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TURN-IT FOG: Improving Turning and Freezing of Gait in People With PD
Oregon Health and Science University
Parkinson Disease
Freezing of Gait Symptoms in Parkinson Disease
The goals of this clinical trial are to 1) learn how two different rehabilitation
interventions for PD can reduce Freezing of Gait (FOG) in people with Parkinson's
disease, as assessed by patients, clinicians, and wearable sensors, and 2) to explore
whether two different rehabilitation intervention1 expand
The goals of this clinical trial are to 1) learn how two different rehabilitation interventions for PD can reduce Freezing of Gait (FOG) in people with Parkinson's disease, as assessed by patients, clinicians, and wearable sensors, and 2) to explore whether two different rehabilitation intervention can reduce FOG and improve daily life mobility in people with FOG sufficiently to justify a clinical trial. Participants will: - Be randomly assigned to one of two intervention groups (turning-focused agility exercise or strength-based exercise) - Have one-on-one training sessions three times per week for 6 weeks - Perform in-lab assessments before beginning and after completing the study intervention - Use wearable mobility sensors during daily life to measure their walking and balance Type: Interventional Start Date: Jun 2025 |
Navigating Pregnancy and Parenthood With Lyme Disease
Children's National Research Institute
Lyme Disease
Post Treatment Lyme Disease
Chronic Lyme Disease
Tick-Borne Infections
Tick-Borne Diseases
This is a mixed methods study exploring the experiences of pregnancy and parenting among
participants with Lyme disease. Eligible participants will have been diagnosed with Lyme
disease (LD), post-treatment Lyme disease syndrome (PTLDS), and/or chronic Lyme (CL)
either during or before a prior preg1 expand
This is a mixed methods study exploring the experiences of pregnancy and parenting among participants with Lyme disease. Eligible participants will have been diagnosed with Lyme disease (LD), post-treatment Lyme disease syndrome (PTLDS), and/or chronic Lyme (CL) either during or before a prior pregnancy. Participants will complete quantitative surveys on topics such as their medical history, their child(ren)'s development, and demographic information. They will then participate in a qualitative interview where they will be asked about their experiences with pregnancy and with parenting their child(ren) in the context of their condition. Type: Observational Start Date: Mar 2024 |
A Study of Mental Health Care in People With Cancer
Memorial Sloan Kettering Cancer Center
Breast Cancer
Colorectal Cancer
Lung Cancer
Prostate Cancer
The purpose of this study is to look at mental health services for adults with depressed
mood who were diagnosed with cancer at the age of 65 or older. This study will compare
the usual approach for connecting older adults with depressed mood to mental health
services with the Open Door for Cancer1 expand
The purpose of this study is to look at mental health services for adults with depressed mood who were diagnosed with cancer at the age of 65 or older. This study will compare the usual approach for connecting older adults with depressed mood to mental health services with the Open Door for Cancer (OD-C) approach. We will find out if the OD-C approach is practical and useful for cancer patients who participate in the intervention and for providers who see or treat cancer patients. Type: Interventional Start Date: Sep 2023 |
The Impact of a Race-Based Stress Reduction Intervention
Loyola University
Racism
Stress
Inflammation
The goal of this clinical trial is to learn whether a stress reduction program called
Resilience, Stress, and Ethnicity (RiSE) improves well-being, inflammation, and the
epigenome in African American (AA) women who have risk factors for heart or metabolic
disease.
