Interpersonal Psychotherapy for Adolescents and Young Adults
Major DepressionBulimia Nervosa1 moreThe purpose of the project is to study the effectiveness of Interpersonal Psychotherapy (IPT) for adolescents and young adults when applied to depression and eating disorders. Specific aims are to analyze the effects, change mechanisms, predictors, and implementation of IPT for youth. In this four-year project we will include 120 patients with depression and 60 adolescents and young adults with eating disorders. Outcome will be studied using a quasi-experimental multiple-baseline design. Change mechanisms will be studied in the form of mentalizing, emotion regulation, social support, and working alliance session-by-session, and with post-treatment qualitative interviews about the participants' experiences of change. Predictors of effectiveness of IPT for adolescents and young adults will be explored by measuring severity of symptoms, anxiety symptoms, presence and severity of parent-child conflicts, quality of interpersonal relationships, experiences of bullying, and school functioning. The implementation process of IPT for youth will be studied through interviews with adolescents, parents, therapists, co-workers, and local managers. The study is a multi-center study within child and adolescent psychiatric services in Gothenburg and Norrköping using a practice-oriented research strategy which emphasizes close collaboration with clinicians. The project is a collaboration between researchers at Linnaeus University, Linköping University, and University of Gothenburg, and clinicians at the BUP Norrköping and Ätstörningscentrum Barn och Unga Vuxna, Sahlgrenska University Hospital.
The Efficiency of Transcranial Direct Current Stimulation in the Treatment of Anorexia Nervosa
Anorexia NervosaThe main goal of the study (a 3-week, randomized, double-blind, and placebo-controlled study) is to determine the effect of Transcranial Direct Current Stimulation (tDCS) on the mental state and advances in nutritional rehabilitation in patients with AN. The primary hypothesis assumes that tDCS will reduce the symptoms of depression, improve cognition functions and it will have a positive effect on the reduction of restriction related to body weight and diet.
Interoceptive Exposure for Adolescents With Low Weight Eating Disorders
Anorexia NervosaThis project includes a parallel group randomized controlled trial comparing two psychological treatments: 1) Exposure-based Family Therapy (IE) vs. 2) Family Based Therapy (FBT) for low weight eating disorders with 12 month follow-up. Primary outcomes are expected body weight and clinical impairment. Three mechanisms of change (Autonomous Eating, Non-Judgmental Body Awareness, and Extinction Learning) will be examined in a process mediation models of change.
Efficiency of Virtual Reality Exposure Therapy in the Management of Body Dysmorphic Disorders in...
Anorexia NervosaAnorexia nervosa is defined in DSM V as a quantitative and qualitative dietary restriction resulting in significant weight loss, intense fear of weight gain, altered weight and body shape perception (body dysmorphic disorder) and low self-esteem influenced by weight or body shape. Body dysmorphic disorder is the most difficult symptom to manage in anorexia nervosa and its persistence is a factor associated with relapse. Virtual reality exposure therapy has proven its effectiveness in the management of post-traumatic stress disorder in the military and is a widely used therapy. The effectiveness of this treatment using new technologies has not yet been studied for the treatment of body dysmorphic disorder in anorexia nervosa and is not used routinely. It could represent an interesting alternative to the physical approach in psychomotor therapy, traditionally offered to patients suffering from anorexia nervosa. It is important to evaluate the effectiveness of virtual reality exposure therapy in the management of body dysmorphic disorder in patients with anorexia nervosa by comparing these two care techniques.
COmparison Between Continued Inpatient Treatment Versus Day Patient Treatment in Early Onset Anorexia...
Early Onset Anorexia Nervosa"In so-called ""early onset"" anorexia nervosa (AN), a rare and severe form affecting 8-13 year olds, experts recommend that, as soon as possible, treatment should take place on an outpatient basis, at an age when separation from the usual environment would be particularly unpleasant and deleterious. However, in severe AN, full-time hospitalisation (FTH) is still indicated when somatic and psychiatric instability criteria are met. Thus, the severity and rapidity of undernutrition in children aged 8-13 years suffering from AN (linked on the one hand to the frequency of total aphagia with refusal to drink and on the other hand to the lack of early detection of the disorder, frequently requires emergency FTH, contrary to expert recommendations. This FTH, which lasts on average 3 months in our specialized unit, has certain disadvantages: poor acceptability by the patient and/or his family, increased anxiety symptoms on entry and exit, school dropout, social isolation, coercive experience. In addition, the rate of premature FTH exits - before weight targets are reached - and the frequency of relapses after FTH remain high, making FTH unsatisfactory in terms of cost-effectiveness. Some families refuse FTH, which is classically long, exposing themselves to the risk of complications that can occur if the disorder is inadequately treated: somatic, acute and chronic complications; risk of progression to another eating disorder. In recent years, day hospitalization (DH) care has been developed for adolescents aged 11 to 18 years and adults (Madden, 2015). The few studies available are in favour of comparable efficacy, better acceptability and lower cost in the management of moderate AN compared to prolonged FTH, but also better social adaptation.In children aged 8 to 13 years with AN, whose somatic condition requires continuous monitoring in a hospital setting (the usual indication for FTH), a DH cannot reasonably be proposed immediately given the severity of the situation. Our hypothesis is that it would however be possible, in these children, to shorten the duration of FTH and to continue DH treatment once the critical period has passed at the somatic level, with comparable efficacy, best acceptability, best progress in terms of school and social integration, and lower cost.
