Clinical Trials Logo

Sleep Wake Disorders clinical trials

View clinical trials related to Sleep Wake Disorders.

Filter by:

NCT ID: NCT03998358 Withdrawn - Clinical trials for Traumatic Brain Injury

Characterization of Fatigue in Military Personnel With Traumatic Brain Injuries

Start date: March 19, 2021
Phase:
Study type: Observational

Background: People who have had a traumatic brain injury (TBI) often experience fatigue. Fatigue is the feeling tired all the time. Researchers want to learn more about how TBI and fatigue are related. Objective: To better understand fatigue after TBI in active duty military and veterans. Eligibility: Active duty service members or veterans ages 25-40 who have sustained at least 1 TBI more than 6 months but less than 5 years ago Design: Participants will be screened with: - Medical history - Physical exam - Blood and urine tests Participants will have Visit 1 the same day as screening. This will include questionnaires and interviews. These will be about their fatigue, quality of life, and health. Participants will wear an activity monitor on their wrist and complete a sleep diary for 7 days at home. Participants will have Visit 2: They will stay in the clinic for 2 nights. The visit will include: - Tests of memory, attention, and thinking - Placement of intravenous (IV) line: A needle will guide a thin plastic tube into the participant s arm vein. - 2 overnight sleeps tests: Participants brain waves will be recorded while they sleep. Small electrodes will be placed on the scalp. Monitors will be placed on the skin. These will measure breathing, heart rate, and movement. Blood will be drawn overnight through the IV line. - Optional hydrocortisone stimulation test: Participants will receive the hormone through the IV line. Blood will be drawn through the IV line 5 times over 1 hour. - Optional MRI: Participants will lie in a machine. This machine is a metal cylinder that takes pictures of the brain.

NCT ID: NCT03998020 Recruiting - Clinical trials for Somnolence Disorder, Excessive

Constitution of a Clinical, Neurophysiological and Biological Cohort for Chronic Sleep Disorders Responsible of Hypersomnolence

Somnobank
Start date: June 16, 2020
Phase: N/A
Study type: Interventional

Chronic sleep disorders result from multiple pathophysiological mechanisms and are often associated with severe hypersomnolence, responsible for major disability. Hypersomnolence may be secondary to sleep disturbances at night by sleep fragmentation, both overall in restless leg syndrome (RLS) or specific to slow or paradoxical sleep in parasomnias (sleepwalking, sleep behavior disorder). paradoxical). Attention-Deficit / Hyperactivity Disorder (ADHD) is another cause of secondary hypersomnolence, unsolved pathophysiology, leading to a major disturbance of alertness. More rarely, hypersomnolence may be primary (central hypersomnia), representing then the most severe form existing in humans. The best-known central hypersomnia is narcolepsy type 1 (NT1), affecting 0.02% of the population. It is thanks to the existence of well-characterized clinical, biological and neuropathological patients that its pathophysiology is better understood. It is due to a selective loss of hypothalamic neurons secreting orexin / hypocretin, in connection with a probable autoimmune process, in genetically predisposed subjects. Narcolepsy type 2 (NT2), idiopathic hypersomnia (HI) and Kleine-Levin syndrome (SKL), are rarer forms of central hypersomnia, the pathophysiology of which is still unknown, due to the small number of patients studied.

NCT ID: NCT03990909 Recruiting - Clinical trials for Traumatic Brain Injury

Pilot Study of BCAA on Sleep

Start date: March 1, 2019
Phase: N/A
Study type: Interventional

Individuals will be recruited from the VA Portland Health Care System and the community affiliated with Oregon Health & Science University. Traumatic brain injury status will be assessed as a contributing factor. Subjects will be randomized to one of 3 groups (BCAA or one of 2 placebo conditions) and instructed to consume study product twice daily for 21 days. Self-report questionnaires, wrist actigraphy, pressure pain testing, and cognitive function will be assessed pre and post the experimental period.

NCT ID: NCT03985228 Completed - Sleep Disorders Clinical Trials

Nutritional Trial With Probiotic Fortified Milk in Women Affected by Insomnia

Prosit
Start date: November 20, 2015
Phase: N/A
Study type: Interventional

The study "Nutritional Trial With Probiotic Fortified Milk in Women Affected by Insomnia" is a part of a complex and multi-sectoral development research project (PROS.IT) with the participation of University Research Institutes and small/medium Italian enterprises. The general objective of the Project is to promote the collaboration between the best scientific research, both epidemiological and experimental, and the most advanced technologies to develop fortified foods that meeting the specific nutritional requirements of adult consumers. This objective will be achieved by the nutritional improvement of primary production, the development of innovative functional foods at high added value, in addition to traditional products functionalized, which are peculiar of the Italian local districts.

NCT ID: NCT03984058 Completed - Clinical trials for Obstructive Sleep Apnea

Recruitment Strategies Comparing Different Strategies in Sleep Apnea and Prediabetes

Start date: October 1, 2019
Phase: N/A
Study type: Interventional

Recruitment strategies comparing different strategies.