The main question it aims to answ1 expand
The goal of this clinical trial is to learn whether a stress reduction program called Resilience, Stress, and Ethnicity (RiSE) improves well-being, inflammation, and the epigenome in African American (AA) women who have risk factors for heart or metabolic disease. The main question it aims to answer is whether an intervention that integrates cognitive-behavioral strategies focused on the impact that social stress, such as racism, has on the body, racial identity development, and empowerment. Participants will placed in one of the two following groups: - The RiSE program will focus on teaching participants how to reduce their stress levels and will meet online weekly for approximately 2 hours each week for 8 consecutive weeks. - The Health Education program will include education on how to improve general health and will meet online weekly for approximately 2 hours each week for 8 consecutive weeks. Participants will provide saliva to measure cytokines and DNA methylation (DNAm), complete questionnaires, and have blood pressure, heart rate, and weight measured at the following clinic visits: 1. Prior to starting the intervention 2. Mid-way through the intervention (Week 4) 3. End of the intervention (Week 8) 4. Six (6) months after the completion of the intervention Type: Interventional Start Date: Oct 2023 |
The Breast Cancer Survivors and Partners Online Research Together (SUPORT) Project
University of Arizona
Breast Cancer Female
Psychological Distress
Many breast cancer survivors (estimated 70% in some studies) experience clinically
significant depression and/or anxiety in the months and years after finishing cancer
treatments. This research will build on the rigor of prior research to reduce breast
cancer survivor depression and anxiety with a1 expand
Many breast cancer survivors (estimated 70% in some studies) experience clinically significant depression and/or anxiety in the months and years after finishing cancer treatments. This research will build on the rigor of prior research to reduce breast cancer survivor depression and anxiety with a compassion meditation intervention called CBCT (Cognitively-Based Compassion Training) for online synchronous delivery that is also inclusive of informal caregivers (i.e., adult family members who live with and typically provide half the care for survivors, aka supportive partners). Type: Interventional Start Date: Mar 2023 |
Medical Cannabis and Behavior
University of Minnesota
Chronic Pain Patients
Medical Cannabis Users
This study will assess cognition, neural function, and drug exposure in chronic pain
patients who have been prescribed medical cannabis and will differentiate outcomes based
on use of specific CBD-dominant versus THC-dominant treatment products. This longitudinal
study will recruit medical cannabis1 expand
This study will assess cognition, neural function, and drug exposure in chronic pain patients who have been prescribed medical cannabis and will differentiate outcomes based on use of specific CBD-dominant versus THC-dominant treatment products. This longitudinal study will recruit medical cannabis users from local dispensaries. Each participant will complete a baseline assessment prior to the start of medical cannabis use, monthly phone calls to assess treatment adherence, and a four-month follow- up assessment. The aims of this project are: Aim 1. To assess impacts of medical cannabis compounds on executive functions, learning and memory in adults to determine whether cognitive impairments are evident after the onset of cannabis use; Aim 2. To assess the impacts of medical cannabis compounds on white matter microstructure, functional brain activity and functional connectivity; Aim 3. To differentiate change over four months in these outcomes as a function of (a) age and (b) pre-to-post-treatment changes in blood levels of cannabinoid compounds. Type: Interventional Start Date: Jun 2025 |
Fibromyalgia Sleep A to ZZZ Study
University of Michigan
Fibromyalgia
This research study is testing whether changes in sleep timing and morning light therapy
may have an impact on symptoms related to fibromyalgia. expand
This research study is testing whether changes in sleep timing and morning light therapy may have an impact on symptoms related to fibromyalgia. Type: Interventional Start Date: Sep 2024 |
Mobile CBT for Middle Aged and Older Adults
Weill Medical College of Cornell University
Anxiety Disorders and Symptoms
Depressive Symptoms
Depression
This study aims to assess a mobile iPhone app called MAYA for use in middle-aged and
older adults with anxiety or mood disorders. The MAYA app is designed to teach coping
skills for anxiety and depression that are drawn from cognitive behavioral therapy.
