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Seach Results for — “addiction”

Using Addiction Comprehensive Health Enhancement Support System (ACHESS) in an Alcoholic Liver Disease Population

Using Addiction Comprehensive Health Enhancement Support System (ACHESS) in an Alcoholic Liver Disease Population

This is a pilot study examining whether an evidence-based recovery support smartphone application, the Addiction Comprehensive Health Enhancement Support System (A-CHESS), can decrease alcohol recidivism in a previously unstudied group of patients with alcoholic liver disease (ALD).

NCT03388320 — Liver Diseases, Alcoholic
Status: Recruiting
http://inclinicaltrials.com/liver-diseases-alcoholic/NCT03388320/

Cognitive Function and Addiction Under Opioid Tapering

Cognitive Function and Addiction in Patients With Chronic Pain Under Opioid Tapering in a Multidisciplinary Pain Treatment

This study evaluates the effects of opioid dose reduction in the treatment of chronic pain in adults. Participants were divided in two groups: 1) patients that reduced opioid dose and 2) patients that kept the same opioid dose for six months.

NCT03365817 — Chronic Pain
Status: Completed
http://inclinicaltrials.com/chronic-pain/NCT03365817/

Web-based Addiction Treatment: Cultural Adaptation With American Indians

Web-based Addiction Treatment: Cultural Adaptation With American Indians

The purpose of the current study is to evaluate the preliminary efficacy of the Therapeutic Education System-Native Version (TES-NAV) (an efficacious web-delivered psychosocial intervention for substance use disorders adapted with American Indians/Alaska Natives [AI/AN]) to determine whether a future large-scale effectiveness trial is warranted. Specifically, a randomized controlled trial among urban AI/AN (N=80) attending outpatient addiction treatment services will be conducted to (1) estimate preliminary effect size of 12 weeks of TES-NAV on substance use disorder outcomes; (2) explore relevant moderators of TES-NAV outcomes; and (3) assess cultural factors that may correspond to variation in outcome.

NCT03363256 — Substance Use Disorders
Status: Completed
http://inclinicaltrials.com/substance-use-disorders/NCT03363256/

Advancing STOP: Self-regulation Therapy for Opioid Addiction and Pain

Advancing STOP: Self-regulation Therapy for Opioid Addiction and Pain

The public health relevance of this proposed project is substantial given the current opioid abuse epidemic as identified by the Centers for Disease Control (CDC). This study finalizes and tests a new psychotherapy treatment that is designed to treat chronic pain and opioid addiction at the same time in a format that could be easily used in a community addiction treatment setting. Final products of the study will yield an integrated STOP (Self-regulation/Cognitive-behavioral therapy (CBT) Therapy for Opioid addiction and Pain) manual guided protocol, patient workbook, and therapist training protocol.

NCT03363243 — Chronic Pain
Status: Active, not recruiting
http://inclinicaltrials.com/chronic-pain/NCT03363243/

Effect of Exercise on Chocolate Addiction

The Effect of a High Intensity Interval Exercise Bout on Addictive Behaviors in Overweight/Obese Adults

The study will use stress inducing tasks to determine if there are significant improvements in mood, chocolate cravings, and attentional bias to chocolate in overweight/obese chocolate abusers following rest and a bout of high intensity interval exercise.

NCT03356509 — Acute Exercise and Addictive Behavior
Status: Completed
http://inclinicaltrials.com/acute-exercise-and-addictive-behavior/NCT03356509/

The Effectiveness of tDCS on Internet Game Addiction

Randomized Double-blind Clinical Trial to Evaluate the Effectiveness of Transcranial Direct Current Stimulation (tDCS) on Internet Game Addiction

In this study, the investigators aimed to investigate the effect of transcranial direct current stimulation (tDCS) on clinical status of Internet game addiction. The clinical status of Internet game addiction includes severity of addiction symptom, subjective craving for gaming, response inhibition and cue reactivity. The investigators hypothesized that real stimulation with tDCS on the dorsolateral prefrontal cortex will have higher effectiveness on severity of addiction symptom, subjective craving for gaming, response inhibition and cue reactivity rather than sham stimulation with tDCS.

NCT03347643 — Addiction
Status: Completed
http://inclinicaltrials.com/addiction/NCT03347643/

Deep Brain Stimulation of Nucleus Accumbens for Methamphetamine Addiction

Deep Brain Stimulation of Nucleus Accumbens for Methamphetamine Addiction

The main objective of this study is to assess the efficacy of bilateral deep brain stimulation (DBS) of the Nucleus Accumbens(NAc) as a novel treatment in severe methamphetamine addiction. Our hypothesis is that bilateral DBS of the NAc will significantly reduce the craving for methamphetamine.

NCT03347474 — Treatment Methamphetamine Addiction
Status: Recruiting
http://inclinicaltrials.com/treatment-methamphetamine-addiction/NCT03347474/

Effectiveness of Contingency Management in the Treatment of Crack Addiction in Brazil

Effectiveness of Contingency Management in the Treatment of Crack Addiction for Individuals Living in the "Crackland" Region. A Single-blind Randomized Controlled Trial

Crack addiction has become a severe public health problem in Brazil. Crack users present elevated prevalence rates of psychiatric comorbidities, sexual transmitted infections and unemployment with high probability of living or have lived in the streets, history of incarceration and engagement in illegal activities. For the last 20 years a treatment called Contingency Management (CM) have achieved the best results regarding reduction of substance use, promotion of abstinence, treatment attendance and retention in treatment. The first CM study conducted in Brazil advocates for the efficacy of CM on all of these outcomes, suggesting that CM can be effective in a Brazilian population of crack users.

NCT03345394 — Substance Use Disorders
Status: Completed
http://inclinicaltrials.com/substance-use-disorders/NCT03345394/

Addiction Risk: Psychoeducational Intervention to Change Risk Perception Among Alcohol Patients in Residential Treatment

Sub-Project No 8 of the Research Group RISKDYNAMICS: Addiction Risk - the Dynamic of Risk Perception and Risk Behavior in Alcohol Dependence, Work Package 1, Study 1.

Based on previous research (Odenwald & Semrau, 2012) the investigators know that psychoeducation on comorbid mental disorders during residential alcohol detoxification can improve subsequent treatment utilization. In this study they will study a hypothesized psychological mechanism that contributes to this behavior change. The investigators will recruit alcohol dependent patients in residential detox treatment who all receive Treatment as Usual. Participants will be randomly assigned to an additional psychoeducational group therapy (intervention group) or to an additional neuropsychological group training (control group). Measurements will take place on the day before study inclusion, one week later and one month after release from index residential treatment. Measurements will include alcohol-related risk perception, alcohol use, treatment motivation, comorbid psychiatric symptoms and whether the patient has regularly completed treatment and whether he/she has been transferred to subsequent treatment. Furthermore, six months after release from index treatment information on re-admission to the clinic is assessed from patient files. The investigators hypothesize that the behavioral effects of psychoeducational group intervention will be mediated by adaptive changes of the individual's alcohol-related risk perception.

NCT03339674 — Alcohol Use Disorder
Status: Completed
http://inclinicaltrials.com/alcohol-use-disorder/NCT03339674/

Neurobiology of Alcohol and Nicotine Co-Addiction - NAUD

Neurobiology of Alcohol and Nicotine Co-Addiction

This proposal addresses the critical absence of information about the neurobiology of recovery from Alcohol Use Disorder (AUD) in alcohol and nicotine users.

NCT03338933 — Alcohol Use Disorder
Status: Completed
http://inclinicaltrials.com/alcohol-use-disorder/NCT03338933/