View clinical trials related to Treatment Outcome.
Filter by:The purpose of this study is to assess the development of self-efficacy over the course of psychotherapeutic inpatient treatment and to examine the interplay of symptom severity with group cohesion and positive self-view, respectively. Moreover, variables that potentially moderate the relationship between positive self-view and treatment outcome will be investigated.
The study was a retrospective observational cohort where patient medical record review was done and data were gathered on 419 cases. The ICU admission pattern and patient outcome were the primary outcomes presented in the manuscript.
This study investigates whether within- and between-patient effects of attachment moderate the association between self-disclosure and psychotherapy outcome.
Aim: The aim of the present study was to analyse the effects of training performed on a rotating, motorised platform (the Huber/SpineForce device from LPG Systems, Valence, France) intended to reduce the risk of falls. Subjects: any patient 1) benefiting from a physiotherapy rehabilitation program at the CHU Liège, CNRF, Belgium; 2) presenting a pathological situation justifying functional rehabilitation with HUBER 360®; 3) presenting any pathology not constituting an exclusion criterion; 4) giving informed consent to research will be include in this 8-week interventional trial. Design: randomized open-label trial. Patients will be randomized into the intervention group (HUBER trainig, 45 minutes of training, twice a week during 8 weeks) or in the control group (standard care). Outcomes: the effect of the training will be measured on the Time-Up-and-Go test, on the Short-Physical performance battery test and on quality of life.
Decompressive craniectomy is a treatment of refractory intracranial hypertension after various etiologies : malignant ischemic stroke, traumatic brain injury, intraparenchymal hemorrhage, aneurysmal subarachnoid hemorrhage, cerebral venous thrombosis. Initially considered as a lifesaving therapy, benefits in terms of survival were shown compared to medical treatment alone. However, despite a better survival, morbidity and poor neurological outcome are frequent among survivors. The objective of the study is to identify initial good neurological outcome factors after decompressive craniectomy in a large series of patients, in order to argue surgical and intensive care decisions, considering expected benefit and quality of life.
Objectives: Evaluation of endodontic treatment success is largely based on radiographical assessment of anatomical and treatment-related parameters of teeth with apical periodontitis (AP). This study aimed to analyse 2-year treatment outcomes of teeth with AP based on radiographical changes, and to evaluate prognostic validity of Periapical and Endodontic Status Scale (PESS). Materials and Methods: 128 patients (176 teeth) were examined by cone-beam computed tomography at baseline and in 24 months after endodontic treatment. Treatment outcome was evaluated using estimates of periapical radiolucencies in size, relation with anatomical structures and location. Strength of associations between these and treatment-related parameters was tested by logistic regression analysis. Predictive validity of PESS was verified by estimating association between treatment risk groups defined at baseline and negative outcome.
Objectives: The purpose of this study was to assess the long-term follow-up of the overall and melanoma-specific survival in the randomised, open-lable multicenter trial (NTC NCT01183936) comparing excision margin of 2 cm versus 4 cm for patients with primary cutaneous malignant melanoma (CMM) thicker than 2 mm. Study hypothesis: The hypothesis is that there is no difference between the two treatment arms measured as melanoma-specific survival and overall survival.
Exposure therapy, including its self-directed forms, is effective for treatment of specific phobias. Nevertheless, there are issues with patient adherence in the use of exposure therapy, including its self-directed formats. Technological advancements, as with smartphones, may improve adherence to self-directed exposure therapy, perhaps due to exposure stimuli being more readily accessible. Thus, there is a need to examine how presenting phobic material on a smartphone might promote increased adherence in conducting self-directed exposure. Additionally, exposure can incorporate phobic material from different perspectives (i.e., first-person or third-person), which is one factor that may impact treatment effectiveness. Participants will be randomly assigned to a treatment or control condition, and complete a pre-assessment and then a post-assessment two weeks later. The assessment consists of a multimodal approach (e.g., self-report, physiological response, and overt behavior). Participants in the treatment condition will be instructed to watch a standard exposure video of a dental examination and prophylaxis three times daily for two weeks. One week of videos was shown in a first-person perspective and the same video will be shown in a third-person perspective for one week. The study can demonstrate the potential utility of smartphone-based self-directed exposure therapy for specific phobia.
A randomized study to assess the safety and efficacy of single-session pan-retinal photocoagulation (PRP) using Pattern Scan Laser (PASCAL) in proliferative diabetic retinopathy (PDR) - 1,700 shots vs 2,500 shots
The purpose of this study is to evaluate the effects of Vortioxetine (Lu AA21004), once daily (QD), compared with escitalopram on sexual functioning.