Cognitive Training for Patients With Eating Disorders
Feeding and Eating DisordersAnorexia Nervosa2 moreEating disorders are severe mental illnesses, mainly affecting adolescent- and young adult women. The prognoses for eating disorders are relatively poor, and a large part of patients with these illnesses do not benefit from available conventional therapies. After decades of research into the causes of eating disorders, there is now compelling evidence for specific neuropsychological difficulties in patients affected by eating disorders. These neuropsychological difficulties are characterized by cognitive and behavioral rigidity (poor set-shifting abilities), as well as difficulties related to central coherence, planning and impulse control. Surprisingly, few therapies specifically target these difficulties, and they are rarely incorporated into treatment. Cognitive Remediation Therapy has shown promising results as an adjunctive therapeutic intervention for patients with anorexia Nervosa. The primary aim of this randomized controlled trial is thus to investigate the effect of Cognitive Remediation Therapy on neuropsychological function, symptoms of eating disorders and general mental health, quality of life and motor activity in women with both eating disorders (transdiagnostic) and these specific cognitive difficulties.
Therapeutic Ketogenic Diet in Anorexia Nervosa
Anorexia Nervosa in RemissionThis study will investigate the effects of therapeutic ketogenic diet (TKD) on eating behavior including drive to restrict, body dissatisfaction, mood and anxiety in individuals with anorexia nervosa who have been weight normalized (body mass index of 17.5 or greater) but continue to struggle with eating disorder behaviors including a high drive for thinness and body dissatisfaction.
Project HOME: Home-Based Treatment Options and Mechanisms for Eating Disorders
Anorexia NervosaEating DisordersThis randomized, controlled effectiveness trial will assess outcomes, implementation, and mechanisms of two psychological treatments for adolescent anorexia nervosa (AN) delivered in the home setting, in the context of community-based mental health. Adolescents with AN-spectrum disorders (n=50) and their caregivers will be randomly assigned to either family-based treatment or integrated family therapy delivered in the home. Caregivers and adolescents will provide data on weight, eating, and putative treatment mechanisms, including caregiver self-efficacy, adolescent distress, and generalizability of treatment skills. Treatment feasibility, acceptability, and appropriateness will be measured among providers and participating families. The proposed study has clear potential to advance scientific and clinical understanding of the real-world effectiveness of psychological treatments for AN, including whether adapting them for the home setting may improve accessibility and effects on treatment outcome
Smart Technology for Anorexia Nervosa Recovery
Anorexia NervosaAnorexia nervosa (AN) has the highest mortality rate of any mental illness, with a typical onset in adolescence. Although family-based interventions are efficacious for up to 75 percent of adolescents with AN, approximately 30 percent will relapse after recovery. There is a critical need to improve treatments and prevent post-discharge relapse following acute treatment to improve outcomes for adolescents with AN. To address this critical need, the investigators developed an adaptive smart-phone based therapy support tool for teens with AN, called Smart Treatment for Anorexia Recovery (STAR). STAR is for adolescents between the ages of 13-21 who recently received acute treatment for AN (e.g., inpatient, residential, intensive outpatient, or day hospital) who are currently working with an outpatient therapist. STAR incorporates elements from the Unified Protocol and Acceptance and Commitment Therapy to target emotion avoidance, which the investigators hypothesize will lead to reductions in eating-disorder behaviors. The investigators will compare STAR to Present-focused Anorexia Nervosa Coping Treatment (PACT), which focuses on current life stressors and problems. The investigators' hypothesis is that STAR will improve outpatient treatment response and reduce relapse in adolescents discharged from intensive treatment for AN. The investigators will evaluate their hypotheses in two conditions: 1) STAR app and 2) PACT app. In both conditions, participants must be working with an individual outpatient therapist.
Efficacy of Non-invasive Vagus Nerve Stimulation for Treatment of Low Weight Eating Disorders
Anorexia NervosaThis project includes a 4-week randomized trial comparing pre-meal vagal nerve stimulation (taVNS) to pre-meal sham stimulation. The aims will assess if taVNS results in greater satisfaction, greater calorie consumption, less self-reported fullness, decrease in eating disorder symptoms, and less anxiety than sham stimulation. Gastric parameters (rhythm, motility, and pH level) will also be measured to assess stimulation as a mediator of autonomous eating