Participants will be asked to use the app fo1 expand
This study aims to assess a mobile iPhone app called MAYA for use in middle-aged and older adults with anxiety or mood disorders. The MAYA app is designed to teach coping skills for anxiety and depression that are drawn from cognitive behavioral therapy. Participants will be asked to use the app for at least two days a week, 20 minutes on each day, for six weeks. Participants will have weekly check-ins as well as longer assessments at the beginning of the study, week 3, week 6 (end of treatment), and week 12 (follow up). During assessments, participants will answer brief questionnaires designed to assess their symptoms and impressions of the app. The main hypotheses of the study are that participants will complete most of the assigned sessions and that they will rate their impressions of the app highly. The secondary hypotheses are that symptoms of depression and anxiety will decrease with use of the MAYA app. Type: Interventional Start Date: Jun 2023 |
Randomized Trial on Mobile Technology and Young Drivers' Cellphone Use
Motao Zhu
Cell Phone Use
Automobile Driving
The purpose of this study is to conduct a randomized controlled trial to determine the
effects of a cellphone app and a driving mode intervention on driving behavior in drivers
aged 18-24 years. expand
The purpose of this study is to conduct a randomized controlled trial to determine the effects of a cellphone app and a driving mode intervention on driving behavior in drivers aged 18-24 years. Type: Interventional Start Date: Nov 2022 |
Relationships Between Exercise and Appetite in Women With Loss of Control Eating
Ohio University
Eating Disorders
Binge-Eating Disorder
Bulimia Nervosa
This pilot study is a first step in looking at the relationship between exercise and
appetite in women with loss of control eating. expand
This pilot study is a first step in looking at the relationship between exercise and appetite in women with loss of control eating. Type: Interventional Start Date: Aug 2024 |
Polyphenols and Cognitive Decline
University of California, Los Angeles
Cognitive Decline
Cognitive Dysfunction
Globally, populations are aging thereby increasing healthcare burden, overall cognitive
impairment, and dementia including Alzheimers diseases (AD). The lack of effective
treatments makes it essential to develop new strategies for healthy cognitive aging,
including interventions to slow or prevent1 expand
Globally, populations are aging thereby increasing healthcare burden, overall cognitive impairment, and dementia including Alzheimers diseases (AD). The lack of effective treatments makes it essential to develop new strategies for healthy cognitive aging, including interventions to slow or prevent cognitive decline. A traditional Mediterranean diet, rich in polyphenols (PPs), may prevent or delay the onset of cognitive dysfunction in older adults, preserving healthy brain structure and function, and lowering the risk of AD. These effects, mediated in part by gut microbiome-derived PP metabolites, highlight the role alterations in the brain-gut microbiome system play in neurodegeneration. Moreover, high levels of circulating phenyl-y-valerolactones, neuroprotective compounds, exclusively produced by gut microbiota from flavan-3-ol-rich foods (e.g., cocoa, tea, berries) are associated with delaying the onset of cognitive dysfunction in older adults. Intake of such PPs can also change gut microbial composition and function, altering the physiology of the hosts secondary bile acid (BA) pool, affecting regulatory and signaling functions in the brain as well as cognitive decline and AD. The investigators hypothesize that, in older adults with enhanced AD risk, dietary intake of PPs maintains healthier brain features and cognitive function, and that this beneficial effect is mediated by gut microbiota metabolites of PPs and BAs. In this multi-PI application by leaders in the field of brain-gut microbiome interactions, the investigators will conduct a year-long, multi-center, randomized double-blind placebo-controlled study in 300 older adults in the United States (validation sample of 100 from Northern Ireland) who are at enhanced risk of developing AD. Ultimately, the investigators will establish the protective effects of regular dietary PP intake on cognitive function and on brain-gut microbiome interactions, ideally allowing the development of effective dietary regimes to prevent of delay the onset of AD in at-risk elderly, thereby reducing cognitive decline and healthcare costs. Participants will be asked to provide information about their diet, mood, and behaviors via food diaries, physical body measures (e.g. height, weight, etc.), and online questionnaires collected before each in-clinic appointment, as well as monthly online questionnaires. MR imaging will be collected on participants to assess neurocognitive changes as a result of the supplement. Participants will be asked to provide both stool and blood samples. Participants will be randomly assigned to either the Juice Plus+ intervention group or the placebo treatment group and then asked to take their respective supplement 4 pills twice a day. All participants will be asked to come in for 4 in-clinic appointments, including 3 brain MRI scans and 3 cognitive testing appointments, collect 3 stool samples with corresponding diet diaries, and provide 3 blood samples over the course of 12 months. Participants will also meet with a nutritionist 3 times over the 12 months to discuss diet to ensure study eligibility and any questions about the supplement. Type: Interventional Start Date: Jan 2025 |
Stepped Care for Weight Loss Maintenance
Johns Hopkins University
Obesity
This study is a 3-group, parallel design, randomized controlled trial (RCT) in
approximately 258 adults with obesity that will investigate whether a 16-week behavioral
weight loss treatment and a 52-week stepped-care digital health intervention can improve
the maintenance of a ≥ 5% weight loss.
