View clinical trials related to Tobacco Use Disorder.
Filter by:The objective of this study is to examine the cognitive, immunological, and neurophysiological effects of transitioning from tobacco cigarettes to electronic cigarettes. The central hypothesis of this study is that this transition will be accompanied by a decrease in peripheral inflammation, which will lead to significant changes in the neurocircuitry underlying interoception and appetite.
Attempts to quit cigarette smoking are often accompanied by negative mood and problems in attention and memory. These effects, in turn, may contribute to smoking relapse. This exploratory/developmental project examines the effects of a novel medication, GTS-21, on individuals interested in smoking cessation. It is hypothesized that GTS-21 will reduce negative affect, improve cognition and/or reduce smoking relapse in healthy adult men and women who are chronic cigarette smokers.
Phase 3 Pilot Clinical Trial.
The investigators will conduct a cluster randomized controlled trial of several behavioral interventions for smoking cessation among a sample of employees at large workplaces in the Bangkok metropolitan area. The study aims to test the impacts of different incentive structures for smoking cessation on take-up, effectiveness, and cost-effectiveness. The interventions are designed to elucidate certain principles from the field of behavioral economics.
Background: . Bipolar disorders and tobacco use disorder are top of the causes of disability and mortality worldwide Objective: The aim of this study was to evaluate N-acetyl-cysteine (NAC) as an adjunctive treatment in patients with bipolar .disorders and tobacco use disorder (TUD) , to determine whether NAC reduces alterations in biomarkers of inflammatory and oxidative stress Methods: This study will be conducted as a double-blind, randomized, placebo controlles add NAC or placebo for .bipolar disorders and tobacco use disorder at Londrina State University, Brazil.
This is a study of EMB-001 (a combination of two FDA-approved drugs, metyrapone and oxazepam) in otherwise healthy adults who are regular cigarette smokers. There will be 3 groups of 8 subjects; in each group, 6 subjects will get the drug combination and 2 will get placebo. Neither the subjects nor the study personnel will know who got drug and who got placebo (double-blind). In the first group the drug doses will be low, and they will be increased in the second and third groups. Subjects will receive a single dose on Day 1, followed 24 hours later by the start of doses twice daily for 7 days, and then a final morning dose on the last day. The levels of the drugs in the blood will be assessed by repeated blood draws after the first day and after the end of dosing. Safety will be assessed after the single dose and repeated dosing. Effects of study drug on smoking and craving cigarettes will be assessed at the end of repeated dosing. The hypothesis is that this drug combination will be safe, with relatively few side effects.
Cigarette smoking remains a significant public health concern. A magnetic field applied to the outside of the skull can produce electrical activity in the brain without significant pain or the need for anesthesia. Sessions of magnetic stimulation or superficial stimulation that does not reach the brain will be used to determine if magnetic stimulation can reduce cue-induced craving and cigarettes consumption in adult nicotine-dependent cigarette smokers. This project may lead to a new therapy for smoking cessation.
To evaluate the efficacy and safety of AZD8529 for smoking cessation in female smokers.
This will be an open label clinical trial with all subjects receiving both lorcaserin and varenicline with a primary aim of reducing post cessation weight gain.
In its original phase, this cohort study recruited subjects who were either HIV-positive or HIV-negative healthy controls, to analyze the community structure of the lung microbiome. Original recruitment was planned to occur both at the University of Michigan Medical Center and clinics, and at VA Ann Arbor Healthcare System. Enrollment for the original cohort is completed, and all current activity of this project is occurring at VA Ann Arbor, where both Veteran subjects and non-Veteran subjects are eligible to participate. This study is currently recruiting only healthy HIV-negative subjects. Participation, described below, involves a research bronchoscopy procedure.