
Search Clinical Trials
Study is registered in ResearchMatch ![]() Sponsor Condition of Interest |
|---|
PET Imaging of Cyclooxygenase in Participants With Major Depressive Disorder (MDD)
National Institute of Mental Health (NIMH)
Depression
Background:
Researchers developed [11C]MC1, a radioligand for cyclooxygenase-2 (COX-2). COX-2 is an
enzyme induced in the brain during inflammation. Researchers want to see the levels of
COX-1 (measured as distribution volume VT) are elevated in the brain of two groups of
mood disorders patients u1 expand
Background: Researchers developed [11C]MC1, a radioligand for cyclooxygenase-2 (COX-2). COX-2 is an enzyme induced in the brain during inflammation. Researchers want to see the levels of COX-1 (measured as distribution volume VT) are elevated in the brain of two groups of mood disorders patients undergoing MDE relative to the control group. Objective: To determine whether COX-1 and COX-2 are detectable in the brains of individuals with MDD experiencing a major depressive episode (MDE). Eligibility: People aged 18-70 years with MDD and Healthy Volunteers aged 18 70 years. Design: Group A: MDD participants will be studied with the same dose of [11C]MC1 before and after administration of 600 mg celecoxib; the study is neither randomized nor placebo-controlled. Group B: MDD participants, both medicated and unmedicated, will be studied with [11C]PS13 and compared to healthy volunteers.. https://nimhcontent.nimh.nih.gov/start/surveys/?s=TJW4RA4WN3LDD988 Type: Interventional Start Date: Jul 2021 |
Neurobiology of Suicide
National Institute of Mental Health (NIMH)
Healthy Volunteers
Depression
Background:
There are no good treatments for people considering suicide. Researchers want to study
suicide with questions, blood tests, brain imaging, and sleep studies. They hope to
better understand suicide, so they can help suicidal people.
Objective:
To understand what happens in the brain w1 expand
Background: There are no good treatments for people considering suicide. Researchers want to study suicide with questions, blood tests, brain imaging, and sleep studies. They hope to better understand suicide, so they can help suicidal people. Objective: To understand what happens in the brain when someone has thought about or attempted suicide. Eligibility: Group 1: Adults ages 18 70 who have thought about or attempted suicide recently Group 2: Adults ages 18 70 who have thought about or attempted suicide in the past Group 3: Adults ages 18 70 who have depression or anxiety, but have never thought about suicide Group 4: Healthy volunteers the same ages. Design: Participants will be screened in another protocol. Adults who have recently thought about or attempted suicide must be referred by a doctor. They may do up to 3 phases of this study. Groups 2, 3 and 4 will do only Phase 1 and will not get ketamine. Phase 1: 1 week in hospital. Participants will have: Physical exam. Questions about thoughts and feelings. Thinking and memory tests and simple tasks. Blood and urine tests. Two MRI scans. Participants will lie on a table that slides into a metal cylinder that takes pictures. They will have a coil over their head and earplugs and do a computer task. Sleep test. Disks and bands will be placed on the body to monitor it during sleep. Magnetic detectors on their head while they perform tasks. A wrist monitor for activity and sleep. Lumbar puncture (optional). A needle will collect fluid from the back. Shock experiments (optional). Participants will observe pictures and sounds and feel a small shock on the hand. Phase 2: 4 days in hospital. A thin plastic tube will be placed in each arm, one for blood draws, the other to get the drug ketamine once. Participants will repeat most of the Phase 1 tests. Phase 3: up to 4 more ketamine doses over 2 weeks. Participants will have follow-up calls or visits at 6 months and then maybe yearly for 5 years. ... Type: Interventional Start Date: Dec 2015 |
Developing Biomarkers of Dietary Intake: Dose Dependent Measurement of Sugar Intake
National Institute of Diabetes and Digestive and Kidney Diseases (NIDDK)
Diet Therapy
Healthy Volunteers
Background:
Diet is one of the most modifiable behaviors affecting health. But diet assessment
measures that are based on self-report can be inaccurate. Researchers want better ways to
address the role of diet in chronic disease. They want to see if stable isotopes can be
used to better assess wha1 expand
