outcome measures will be collected before, during and after each intervention. The primary outcome is plasma concentrations of endocannabinoids. Secondary measurements include plasma concentrations of endogenous opioids and norepinephrine; change in pain intensity during the thermal noxious stimuli; and autonomic nervous system variability (as measured by heart rate variability). Anticipated results: The investigators expect a positive relationship between the change in pain intensity (analgesia) induced by the interventions (hypnosis, meditation, conditioned pain modulation, and placebo) and the change (increase) in plasma concentrations of endocannabinoids, opioids, and norepinephrine in healthy adults. It is also believed that the interventions will influence heart rate variability. Moreover, it is expected that there will be a relationship between the efficiency of the analgesic intervention and some gene polymorphisms associated to pain modulation and endocannabinoids, opioids or norepinephrine in healthy individuals.
NCT03407937 — Analgesia
Status: Completed
http://inclinicaltrials.com/analgesia/NCT03407937/
Assisting University Students Self-Manage Stress: Comparison of Mindfulness Meditation Tools
The purpose of this study is to determine what tools best assist university students develop a personal meditation practice to self-manage stress. The two treatment conditions are 1) independent meditation using web-based tools and apps, and 2) independent meditation using web-based tools, apps and EEG-based neurofeedback. Outcomes of interest include acceptability, adherence, changes in mental health (i.e., anxiety, stress), physical health (i.e., sleep, inflammation), resilience, and level of commitment to further practice. Factors related to self-regulation (i.e., interoceptive awareness, self-esteem) will also be assessed as potential outcome moderators.
NCT03402009 — Anxiety
Status: Active, not recruiting
http://inclinicaltrials.com/anxiety/NCT03402009/
A Breathing-Based Meditation Intervention for Patients With Treatment-Resistant Late Life Depression (TR-LLD): A Phase II Trial and Feasibility Study
Late-life depression affects 2-8% of seniors and causes high rates of caregiver distress and risk of suicide. To exacerbate the problem, antidepressants, the cornerstone of therapy, are resistant in 55-80% of this population. Hence, this group of patients is labeled as having treatment-resistant late-life depression (TR-LLD). Non-pharmacological interventions like meditation could offer significant benefits as augmentation strategies to improve response rate of antidepressants in TR-LLD. One such breath-based meditation intervention called Sudarshan Kriya Yoga is of interest based on highly significant preliminary data in adult patients with treatment-resistant depression, its scalability and relatively low cost to learn this lifelong skill. Thirty patients diagnosed with TR-LLD will learn this intervention over 5 consecutive days by a certified para-professional trainer. This will be followed by 3 weekly 90 min follow-up sessions and then bimonthly sessions for 8 more weeks. SKY consists of a series of breathing techniques, including Sudarshan Kriya (SK), a sequential rhythm-specific breathing exercise. Participants will be asked to practice this technique for 25-30 minutes daily over the next 11 weeks. The investigators will collect clinical as well as feasibility outcome measures. The investigators will also explore if it is feasible to assess the antioxidant Glutathione (GSH) in the brain using a sophisticated magnetic resonance spectroscopy. The investigators suspect that GSH levels are reduced in TR-LLD and they will improve with SKY.
NCT03368560 — Late Life Depression
Status: Withdrawn
http://inclinicaltrials.com/late-life-depression/NCT03368560/
Mindfulness Meditation and Cannabis Dependence : Therapy Effectiveness
Cannabis use can lead to addiction in about 5 to 10 % of users in France. Currently, behavioral interventions are the most dependable but effectiveness is still reduced. Mindfulness meditation has demonstrated an effectiveness in several meta analysis (anxiety and depressive disorder) and seems to be relevant to reduce anxious and impulsive symptoms found in cannabis use disorders. This study proposes to determinate the mindfulness effectiveness in reduction of cannabis use in regular consumer. The consumption decrease is estimated with a retrospective diary, TLFB (Timeline Follow Back) which collect cannabis use every week until the 12th. Urine (week 0/baseline, 2, 4, 6, 8, 10, 12) and hair (week 0/baseline, 10) analyses are regularly effected. Patients included in control group get classic cares in an addictology center in CHRU of Nancy. Patients included in mindfulness group receive one session a week during eight weeks (MBRP protocol : Mindfulness -Based Relapse Prevention). The study process goes on for 12 weeks. An ancillary study measures the impact of cannabis decreases on retinal electrophysiological and architectural markers, usually disturbed by cannabis uses.
NCT03366909 — Addiction
Status: Not yet recruiting
http://inclinicaltrials.com/addiction/NCT03366909/
An Exploratory Study of the Feasibility of the Installation by a Paramedical Staff of a Standardized Meditation Technique "Body-scan", in the Management of Anxiety in Hospitalized Parkinsonian Patients
The aim of the study is to constitute a proof of concept study for a larger study investigating the effect of mindfulness on anxiety and agitation in Parkinson's disease (PD) based on the results of a preliminary feasibility.
NCT03349554 — Parkinson's Disease
Status: Completed
http://inclinicaltrials.com/parkinson-s-disease/NCT03349554/