View clinical trials related to Tobacco Dependence.
Filter by:Project 1, Study 1 will evaluate the relationship between nicotine yield of very low nicotine content cigarettes and cigarettes smoked per day, nicotine exposure, discomfort/dysfunction, other health-related behaviors, nicotine/tobacco dependence, biomarkers of tobacco exposure, intention to quit, compensatory smoking, other tobacco use, cigarette characteristics, cognitive function, cardiovascular function, and perceived risk. We will also consider differences between conditions in compliance with product use.
People with schizophrenia have two- to three-times the mortality risk of the general population. This is primarily due to their unusually high rates of cigarette smoking, as well as other cardiovascular risk factors such as physical inactivity, obesity, high blood cholesterol and diabetes. Effective smoking treatments are needed to reduce morbidity and mortality in this population. Over a dozen experimental studies indicate that walking and other forms of exercise acutely reduce cigarette craving, nicotine withdrawal symptoms and smoking behavior in non-psychiatric smokers. However, the effects of acute exercise on smoking measures have not been studied in smokers with schizophrenia. This study will use a within-subjects, repeated-measures design, in which participants will undergo 4 laboratory sessions (order counterbalanced across participants): (1) smoking cues followed by exercise, (2) smoking cues followed by passive activity, (3) neutral cues followed by exercise, (4) neutral cues followed by passive activity. Outcome measures include cigarette craving, nicotine withdrawal symptoms, mood and smoking behavior. If the results of this study indicate that walking acutely reduces craving and smoking in smokers with schizophrenia, the next step in this research would be to test the effectiveness of a smoking cessation intervention that incorporates exercise bouts as a behavioral strategy for improving smoking cessation rates in this population.
Focus of this study was to determine if bupropion was more effective for smoking cessation when used alone or combined with nicotine gum.
The purpose of this study was to determine if bupropion plus counseling was more effective than bupropion alone or counseling alone in helping smokers quit smoking.
The purpose of this study is to evaluate the first web-based cessation program developed expressly for people living with HIV who smoke tobacco. Main study goals are (1) to evaluate the website's feasibility (i.e., recruitment, adherence, retention, and satisfaction) and (2) to complete a prospective, randomized controlled trial comparing the efficacy of the online program to standard care with a primary outcome of 3 month point-prevalence abstinence.
Subjects will be screened within 28 days before the first study treatment to confirm that they meet the requirements to participate in the trial. They will return to the site for two treatment visits, at least 12 hours each, and at least one day in between visits. At each visit treatment N1/3-I5 or Nicotine Inhaler 10 mg will be administered every hour for 11 hours. The investigator (or an appropriate delegate at the investigator site) will obtain informed consent from each subject. Blood samples will be drawn on a special schedule. The total predicted amount of blood sampled from each subject is 174 mL over the whole study. Subjects will be required to follow specific smoking and dietary restrictions and rate their urges to smoke, general liking of the product, and how easy the product is to use.
The purpose of this study is to test whether the addition of a nicotine patch to varenicline increases smoking cessation success rate and whether the combination is safe.
Participants will be smokers who want to quit, and have visible nicotine stains on their teeth. They will be given toothpaste and a toothbrush to use during the study, and will have an equal chance of being assigned to use either a nicotine gum or microtab. They will visit the study site five times during the 12 week trial to have their teeth examined.
This study will consist of 2 phases. Phase 1 will be a one day crossover study to see the effects of study product on a smoker's desire to smoke, measured by changes in scores on questionnaires given over time. Phase 2 will be a two-week extension, in which subjects will self-administer the study product and visit the study site for assessment of desire to smoke and collection of samples for the evaluation of smoking-related biomarkers.
The overall purpose of this pilot study is to examine effects of Hatha yoga and cardiovascular exercise on craving, mood, cue reactivity, and smoking behavior. Our preliminary study indicated that a single session of either form of activity intervention improved mood, and the yoga intervention appeared to decrease cravings to smoke. The proposed study will extend this preliminary research in several ways.