Background: Diet is one of the most modifiable behaviors affecting health. But diet assessment measures that are based on self-report can be inaccurate. Researchers want better ways to address the role of diet in chronic disease. They want to see if stable isotopes can be used to better assess what people eat. Objective: To see if stable isotopes can help scientists identify things people eat. Eligibility: Healthy adults ages 18 to 65 Design: Participants will be screened with a medical history and physical exam. They will have blood and urine tests. These tests will be repeated during the study. Participants will stay in the inpatient unit of the NIH in Phoenix, Arizona, for 13 weeks. For 7 days, participants will eat a diet prepared by the NIH kitchen. They will get balanced meals that are 50% carbohydrates, 20% protein, and 30% fat. Then participants will be randomly placed on one of 3 diets containing different percentages of carbohydrates from soda. Participants height and weight will be measured. The amount of fat and muscle in their body will be measured by body scans that are similar to x-rays. Participants will have oral glucose tolerance tests. They will consume a sugar drink and then give blood samples over 3 hours. Participants will give hair and stool samples. Participants will complete a diet questionnaire. It assesses their food intake over 24 hours. Participants will complete behavioral questionnaires and computer performance tests. Participants will have fat biopsies taken from their stomach and thigh. Participants will have three 24-hour stays in a metabolic chamber. It is used to measure metabolism. Type: Interventional Start Date: Feb 2022 |
Collection of Peripheral Blood Mononuclear Cells (PBMCs) From Healthy People for the Expansion of T1
National Cancer Institute (NCI)
Healthy Volunteer
Title: Collection of Peripheral Blood Mononuclear Cells (PBMCs) from Healthy People for
the Expansion of T Cells for Adoptive Cell Therapy
Background:
New therapies are being developed that use a person s own immune system to fight tumors.
Some of the tumors being studied include cancers caused b1 expand
Title: Collection of Peripheral Blood Mononuclear Cells (PBMCs) from Healthy People for the Expansion of T Cells for Adoptive Cell Therapy Background: New therapies are being developed that use a person s own immune system to fight tumors. Some of the tumors being studied include cancers caused by viruses. Researchers want to use the healthy cells of volunteers to perform research studies. To do this, they are collecting lymphocytes through leukapheresis. Objectives: To collect healthy cells from volunteers for research studies for new cancer therapies. Eligibility: Healthy people ages 18 and older Design: Participants will be screened with a standard donor questionnaire. It asks about their health and past medical problems. It also asks about risky behaviors that could increase their exposure to viruses or bacteria that could be transmitted through a transfusion. Participants will give a blood sample to make sure they are able to donate. They will have a physical exam. A finger stick test will check their hemoglobin, or red blood cell, level. They might give a urine sample. Participants will undergo apheresis. For this, a needle is placed in a vein in each of their arms. Their blood is taken from one arm. A machine separates the white cells from the red cells and plasma by a spinning process. The white cells are removed and directed into a plastic bag. The red cells and plasma are returned through the needle in the other arm. The entire procedure takes 4 6 hours. Participants may donate every 21 days in this protocol if they choose to. Type: Observational Start Date: Aug 2016 |
Study of Intravenous ZMA001 in Healthy Subjects
National Heart, Lung, and Blood Institute (NHLBI)
Pulmonary Arterial Hypertension PAH
Background:
A number of diseases can cause a type of lung injury called pulmonary arterial
hypertension (PAH). Most people who develop PAH do not survive more than a few years. A
new study drug (ZMA001) may help. ZMA001 is a monoclonal antibody. This type of drug
consists of proteins, made in a fa1 expand
Background: A number of diseases can cause a type of lung injury called pulmonary arterial hypertension (PAH). Most people who develop PAH do not survive more than a few years. A new study drug (ZMA001) may help. ZMA001 is a monoclonal antibody. This type of drug consists of proteins, made in a facility, that are very similar to proteins in a human body. But before giving ZMA001 to people sick with PAH, researchers want to find out how the drug affects healthy people. Objective: To test a drug (ZMA001) in healthy volunteers. Eligibility: Healthy adults aged 18 to 60 years. Design: Participants will be screened. They will have a physical exam with blood tests. They will have a urine test for drug use. They will have a test of their heart function. Participants will come to the clinic for 1 inpatient visit of up to 48 hours. ZMA001 is a liquid administered through a tube attached to a needle inserted into a vein in the arm. Participants will receive this drug only once, during their inpatient stay. Some participants will receive the drug; others will receive a placebo in Cohort 1 only. A placebo is a treatment that looks just like the real drug but contains no medicine. Participants will not know which treatment they are getting in Cohort 1. Cohorts 2-4 will receive a single dose of the study drug, administered through a tube attached to a needle inserted into a vein in the arm. After a screening visit, participants will have 1 inpatient visit and up to 8 outpatient visits over 16 weeks after receiving the treatment. Blood draws and other tests will be repeated. Each outpatient visit is approximately 2 hours long. This study is the first time ZMA001 will be administered to people. Type: Interventional Start Date: Nov 2023 |