161 expand
This study is a 3-group, parallel design, randomized controlled trial (RCT) in approximately 258 adults with obesity that will investigate whether a 16-week behavioral weight loss treatment and a 52-week stepped-care digital health intervention can improve the maintenance of a ≥ 5% weight loss. 16-week run-in (Phase 1). To qualify for randomization, participants must lose ≥ 5% of initial weight in the 16-week run-in. This loss will be achieved with the provision of weekly-group lifestyle counseling, which includes a partial meal replacement diet. 52-week randomized trial of 3 weight loss maintenance strategies (Phase 2): Participants who have achieved ≥ 5% weight loss during Phase 1 will be randomly assigned to 1 of 3 groups: 1. Participants in the Usual Care group will be emailed monthly educational modules with information on maintaining weight loss. 2. Participants in the SELF group will receive a wireless "smart" body weight scale and a wearable physical activity tracker, and daily text messages with tailored feedback to assist in weight loss maintenance. 3. Participants in the STEP group will be enrolled in an intervention that consists of 4 steps that are progressive and based on response to treatment. After 13 weeks at each step, participants who do not maintain a ≥5% weight loss or regain 2 percentage points of weight from the participants randomization value will move to a higher intensity step. Participants who maintain weight loss will stay at the same step. Type: Interventional Start Date: Feb 2024 |
Concurrent vs. Sequential Cessation of Dual Cigarette and E-cigarette Use
Yale University
Cigarette Smoking
E-Cigarette Use
Smoking Cessation
The purpose of this research study is to understand whether concurrent treatment for
cigarettes and e-cigarettes in which an individual quits both products at the same time
(QUIT-C) or sequential treatment in which an individual quits cigarettes first followed
by e-cigarettes is more effective for1 expand
The purpose of this research study is to understand whether concurrent treatment for cigarettes and e-cigarettes in which an individual quits both products at the same time (QUIT-C) or sequential treatment in which an individual quits cigarettes first followed by e-cigarettes is more effective for quitting both products. The study will also compare the effect of treatment on health-related biomarkers. All participants will receive varenicline, a medication used to treat tobacco use dependence, counseling, and cessation resources (i.e., links to text-based support, self-change booklet). Varenicline helps to reduce cravings for tobacco use and decreases the pleasurable effects of cigarettes and other tobacco products. Type: Interventional Start Date: Apr 2024 |
Mindful Steps 2.0: Promoting Physical Activity in Patients With COPD and HF
Beth Israel Deaconess Medical Center
Chronic Obstructive Pulmonary Disease
Chronic Heart Failure
The goal of this fully-remote randomized controlled trial is to test the efficacy of
Mindful Steps in facilitating physical activity compared to usual standard of care among
136 patients with COPD and/or HF. The main question it aims to answer is can this
intervention promote physical activity as m1 expand
The goal of this fully-remote randomized controlled trial is to test the efficacy of Mindful Steps in facilitating physical activity compared to usual standard of care among 136 patients with COPD and/or HF. The main question it aims to answer is can this intervention promote physical activity as measured by daily step counts in sedentary patients with COPD and/or HF. Participants will be randomized (1:1 ratio) to receive either the Mindful Steps intervention or usual care for 12 months, with both arms receiving a Walking for Health education booklet. Type: Interventional Start Date: Apr 2025 |
Weight Loss Study: Genetics and Response to Naltrexone/Bupropion
Columbia University
Obesity
The goal of this clinical trial is to understand if genetic variations are associated
with the amount of weight loss with diet and while taking an FDA-approved medication for
weight loss. The main question[s] it aims to answer are:
- In Aim One, the investigators propose to rigorously test the1 expand
The goal of this clinical trial is to understand if genetic variations are associated with the amount of weight loss with diet and while taking an FDA-approved medication for weight loss. The main question[s] it aims to answer are: - In Aim One, the investigators propose to rigorously test the hypothesis that presence of the Taq1A A1+ polymorphism is associated with greater weight loss with NB compared with the A1- genotype. - In Aim Two, the investigators will explore other genetic polymorphisms that might influence the efficacy of NB such as the fat mass and obesity-associated (FTO) gene which modulates DRD2 signaling, as carriers of risk alleles in both the FTO and ANKK1 gene demonstrate altered responses to reward-learning tasks associated with negative outcomes. Participants will be in the study for 40 weeks, which consists of two phases: 1. From baseline to week 12, participants will receive individual nutritional counseling on a calorie restricted diet. This phase includes in-person visits, blood tests, an EKG, vital signs, questionnaires, body weight, and nutritional visits. 2. From week 12 to week 40, participants will continue to receive dietary counseling and will receive treatment with naltrexone/bupropion for 28 weeks. This phase includes in-person and phone visits, blood tests, vital signs, questionnaires, body weight, and nutritional visits. Type: Interventional Start Date: Jun 2023 |
Cochlear Implants in Young Children With SSD
University of North Carolina, Chapel Hill
Single Sided Deafness
Unilateral Deafness
Hearing Loss, Unilateral
Hearing Loss
Congenital Hearing Loss
The goal of this clinical trial is to investigate the safety and effectiveness of
cochlear implantation in infants and toddlers with single-sided deafness.
