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Active clinical trials for "Alcoholism"

Results 1221-1230 of 1343

Risk and Protective Factors of Children and Adolescents Who Were Hospitalized Due to Alcohol Intoxication...

Alcohol Use Disorders

The aim of the study is to improve the prognosis of the development of alcohol consumption by considering a variety of biological, psychological and social risk and protective factors. Therefore, young people who have been hospitalized due to acute alcohol intoxication within the past 5 to 12 years will be interviewed in order to assess aspects of healthy or impaired psychosocial development. The study will also include a control group of young adults who were in hospital due to other medical conditions. The identification of relevant cases will be based on medical records of several children's hospitals. These records will be analysed with regard to potential predictors of developmental hazards and protective factors.

Completed10 enrollment criteria

FMRI of Stress and Addictive Disorders

Cocaine DependenceOpioid Dependence3 more

The purpose of this study is to explore whether frontal brain activation in response to stress varies as a function of the presence or extent of early trauma and whether or not this effect is greater in women compared to men. To examine the effect of stress on thinking and remembering. To examine the separate and interactive effects of stress, addiction, withdrawal, and genetics; and to examine fMRI brain activation associated with stressful, reward-related-cue and neutral/relaxing audiotaped scripts,visual images and emotional video clips in addicted individuals and in healthy controls.

Completed14 enrollment criteria

Project RAP: Reaching Adolescents for Prevention

Alcohol Related MorbidityAlcohol Dependence

The purpose of the study is to determine if a brief motivational interview in the context of an emergency health care visit will reduce high-risk drinking and drug-taking and associated health consequences among adolescents ages 14-21 years old.

Unknown status6 enrollment criteria

Neural and Mobile Assessment OF Behavior Change Among Problem Drinkers

Alcohol Use Disorder

This study will examine the neural mechanisms underlying both spontaneous behavior change and behavior change in response to a brief intervention among problem drinkers.

Completed27 enrollment criteria

Sleep Disturbance and Relapse in Individuals With Alcohol Dependence: An Exploratory Mixed Methods...

Alcoholism

Despite research establishing the relationship between sleep disturbances and alcohol use, there is no clear understanding or model for what occurs once individuals who seek inpatient alcoholism treatment are discharged from rehabilitation facilities and attempt to integrate back into their homes and communities. The purpose of this investigation will be to characterize sleep patterns, perceptions, and beliefs throughout the process of alcohol rehabilitation. The misuse of alcohol is a global public health concern that compromises both individual and societal wellbeing, resulting in an estimated 2.5 million deaths annually. The National Institute on Alcohol Abuse and Alcoholism (NIAAA) distinguishes alcoholism by craving, loss of control, physical dependence, and tolerance (NIAAA, Alcohol Use Disorders). The relationship between alcohol use and sleep disturbances is complex and bidirectional, but sleep disturbances are common among alcoholics during phases of drinking, withdrawal, and abstinence. Outcome expectancies, behavioral capability, and self-efficacy beliefs are central constructs in the Social Cognitive Theory and will be measured directly in this study using both quantitative and qualitative methods. A mixed methods approach will be used to study the following aims: a) to assess individuals' perceptions of and experiences with sleep during alcohol rehabilitation, b) to describe sleep patterns, perceptions, and beliefs among alcohol-dependent individuals throughout the transition from a clinical research facility providing rehabilitation treatment back to the community, c) to assess whether sleep-related beliefs and/or behavior of individuals are predictive of sleep quality or relapse to drinking, and d) to assess whether sleep quality predicts relapse. Adult research participants admitted to the inpatient behavioral health unit and enrolled on to the NIAAA intramural study NCT 0010693: Assessment and Treatment of People with Alcohol Drinking Problems will be recruited for participation in this study (n=215). Sleep quality and duration will be quantitatively assessed approximately one week prior to discharge from the inpatient facility and again 4-6 weeks post-discharge. A sub-set of participants will be asked to wear actiwatches (accelerometers) to provide objective data on sleep throughout the transition from inpatient to outpatient. In addition to quantitative measures, qualitative semi-structured interviews will be conducted with a subset of 25 participants (to reach 25 completed cases) within a week of the scheduled discharge date and again four to six weeks post-discharge to assess perceptions of sleep during recovery. The proposed study will fill a gap in the literature by characterizing sleep throughout the rehabilitation process and ongoing maintenance of abstinence....