A Research Study to See How a Weekly Insulin, Insulin Icodec, Helps in Reducing the Blood Sugar Com1
Novo Nordisk A/S
Diabetes Mellitus, Type 1
This study compares insulin icodec, an insulin taken once a week to insulin glargine, an
insulin taken once a day. The study medicine will be investigated in participants with
type 1 diabetes. The study will look at how well insulin icodec taken weekly controls
blood sugar compared to insulin glarg1 expand
This study compares insulin icodec, an insulin taken once a week to insulin glargine, an insulin taken once a day. The study medicine will be investigated in participants with type 1 diabetes. The study will look at how well insulin icodec taken weekly controls blood sugar compared to insulin glargine taken daily. The study will last for about 8.5 months. Type: Interventional Start Date: Aug 2025 |
Mechanisms of Mindfulness Meditation and Self-Hypnosis for Pain in Older Adults With Chronic Pain
University of Washington
Chronic Pain
The goal of this study is to better understand how two common psychological treatments
for pain work in the brain of older adults living with chronic pain. This study will:
1. evaluate fMRI of adults receiving psychological treatments for chronic pain to
determine how these interventions wo1 expand
The goal of this study is to better understand how two common psychological treatments for pain work in the brain of older adults living with chronic pain. This study will: 1. evaluate fMRI of adults receiving psychological treatments for chronic pain to determine how these interventions work within older adults, and 2. examine self-report and EEG variables to identify for whom do these psychological interventions work. Adults ages 60 years and older, living with chronic pain for at least 3 months will be randomly assigned to one of three conditions: 1. Mindfulness-Meditation 2. Therapeutic Hypnosis 3. Story Listening Type: Interventional Start Date: Mar 2026 |
A Study of CLN-978, a Subcutaneously Administered CD19-directed T Cell Engager, in Subjects With Sy1
Cullinan Therapeutics Inc.
SLE
SLE (Systemic Lupus)
Phase 1b, open-label study of CLN-978 administered subcutaneously in patients with
Moderate to Severe Systemic Lupus Erythematosus (SLE). expand
Phase 1b, open-label study of CLN-978 administered subcutaneously in patients with Moderate to Severe Systemic Lupus Erythematosus (SLE). Type: Interventional Start Date: Jan 2025 |
Neurofeedback Enhanced Cognitive Reappraisal Training - Phase 4
University of Michigan
Anxiety
Social Anxiety Disorder
Panic Disorder
Generalized Anxiety Disorder
This study seeks to understand emotion regulation in those with young adults with anxiety
using real-time functional magnetic resonance imaging neurofeedback, a tool that allows
individuals to control brain activity. The goal of this project is to understand how
receiving feedback about one's own b1 expand
This study seeks to understand emotion regulation in those with young adults with anxiety using real-time functional magnetic resonance imaging neurofeedback, a tool that allows individuals to control brain activity. The goal of this project is to understand how receiving feedback about one's own brain activity relates to emotion regulation ability. This work will help the study team understand the brain areas involved in emotion regulation and could lay the groundwork to test if psychotherapy outcomes can be enhanced using neurofeedback. The study hypotheses include: - Participants receiving veritable-Neurofeedback (NF) will show a greater activation increases in the prefrontal cortex (PFC) compared to sham-NF - Participants receiving veritable-NF will show greater cognitive reappraisal (CR) ability compared to those receiving sham-NF - PFC activation will positively correlate with CR ability Type: Interventional Start Date: Jan 2025 |
Phase 3 Study of Adjunctive Treatment With Seltorexant in Adult and Elderly Participants With Major1
Janssen Research & Development, LLC
Depressive Disorder, Major
The purpose of this study is to know how well seltorexant works, and also to evaluate
safety and maintenance effect of seltorexant compared with placebo as an adjunctive
therapy to an antidepressant in improving depressive symptoms in participants with major
depressive disorder with insomnia sympto1 expand
The purpose of this study is to know how well seltorexant works, and also to evaluate safety and maintenance effect of seltorexant compared with placebo as an adjunctive therapy to an antidepressant in improving depressive symptoms in participants with major depressive disorder with insomnia symptoms (MDDIS) who have had an inadequate response to current antidepressant therapy with a selective serotonin reuptake inhibitor (SSRI) or serotonin-norepinephrine reuptake inhibitor (SNRI). Type: Interventional Start Date: Jul 2024 |
Pregnancy and Early Neurodevelopmental Outcomes Following In Utero Lyme Disease Exposure
Children's National Research Institute
Lyme Disease
Post-Treatment Lyme Disease
Chronic Lyme Disease
Tick-Borne Infections
Pregnancy Complications
The purpose of this pilot study is to assess the feasibility of longitudinal
neurodevelopmental evaluation of fetuses and infants exposed to Lyme disease in utero.