The main questions it aims to answer are:
- Are cochlear implants an effective treatment of single-sided deafness in infants and
todd1 expand
The goal of this clinical trial is to investigate the safety and effectiveness of cochlear implantation in infants and toddlers with single-sided deafness. The main questions it aims to answer are: - Are cochlear implants an effective treatment of single-sided deafness in infants and toddlers? - Are cochlear implants a safe treatment for single-sided deafness in infants and toddlers? Participants will receive a cochlear implant and be followed until they are five years old. During those five years, the investigators will program the device and monitor auditory development. Children will be asked to: - Undergo cochlear implantation - Wear their cochlear implant processor whenever they are awake. - Participate in traditional hearing tests - Participate in traditional hearing testing - Participate in localization testing - Participate in hearing in noise testing - Participate in word recognition testing - Participate in speech, language, and educational evaluations The researchers will compare results to children with typical hearing in both ears and children with single-sided deafness who have not received an implant to observe any differences between the groups. Type: Interventional Start Date: Jul 2023 |
Confirming the Effectiveness of Online Guided Self-Help Family-Based Treatment for Adolescent Anore1
Stanford University
Anorexia Nervosa
With an incidence rate of about 1%, Anorexia Nervosa (AN) is a serious mental disorder
associated with high mortality, morbidity, and cost. AN in youth is more responsive to
early treatment but becomes highly resistant once it has taken an enduring course. The
first-line treatment for adolescents w1 expand
With an incidence rate of about 1%, Anorexia Nervosa (AN) is a serious mental disorder associated with high mortality, morbidity, and cost. AN in youth is more responsive to early treatment but becomes highly resistant once it has taken an enduring course. The first-line treatment for adolescents with AN is Family Based Treatment (FBT). While FBT can be delivered using videoconferencing (FBT-V), therapists' limited availability hampers scalability. Guided self-help (GSH) versions of efficacious treatments have been used to scale and increase access to care. The main aim of this proposed comparative effectiveness study is to confirm that clinical improvements in GSH-FBT are achieved with greater efficiency than FBT-V in generalizable clinical settings. Type: Interventional Start Date: Mar 2023 |
Trial-Ready Cohort-Down Syndrome (TRC-DS)
University of Southern California
Down Syndrome
Alzheimer Disease
Dementia
The purpose of the Trial-Ready Cohort - Down Syndrome (TRC-DS) is to enroll 120 healthy
adults with Down syndrome (DS), between the ages of 25-55, into a trial ready cohort
(TRC), and up to 450 participants in total including co-enrolled in the Alzheimer
Biomarkers Consortium - Down Syndrome (ABC-D1 expand
The purpose of the Trial-Ready Cohort - Down Syndrome (TRC-DS) is to enroll 120 healthy adults with Down syndrome (DS), between the ages of 25-55, into a trial ready cohort (TRC), and up to 450 participants in total including co-enrolled in the Alzheimer Biomarkers Consortium - Down Syndrome (ABC-DS) study. Participants enrolled in the TRC-DS will undergo longitudinal cognitive and clinical assessment, genetic and biomarker testing, as well as imaging and biospecimen collection. Using these outcome measures, researchers will analyze the relationships between cognitive measures and biomarkers of Alzheimer's disease (AD) to identify endpoints for AD clinical trials in DS that best reflect disease progression. To learn