Completed13 enrollment criteria

Study of the BDNF-Val66Met Polymorphism in Alcohol-dependent Subjects in Relation to Abstinence...

Alcohol Dependence

This study is complementary to the main study "Brain Derived Neurotrophic Factor Serum Levels Evolution During the Six Months After Alcohol Withdrawal " NCT01491347. The purpose of this study is to evaluate the Bdnf gene - Val66Met polymorphism in subjects with alcohol dependence according to their alcohol consumption status 6 months after withdrawal (relapse or abstinence), in relation to the presence of psychiatric co-morbidities.

Completed4 enrollment criteria

Learning in Young Adults as Predictor for the Development of Alcohol Use Disorders

High-risk Alcohol Consumption PatternLow-risk Alcohol Consumption Pattern

Overall goal of this study is to scrutinize the relation of learning behavior and related brain activity to the development of alcohol use disorder (AUD). The researchers aim is to characterise a representative sample (200 men at age 18) with regard to learning parameters and their respective neural correlates which are thought to be indicators for the risk to develop an alcohol use disorder. As part of a large multi-center study on alcohol dependency (in Dresden & Berlin, Germany) the researchers will characterize the sample and then prospectively assess alcohol consumption and development of AUDs over a period of three years plus additional follow-ups after that period, depending on future funding. Among other hypotheses it is expected that increased activation of striatal and prefrontal brain regions by the Pavlovian-to-instrumental transfer process is related to increased risk of developing an AUD.

Completed12 enrollment criteria

Telephone-Based Continuing Care for Alcohol Dependence

Alcohol Dependence

Alcohol dependency is the second most common psychiatric disorder and a major public health concern. As addictive disorders and now thought to be chronic disorders for many patients there is a need for the development of expanded treatment approaches. Because relapse is more often the rule than the exception the importance of continuing care after an initial phase of treatment is evident. Studies investigating telephone-based continuing care for patients with alcohol dependence have shown to be an effective form of step-down treatment after a previous stabilisation treatment program and provide extended recovery support. Therefore, the investigators hypothesize that alcohol abstinent patients who received high-frequency telephone-based or sms-based continuing care show significantly less relapses respectively more abstinent days six and twelve months after in-patient treatment compared to patients who receive low-frequency or no telephone-based continuing care.

Completed7 enrollment criteria

[C-11]NOP-1A and Alcohol Use Disorder

Alcohol Use Disorder

The goal of this study is to compare [C-11]NOP-1A binding in recently abstinent alcohol use disorders and controls

Completed19 enrollment criteria

Therapeutic Education for Harm Reduction in People With Alcohol Use Disorder

Alcohol Use Disorder

Alcohol is the most harmful psychoactive substance in terms of overall damage. Although abstinence remains the objective of most pharmacological and non-pharmacological approaches addressing alcohol use disorder (AUD), new therapeutic objectives of reduced alcohol intake and controlled-drinking have emerged. ETHER ("Education THEérapeutique pour la Réduction des dommages en alcoologie" or therapeutic education for the reduction of alcohol-related harms) is an ongoing, multicentre, community-based mixed-methods study, which aims to evaluate the innovative therapeutic patient education (TPE) programme named "Choizitaconso". This programme teaches psychosocial skills to people with alcohol use disorder (PWAUD), to help them (re)establish controlled drinking and reduce harms. The evaluation of the programme will rely on a sequential explanatory design, where the qualitative study (16 semi-structured interviews) will assist in explaining and interpreting the findings of the controlled before-and-after quantitative study.

Completed10 enrollment criteria
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