Participants with Lyme disease or Post-Treatment Lyme Disease Syndrome (PTLDS) will be
recruited during pregnancy. Pregnancies will be1 expand
The purpose of this pilot study is to assess the feasibility of longitudinal neurodevelopmental evaluation of fetuses and infants exposed to Lyme disease in utero. Participants with Lyme disease or Post-Treatment Lyme Disease Syndrome (PTLDS) will be recruited during pregnancy. Pregnancies will be monitored and infant development will be assessed from birth until age 18 months. Type: Observational Start Date: Jul 2023 |
Open Trial of Trauma-focused Psychodynamic Psychotherapy for People Living With HIV and PTSD
Montefiore Medical Center
Post Traumatic Stress Disorder (PTSD)
HIV
People living with HIV (PLWH) have a higher rate of post-traumatic stress disorder (PTSD)
diagnosis than the general population. Comorbid PTSD is also associated with negative
HIV-related health outcomes. Unfortunately, little outcome research has examined the
usefulness of PTSD treatments for PTSD1 expand
People living with HIV (PLWH) have a higher rate of post-traumatic stress disorder (PTSD) diagnosis than the general population. Comorbid PTSD is also associated with negative HIV-related health outcomes. Unfortunately, little outcome research has examined the usefulness of PTSD treatments for PTSD. This pilot study adapts for PLWH a non-exposure based psychotherapy for PTSD focused on reflecting on one's emotions and relationships and understanding and working through how trauma may have disrupted them. The study team is interested in better understanding the needs of PLWH with PTSD, learning whether PLWH with PTSD find this treatment acceptable and helpful, and beginning to understand the relationship between HIV-related health factors (e.g., inflammation and stress biology) and PTSD, and how these health factors may improve during treatment. Type: Interventional Start Date: Apr 2024 |
CBD for Individuals at Risk for Alzheimer's Disease
University of Colorado, Denver
Mild Cognitive Impairment
This is a double-blind, randomized controlled trial designed to test the effects of
cannabidiol (CBD) on validated biomarkers of Alzheimer's disease (AD) progression, and
behavioral, neurocognitive, and clinical measures, with putative mechanisms of action. expand
This is a double-blind, randomized controlled trial designed to test the effects of cannabidiol (CBD) on validated biomarkers of Alzheimer's disease (AD) progression, and behavioral, neurocognitive, and clinical measures, with putative mechanisms of action. Type: Interventional Start Date: Jan 2024 |
A Study to Investigate Why Overweight People Regain Weight After Losing Weight in a Behavioral Weig1
University of Pittsburgh
Obesity
The goal of this clinical trial is to determine the physiological basis for the
differences in weight regain among adults (25-59 years old) with obesity following
participation in a behavioral weight loss program. Eligible participants will undergo a
baseline evaluation after which they will enter1 expand
The goal of this clinical trial is to determine the physiological basis for the differences in weight regain among adults (25-59 years old) with obesity following participation in a behavioral weight loss program. Eligible participants will undergo a baseline evaluation after which they will enter an up to 20 week behavioral weight loss program with the goal of losing at least 7 percent of their baseline weight within 35 weeks. Participants who meet the weight loss goal will be asked to remain weight stable for 2 weeks after which they will undergo a clinical examination. They will then be observed for 1 year during which they will undergo 2 additional clinical examinations, one 4 months after completing the weight loss program, and the other 12 months after completing the weight loss program. Type: Interventional Start Date: Sep 2023 |
