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Active clinical trials for "Alcoholism"

Results 1181-1190 of 1343

Benefit of Carbohydrate Deficient Transferrin to Detect Chronic Alcohol Abuse in the Elderly

Alcohol Abuse

Alcohol misuse affects 5 million people in France. Even though the elderly are also concerned by this pathology, there is not much information about chronic alcohol misuse of this population in particular. Biological markers like gamma-glutamyltranspeptidase (GGT), mean corpuscular volume (MCV) and carbohydrate deficient transferrin (CDT) are usually used to detect alcohol abuse. As a biological marker of alcohol misuse, the specificity of the CDT is known to be superior to the GGT as well. However, when it comes to the elderly, alcoholism diagnosis tools are based on research of younger populations. This study aims to evaluate the benefit of the CDT to detect chronic alcohol use in the elderly.

Completed19 enrollment criteria

Effectiveness of a Hospital Addiction Service in Treating Opioid and Alcohol Addiction

Alcohol AddictionOpiate Addiction

Hypothesis: Patients who are addicted to opioids or alcohol will have reduced substance use, health care utilization if they have immediate and convenient access to pharmacotherapy and addiction counselling. Summary: This randomized trial will compare two different interventions for 124 alcohol and opioid-addicted patients admitted to either Women's Own Detox (WOD) at the University Health Network or the Withdrawal Management Service (WMS) at Saint Michael's Hospital (SMH. The Delayed Intervention group will receive a card with contact information for the St. Michael's Hospital and Women's College Hospital addiction medicine services. The Rapid Intervention group will be seen by an addiction physician from one of these services, within a day or two of their admission to the WOD or the SMH WMS. The addiction physician will prescribe buprenorphine or anti-alcohol medications, and the physician, nurse and/or therapist will provide ongoing counseling, follow-up and shared care with the family physician. Outcomes (measured at 6 and 12 months) include treatment retention, health care utilization and cost, medications prescribed, and alcohol and opioid use.

Unknown status9 enrollment criteria

Prevention of Alcohol Related Incidents in the US Air Force

Alcohol Abuse

Alcohol misuse poses significant public health concerns in the U.S. military. A Brief Alcohol Intervention (BAI) have been shown to reduce alcohol related incidents among Airmen undergoing training. The current study sought to examine whether a booster BAI administered at the end of an Airmen's training reduced alcohol related incidents out to a one-year follow-up. Participants were 26,231 US Air Force Technical Trainees recruited between March 2016 and July 2018. Participants were cluster randomized by cohort to two conditions: BAI + BAI Booster or BAI + Bystander Intervention. The primary analysis was a comparison of the interventions' efficacies in preventing Article 15 alcohol related incidents at a one-year follow-up, conducted using a generalized estimating equations logistic regression model controlling for covariates.

Completed1 enrollment criteria

Computer-Based Alcohol Use Disorder Recovery System

Alcohol Dependence

The purpose of this grant is to develop and test a proven computer based quality improvement/behavior change e-Health system (CHESS--Comprehensive Health Enhancement Support System) to help prevent relapse in alcohol dependent patients being discharged from residential treatment. The investigators' primary hypothesis is that ACHESS (Addiction CHESS) will improve competence, relatedness and autonomy, which will reduce the days of risky drinking over a 12-month period.

Completed7 enrollment criteria

Designing a Mobile App for Veterans With Substance Use Problems

Substance Abuse ProblemAlcohol Abuse1 more

The purpose of this study is to increase access for rural Veterans to evidence-based, person-centered, individually tailored treatment for alcohol use problems. The primary aim is to evaluate the acceptability and feasibility of using mobile technology deliver treatment for alcohol use disorder. A mobile application will be used replacing the usual setting of clinical visits that accompanies standard face-to-face CBT therapy. The application will be loaded onto an iPod, which will be distributed to each participant that has been found to be eligible to participate.

Unknown status9 enrollment criteria

Multimodal Neuroimaging of Stress and Reward Cues to Assess Alcoholism Risk and Relapse

Alcohol Dependence

Extending previous findings, and applying a novel multi-method translational approach, this project hypothesizes that there are alcohol-related neuroendocrine and neural changes observable in acute and protracted abstinence, and which can accurately classify future relapse and treatment outcome in separate alcohol dependent (AD) patient samples, thereby validating them as biomarkers of relapse, with potential clinical utility as prognostic markers in identifying and treating those most susceptible to relapse.

Completed13 enrollment criteria

FGF21 and Its Role in Alcohol Dependence

Alcohol Abuse or Dependence

Plasma fibroblast growthfactor-21 (FGF21) responses to acute alcohol exposure will be evaluated in three groups: A: 15 individuals diagnosed with alcohol dependence (ICD10 code F10.2) and no alcoholic liver diseases, B: 15 healthy individuals with one or two parents with alcohol dependence, and C: 15 healthy matched controls without history of or disposition to alcohol dependence. The experimental day consists of a load of 0.5 g ethanol per kg body weight ingested from time 0-10 minutes followed by a 7 h period in which blood will be sampled with frequent intervals, rating of preference for ethanol, salt, sour, bitterly and sweets, sensations of hunger, appetite, satiety, headache, and nausea will be evaluated using visuel analogue scale and resting energy expenditure will be evaluated using indirect calorimetry.

Completed22 enrollment criteria

Project ACTIVE a Clinical Intervention

Alcohol AbuseObesity

This is a clinical Randomized Controlled Trial where the study personnel will run a personalized prevention clinic with patients in attempts to improve their preventive health outcomes and compare their health outcomes with a matched control sample of patients who do not receive the clinical intervention.

Completed7 enrollment criteria

Russia PREVENT (HIV Prevention Partnership in Russian Alcohol Treatment)

Alcohol DependenceDrug Dependence

The purpose of this study is to test an HIV prevention intervention in a Russian substance abuse treatment facility using a randomized trial study design.

Completed12 enrollment criteria

Randomized Diagnostic Trial Comparing Ethylglucuronide and Ethanol

Alcohol Use Disorder

Background: Alcohol use disorders represent a major health burden. Efforts aiming at reducing alcohol-related harm include early detection of those with risky drinking habits as well detection of early relapse in patients with alcohol dependence who are detoxified and committed to abstinence. Recently, ethyl glucuronide has been proved to be a good biomarker for the detection of recent drinking. However, to date, no randomized diagnostic trial has tested its impact on drinking outcomes. The aim of this study was to assess, with a randomized design, the implications of ethyl glucuronide screening on alcohol outcomes, compared to screening with a low-sensitivity biomarker such as ethanol. Methods: alcohol dependent outpatients were randomized to either 24 weeks of continuous screening with ethyl glucuronide or ethanol. Patients were aware of screening methods and results. After 24 weeks, all participants were screened with ethyl glucuronide. Self-reports were also gathered. A logistic regression model was performed comparing the rate of ethyl glucuronide positive results at study end between groups. Generalized estimating equations were performed to evaluate the descending rate of EtG positive patients in the EtG group, measured month to month.

Completed2 enrollment criteria
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