NCT ID: NCT03980340 Active, not recruiting - Clinical trials for Sleep Disorders, Circadian Rhythm

Breath Biomarkers for Sleep Loss and Circadian Timing

Start date: January 28, 2021
Phase:
Study type: Observational

Insufficient sleep has both health and safety risks, but currently there are no quick, accurate and inexpensive ways to measure sleep deficiency. The current study aims to use a cutting-edge technology, small molecule analysis (e.g. metabolomics), to detect compounds in breath that reliably change with sleep-wake state and those whose levels vary by time of day.

NCT ID: NCT03977558 Recruiting - Metabolic Syndrome Clinical Trials

Health Effect of Canola Oil Consumption in Shift Workers

Start date: October 30, 2018
Phase: N/A
Study type: Interventional

Shift work is associated with a higher risk of the development of cardiometabolic syndrome (CMtS) than in people working only during the day. One of the factors predisposing to the development of the CMtS in shift workers is an inappropriate composition of their diet. It was observed that the shift workers diet is characterized by a higher intake of saturated fatty acids (SFA) and a lower consumption of unsaturated fatty acids. One potential way to reduce the risk of CMtS in this study group seems to be a modification of their everyday diet by excluding the products of animal origin (e.g. butter) with simultaneously including vegetable oils (i.e. canola oil). The aim of the study is to evaluate the effect of replacement in the everyday diet of saturated fats (butter) with unsaturated fats (canola oil-based spread and canola oil added to main meals) in centrally obese shift workers on changes in body weight and body composition parameters as well as on changes in CMtS markers.

NCT ID: NCT03977441 Not yet recruiting - Depression Clinical Trials

the Efficacy and Safety of Agomelatine in the Patients With Parkinson's Disease

Start date: July 2019
Phase: Phase 4
Study type: Interventional

Among the patients with Parkinson's disease, about 40%~50% will suffer from depression, 40% will suffer from anxiety, and 40%~60% will suffer from sleep disorder. These non-motor symptoms of Parkinson's disease will cause great physical and psychological pain and affect the quality of life seriously. Commonly used therapeutic drugs, such as selective serotonin reuptake inhibitor (SSRI) and clonazepam, can cause a variety of side effects, including serotonin syndrome, sexual dysfunction, daytime fatigue, insomnia, residual effects and increased risk of falls. Therefore, a new and more reasonable therapeutic choice should be sought. Agomelatine is a new type of antidepressant with novel mechanism, and can improve sleep structure and circadian rhythm. The aim of this multi-center randomized controlled trial (RCT) is to clarify the role of agomelatine in improving sleep disorders and depression in patients with Parkinson's disease

NCT ID: NCT03976479 Completed - Clinical trials for Stress, Psychological

Body Composition, Nutritional and Cardiovascular Status and Lifestyle Factors of Adults Who Are on Plant-Based Diet

SuppWFPBD
Start date: May 28, 2019
Phase:
Study type: Observational

There is an objective lack of data on the body composition, nutritional status, cardiovascular status and lifestyle of adults on a plant-based diet (PBD). The aim in this cross-sectional study investigators will document the differences in the body composition, nutritional intake and general health status of healthy adults aged 18 to 80 years who are on plant-based diet of 0.5-10 years and to determine if their body composition status is associated to the duration of eating with PBD between the 3 groups: those that are 0.5-2 years (short-term), 2-5 years (medium-term) and 5-10 years (long-term) on PBD. This study will also include the monitoring of other factors of healthy and active lifestyle of PBD participants, namely the status of habitual and organized physical activity, the status of daily long-term seating, the status of stress and hygiene of sleep, socio-economic status and the motive(s)/reasons for starting PBD. Investigators will also record their maximum (lifetime) body weight, body weight upon entering the PBD lifestyle, and using data from participants, blood analysis to collect their basic biochemistry results, and data on current blood pressure status. The investigators hypothesis is that: (H1): There are no differences in nutritional status between people who are short- (0.5-2 years), the medium- (2-5 years) or the long-term (5-10 years) on PBD. (H2): At least 80% of the tested subjects have plasma lipid values and blood pressure within the reference values. (H3): There is difference in lipid profile and body composition between people who are short- and the medium but not between medium and long-term PBD.

NCT ID: NCT03976232 Not yet recruiting - Sleep Disturbance Clinical Trials

Trans Cranial Direct Current Stimulation Along With Craniosacral Therapy on Sleep Disturbances in Patients With Chronic Low Back Pain

Start date: June 2019
Phase: N/A
Study type: Interventional

Sleep problems in patients with CLBP are a very common complication and is the most neglected part of the management. Though previous literature suggested that sleep problems need to be managed in patients with CLBP, no physical therapy or manual therapy techniques has been checked for their efficacy to manage the same. Therefore, there is a need to check the efficacy of various physical therapy and manual therapy techniques so that sleep problems associated with CLBP can be managed effectively by physical means. The main purpose of the study is to check the efficacy of tDCS and CST to improve sleep, pain and quality of life in patients with CLBP.