Randomized Study in Children and Adolescents With Migraine: Acute Treatment
Pfizer
Pediatric Migraine
The purpose of this study is to test the safety and efficacy of BHV-3000 versus placebo
in the acute treatment of moderate or severe migraine in children and adolescents. expand
The purpose of this study is to test the safety and efficacy of BHV-3000 versus placebo in the acute treatment of moderate or severe migraine in children and adolescents. Type: Interventional Start Date: Jan 2021 |
Hirschsprung Disease Genetic Study
NYU Langone Health
Hirschsprung Disease
Hirschsprung disease is a genetic condition caused by lack of nerve cells in varying
lengths of the intestines. This study will investigate the complex genetic basis of the
disease, which involves multiple interacting genetic factors. expand
Hirschsprung disease is a genetic condition caused by lack of nerve cells in varying lengths of the intestines. This study will investigate the complex genetic basis of the disease, which involves multiple interacting genetic factors. Type: Observational Start Date: Jan 2001 |
Observational Study to Deeply Phenotype Major Organs in Sickle Cell Disease After Curative Therapies
National Heart, Lung, and Blood Institute (NHLBI)
Mortality in Sickle Cell
Sickle Cell Cardiopulmonary Complications
Sickle Cell Organ Damage
Sickle Cell Life Expectancy and Risk Factors for Early Death
Sickle Cell Lung Disease and Sudden Death
Background:
People with sickle cell disease (SCD) have problems with their heart, brain, kidneys,
liver, and lungs as they age. These problems may improve after transplant. Researchers
want to learn how and why this happens.
Objective:
To study the benefits of treatments that are intended to cur1 expand
Background: People with sickle cell disease (SCD) have problems with their heart, brain, kidneys, liver, and lungs as they age. These problems may improve after transplant. Researchers want to learn how and why this happens. Objective: To study the benefits of treatments that are intended to cure SCD. Eligibility: People aged 18 and older with SCD who are either receiving curative therapy in the next 3 months or don t have any plans to receive a curative therapy in the next 2 years. Design: At their first visit, participants will be screened with their medical history and a physical exam. Participants will then have a baseline visit. This will take about a week to complete and will include: Blood and heart tests MRI of the brain, heart, and lungs. Participants will lie on a bed that will move into the MRI scanner. Special padding may be placed around their head to keep it still. Interactive games. Participants will complete computer games that test memory, attention, problem solving, language, spatial orientation, processing speed, and emotion. Questionnaire rating quality of life Iothalamate test. An IV catheter will be placed into a vein. A contrast agent will be injected through the IV. Blood will then be collected at different time points. Lung function tests and a 6-minute walk test Vibration controlled transient elastography. A probe placed on the abdomen will measure liver scarring. DOS test. A light attached to the finger or toe will measure blood oxygen. Participants will have an end-of-study visit about 2 years after their baseline visit. This will include repeats of the baseline visit tests. Type: Observational Start Date: Mar 2022 |
Human Immune Response to Ixodes Scapularis Tick Bites
National Institute of Allergy and Infectious Diseases (NIAID)
Tick-borne Diseases
Tick Resistance
Lyme Disease
Background:
Each year, the number of cases of tick-borne diseases increases. The deer tick (Ixodes
scapularis) is the vector of at least 7 pathogens that cause human diseases, including
Lyme disease. Researchers want to learn more to help them develop vaccines against ticks
in the future.