more about the study and participating sites, visit our study website at: https://www.trcds.org/. TRC-DS is collaborating with the Alzheimer's Disease Biomarker Consortium-Down Syndrome (ABC-DS) to allow study participants to be concurrently enrolled in both ABC-DS and TRC-DS, referred to as "co-enrollment". ABC-DS is a longitudinal, observational research study that is overseen at University of Pittsburgh Coordinating Center. ABC-DS participants who express interest in potentially joining a clinical trial in the future and who meet TRC-DS eligibility criteria, may choose to co-enroll in TRC-DS at an ABC-DS Site. Co-enrolled participants will adhere to the ABC-DS protocol and schedule of activities, but agree to share their data with the TRC-DS team and to receive invitations for future participation in clinical trials. Fore more information on ABC-DS please visit https://www.nia.nih.gov/research/abc-ds or http://abcds.pitt.edu/. Type: Observational Start Date: Jun 2021 |
The Role of Estrogen in the Neurobiology of Eating Disorders
Massachusetts General Hospital
Eating Disorders
Hypoestrogenemia
This is a randomized, double blind, placebo-controlled study of the effects of
transdermal estradiol versus placebo on cognitive flexibility, reward processing, and
eating disorder pathology in hypoestrogenemic female adolescents and young adults (ages
14-35 years) with an eating disorder character1 expand
This is a randomized, double blind, placebo-controlled study of the effects of transdermal estradiol versus placebo on cognitive flexibility, reward processing, and eating disorder pathology in hypoestrogenemic female adolescents and young adults (ages 14-35 years) with an eating disorder characterized by extreme dietary restriction and/or excessive exercise. Subjects will be randomized 1:1 to 12 weeks of transdermal estradiol with cyclic progesterone or placebo patches and cyclic placebo pills. Study visits include a screening visit to determine eligibility and visits at baseline, 8 weeks, and 12 weeks. Study procedures comprise behavioral, neuroimaging, and endocrine assessments. Type: Interventional Start Date: Jun 2019 |
T1D Pregnancy & Me
Jaeb Center for Health Research
Diabetes Mellitus, Type 1
Pregnancy in Diabetics
Pregnancy, High-Risk
Insulin Dependent Diabetes
T1D Pregnancy & Me will partner with pregnant participants living with type 1 diabetes
(T1D) in the United States to collect real-world data on management of T1D in pregnancy.
This is a remote study where participants can complete online surveys and share device
data (continuous glucose monitor (CG1 expand
T1D Pregnancy & Me will partner with pregnant participants living with type 1 diabetes (T1D) in the United States to collect real-world data on management of T1D in pregnancy. This is a remote study where participants can complete online surveys and share device data (continuous glucose monitor (CGM) data and insulin data). Through the collection of CGM, insulin, and pregnancy outcome data, the study will provide important information to understand how diabetes is being managed during pregnancy. These data will provide much needed evidence to guide modern management of diabetes during pregnancy with a goal of improving care and outcomes. Type: Observational Start Date: Apr 2025 |
Whole Foods for Teens: A Pilot Dietary Intervention to Reduce Body Adiposity in Adolescents With Ob1
Vanderbilt University
Obesity, Childhood
Diet, Healthy
Body Weight Changes
This study will address the following aims:
Aim 1: Conduct an 8-week pilot RCT to examine the effects of a whole foods diet
intervention on body adiposity in adolescents with obesity.
Aim 1a (Primary): Evaluate intervention effectiveness on total fat mass following the
8-week intervention.