Objecti1 expand
Background: Each year, the number of cases of tick-borne diseases increases. The deer tick (Ixodes scapularis) is the vector of at least 7 pathogens that cause human diseases, including Lyme disease. Researchers want to learn more to help them develop vaccines against ticks in the future. Objective: To learn how people s bodies, particularly the skin, respond to tick bites. Eligibility: Healthy adults aged 18 years and older who have no known history of a tick-borne disease or tick bite exposure. Design: Participants will be screened with a medical history, physical exam, and blood tests. Participants will have 2 skin punch biopsies of healthy skin. For this, a sharp instrument will be used to remove a round plug of skin about the size of a pencil eraser. Participants will then have 10 clean laboratory-bred ticks placed at 2 different sites on their skin (20 ticks total). The ticks will be removed from the first site 1 day after placement and from the second site 2-4 days after placement. Participants will complete symptom diary cards. They will answer questions about itching at the tick feeding sites. They will give blood samples. Photos will be taken of the tick feeding sites. Skin punch biopsies will be collected at the sites of the tick bites. Participants will repeat the tick feeding procedures 2 times, each 2-8 weeks apart. For the 2nd and 3rd procedures, 10 clean laboratory-bred ticks will be placed at 1 site. The ticks will be removed 2-3 days after tick placement. They will have telephone follow-up visits after each procedure. After the final tick removal, participants will have follow-up visits in 4-6 weeks and again in 3 months. They will give blood samples and discuss how they are feeling. Participation will last about 5-7 months. Type: Interventional Start Date: Feb 2022 |
Exploring the Feasibility of an Exercise and Noninvasive Brain Stimulation Intervention in Breast C1
Florida Atlantic University
Breast Cancer
The purpose of this study is to assess the feasibility of a 4-week intervention combining
exercise and transcranial alternating current stimulation (Ex+tACS) in breast cancer
survivors who report experiencing cancer-related cognitive impairment. Feasibility will
be assessed by measuring participant1 expand
The purpose of this study is to assess the feasibility of a 4-week intervention combining exercise and transcranial alternating current stimulation (Ex+tACS) in breast cancer survivors who report experiencing cancer-related cognitive impairment. Feasibility will be assessed by measuring participant retention, adherence, satisfaction with the intervention, and safety. The researchers will also examine pre-to-post intervention changes in attention, executive function, working memory, perceived cognitive function, and physical function before, after, and four weeks post intervention completion in the Ex+tACS group compared to a control group who will receive exercise and a placebo tACS condition (CON). Type: Interventional Start Date: Jan 2026 |
Measuring Communal Coping in Dual-smoking Couples Making a Quit Attempt
University of Colorado, Denver
Smoking (Tobacco) Addiction
Smoking ( Cigarette)
Tobacco
Tobacco Abstinence
Quitting Smoking
Smoking is the leading preventable cause of death in the United States, and quitting is
especially difficult for couples who both smoke. When both partners smoke, they are less
likely to quit successfully and more likely to relapse compared to people whose partner
does not smoke. Research suggests1 expand
Smoking is the leading preventable cause of death in the United States, and quitting is especially difficult for couples who both smoke. When both partners smoke, they are less likely to quit successfully and more likely to relapse compared to people whose partner does not smoke. Research suggests that the way romantic partners interact and support each other during a quit attempt can make a real difference - but researchers do not yet know enough about what kinds of support actually help. This study examines a concept called "communal coping," which refers to when partners treat a shared health challenge - like quitting smoking - as something they are facing together as a team rather than as separate individuals. Researchers believe that couples who approach quitting this way may have better outcomes. To study this, researchers will ask both members of dual-smoking couples to complete brief daily surveys over two weeks while making a quit attempt. These surveys will track how partners support (or discourage) each other's quitting efforts on a day-to-day basis, along with cigarette use, cravings, and stress. This will help researchers understand which relationship patterns are most helpful for quitting, and identify specific targets for future couples-based smoking cessation programs. Type: Observational Start Date: Mar 2025 |
NEXUS Study: A Study to Test Single and Multiple Doses of MER511 Given to Adults With Graves' Disea1
Merida Biosciences
Graves Disease
The purpose of this study is to evaluate how well MER511 is tolerated and what side
effects may occur in adults who have Graves' disease. The study drug will be administered
either intravenously (into a vein in the arm) or subcutaneously (under the skin).
Blood tests will be performed to investiga1 expand
The purpose of this study is to evaluate how well MER511 is tolerated and what side effects may occur in adults who have Graves' disease. The study drug will be administered either intravenously (into a vein in the arm) or subcutaneously (under the skin). Blood tests will be performed to investigate how the body processes the study drug and how the study drug affects the body. Type: Interventional Start Date: Dec 2025 |
SAINT in Postpartum Depression (PPD)
Magnus Medical
Postpartum Depression (PPD)
This study is a large, multi-site clinical trial testing whether Stanford Accelerated
Intelligent Neuromodulation Therapy (SAINT), a fast-acting form of repetitive
transcranial magnetic stimulation (rTMS), can more effectively reduce symptoms of
postpartum depression (PPD) compared to a sham treatm1 expand
This study is a large, multi-site clinical trial testing whether Stanford Accelerated Intelligent Neuromodulation Therapy (SAINT), a fast-acting form of repetitive transcranial magnetic stimulation (rTMS), can more effectively reduce symptoms of postpartum depression (PPD) compared to a sham treatment. It will enroll 192 women within 12 months postpartum who are experiencing depression that has not improved with standard care, and will track their progress for up to 12 months. The trial's main goal is to see if SAINT leads to reduction in depression severity in women with postpartum depression. Type: Interventional Start Date: Nov 2025 |
The Effects of Propranolol and Hydrocortisone on Military-Relevant Performance Outcomes
Walter Reed Army Institute of Research (WRAIR)
Fear of Spiders
Acute Stress Reaction
This clinical trial aims to evaluate the nature and duration of effects of three
FDA-approved medications (propranolol and hydrocortisone) on military-relevant cognitive,
emotional, and motor performance following an exposure to a stressful situation (i.e.,
exposure to a tarantula) in physically he1 expand
This clinical trial aims to evaluate the nature and duration of effects of three FDA-approved medications (propranolol and hydrocortisone) on military-relevant cognitive, emotional, and motor performance following an exposure to a stressful situation (i.e., exposure to a tarantula) in physically healthy adult volunteers (aged 18 - 40) with fear of spiders to help the future development of medications for treating Acute Stress Reactions. The main questions this study aims to answer are: Will placebo treatment (oral placebo) result in significant decrements in Psychomotor Vigilance Task (PVT) performance compared to propranolol treatment? Will placebo treatment [intramuscular (IM) placebo] result in significant decrements in PVT performance compared to hydrocortisone treatment? Participants will receive one of five study medications (oral propranolol, oral placebo, IM hydrocortisone, or IM placebo) after a brief exposure to a tarantula. Participants will complete cognitive and simple motor tasks and psychological assessments before and after the study medication administration. Type: Interventional Start Date: May 2025 |
Correcting Circadian Rhythms to Breakthrough in Bipolar Disorder
Leslie Swanson
Bipolar Disorder
Delayed Sleep-Wake Phase Disorder
The purpose of this study is to test whether a dietary supplement (low-dose melatonin)
commonly used to treat night owls, administered in conjunction with a behavioral sleep
intervention, will help to shift the brain clock earlier and improve mood and sleep in
bipolar disorder. Eligible participant1 expand
The purpose of this study is to test whether a dietary supplement (low-dose melatonin) commonly used to treat night owls, administered in conjunction with a behavioral sleep intervention, will help to shift the brain clock earlier and improve mood and sleep in bipolar disorder. Eligible participants will be randomized to receive melatonin plus a behavioral sleep intervention or placebo plus a behavioral sleep placebo. The hypotheses for this study include: - Melatonin plus behavioral sleep intervention (compared to placebo plus behavioral sleep placebo) will produce a greater advance of dim light melatonin onset (DLMO), between pre- and post-treatment. - Melatonin (compared to placebo) will produce a greater reduction in Patient Health Questionnaire-9 score between pre- and post-treatment. Type: Interventional Start Date: Aug 2024 |
Respiratory Strength Training in Heart Transplant Recipients
Vanderbilt University Medical Center
Dysphagia
Heart Transplant Recipients
This research study is investigating whether completing breathing exercises before
surgery helps heart transplant patients recover after surgery. Previous studies have
shown that breathing exercises can improve breathing, cough, and swallow function in
patients with other diseases/conditions. The c1 expand
This research study is investigating whether completing breathing exercises before surgery helps heart transplant patients recover after surgery. Previous studies have shown that breathing exercises can improve breathing, cough, and swallow function in patients with other diseases/conditions. The current study will investigate the impact of a preoperative respiratory muscle strength training program on breathing and cough function, swallow function, patient-reported eating and swallowing fatigue, and health outcomes in individuals undergoing heart transplantation. Participants will: - undergo tests of breathing, cough, and swallow function - complete questionnaires about the treatment, their swallow function - complete breathing exercises daily Type: Interventional Start Date: May 2024 |