Hypot1 expand
This study will address the following aims: Aim 1: Conduct an 8-week pilot RCT to examine the effects of a whole foods diet intervention on body adiposity in adolescents with obesity. Aim 1a (Primary): Evaluate intervention effectiveness on total fat mass following the 8-week intervention. Hypothesis 1a: Adolescents randomized to the whole foods intervention will have lower total fat mass (kg) at the 8-week follow-up than those in the control group. Aim 1b: Evaluate intervention effectiveness on anthropometric changes following the 8-week intervention. Hypothesis 1b: Adolescents randomized to the whole foods intervention will have lower weight, BMI-z scores and/or waist circumference at the 8-week follow-up than those in the control group. Secondary Aims: Aim 2: Conduct an 8-week pilot RCT to examine the effects of a whole foods diet intervention on diet quality in adolescent and parent pairs during the study period. Hypothesis 2: Adolescents and parents randomized to the whole foods intervention will have higher diet quality scores at the 8-week follow-up than those in the control group. Aim 3: Conduct post-intervention family focus groups to identify how individual/family needs and preferences and social determinants of health (SDOH) may be perceived barriers and/or facilitators of diet adherence to a whole foods diet pattern. Type: Interventional Start Date: Mar 2025 |
The Potential of Oxytocin to Reduce Opioid Abuse Liability and Pain Among Older Adults
University of Florida
Pain
Some research suggests that administration of oxytocin with oxycodone may reduce its
abuse liability and improve its ability to reduce pain. In a 6-session laboratory study,
we will be evaluating the effects of oxycodone and oxytocin (combined and separately,
across sessions) on experimentally-indu1 expand
Some research suggests that administration of oxytocin with oxycodone may reduce its abuse liability and improve its ability to reduce pain. In a 6-session laboratory study, we will be evaluating the effects of oxycodone and oxytocin (combined and separately, across sessions) on experimentally-induced pain, subjective effects, and decision-making. Type: Interventional Start Date: Sep 2023 |
Leveraging Technology to Improve Medication Adherence in Youth With Kidney or Liver Transplant
Johns Hopkins University
Transplant;Failure,Kidney
Transplant; Failure, Liver
Adherence, Medication
Adherence, Patient
Adherence, Treatment
Can the investigators create an effective way to improve adherence to immunosuppressant
medication and reduce rejection, graft loss, and death in adolescents and young adults
who have undergone kidney or liver transplantation? The investigators' mobile technology
intervention uses real-time electro1 expand
Can the investigators create an effective way to improve adherence to immunosuppressant medication and reduce rejection, graft loss, and death in adolescents and young adults who have undergone kidney or liver transplantation? The investigators' mobile technology intervention uses real-time electronic pillbox-assessed dose timing and text message prompts to address antirejection medication nonadherence when nonadherence is detected. Type: Interventional Start Date: Mar 2024 |
Passive Heat Therapy for Lowering Systolic Blood Pressure and Improving Vascular Function in Mid-li1
University of Colorado, Boulder
Aging
This study aims to determine the effects of ~12 weeks of repeated hot water immersion
("heat therapy") vs. thermoneutral water immersion on blood pressure and vascular
function in late middle-life to older (≥40 years) adults. The study also aims to
determine the effects of ~12 weeks of heat therapy1 expand
This study aims to determine the effects of ~12 weeks of repeated hot water immersion ("heat therapy") vs. thermoneutral water immersion on blood pressure and vascular function in late middle-life to older (≥40 years) adults. The study also aims to determine the effects of ~12 weeks of heat therapy on fluid cognitive and cerebrovascular function. Type: Interventional Start Date: Aug 2022 |
Facilitation of Extinction Retention and Reconsolidation Blockade in PTSD
Boston University
Post Traumatic Stress Disorder
Purpose: About 6.4% of the U.S. population suffers from posttraumatic stress disorder
(PTSD). Trauma-focused psychotherapies are generally effective in PTSD, but responses
vary greatly across individuals and PTSD subpopulations. Neurobiological factors impacted
by life experiences, stress, and gene1 expand
Purpose: About 6.4% of the U.S. population suffers from posttraumatic stress disorder (PTSD). Trauma-focused psychotherapies are generally effective in PTSD, but responses vary greatly across individuals and PTSD subpopulations. Neurobiological factors impacted by life experiences, stress, and genetics can affect treatment responses. These factors can alter brain capacities needed to reprocess traumatic memories prevent them from triggering intensely distressing, disruptive, out-of-place responses. For example, during psychotherapy for PTSD, trauma memory activation engages two competing brain processes that affect recovery: "extinction" versus "reconsolidation" of trauma-related emotional, physiological, and behavioral responses. This study tests whether a single intravenous (IV) dose of allopregnanolone (Allo) compared to placebo (which is non-active): 1. promotes consolidation of extinction learning (sub-study 1) or 2. blocks reconsolidation physiological responses triggered by aversive memories (sub-study 2). The study also tests whether Allo compared to placebo affects retention of non-aversive memories. Type: Interventional Start Date: Mar 2022 |

