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Active clinical trials for "Anorexia Nervosa"

Results 51-60 of 339

Augmented Interoceptive Exposure Training in Anorexia Nervosa

Anorexia Nervosa

The researchers propose to utilize a pharmacological approach involving infusions of the sympathomimetic agent isoproterenol to repeatedly trigger cardiorespiratory sensations and anxiety during meal anticipation, to facilitate the development of tolerance or a reduction of the anxiety/fear response in individuals with anorexia nervosa. The investigators aim to conduct a proof of principle study to assess for evidence of initial efficacy of this new treatment approach. As a comparator condition, the researchers propose using repeated administration of saline infusions.

Active25 enrollment criteria

Imaginal Exposure II Study: In-Vivo

Eating DisorderAnorexia Nervosa2 more

The purpose of this study is to test if imaginal exposure therapy can decrease symptoms of eating disorders and anxiety.

Active7 enrollment criteria

Nutritional Rehabilitation and Markers of Severity in Anorexia Nervosa

Anorexia Nervosa

The design of this project is a longitudinal trial in patients with Anorexia Nervosa (AN) during in-hospital rehabilitation. Τhe structure of the study, the questionnaires and data protection policy prepared exclusively for our study, have been reviewed and standardised at Institutional Review Boards (Ethics Committees, IRBs,) in Harokopio University of Athens (HUA), Eginition Hospital (EH), Attiko Hospital (AH) and Sismanoglio Hospital (SG). AN is a psychiatric disorder followed by a psychopathologic concerning of body image and very low body weight due to extreme self-starvation. The exact pathogenesis of AN remains unknown with neurobiological, gastrointestinal, neuroendocrinological, immunological, and genetic factors suspected to be implicated. Furthermore, many metabolic traits, biochemical, biological or/and anthropometrical, are manifested during the maintaining effort of patients to achieve lower body weight. Self-inflicted starvation is the primary and essential causation of the pathological outcomes of the disorder. These outcomes involve all biological systems and organs. The role of the immune system in AN is critical as levels of pro-inflammatory cytokines are increased and the immune system is dysregulated. Other contributors to AN pathogenesis have been proposed, such as increased oxidative stress, dysbiosis of the gut microbiota and altered metabolomic profiles. Treatment options for patients with AN constitutes outpatient and inpatient care accordingly with the severity of the disorder. So far, no biomarker has been strongly proposed as an indicator of the disorder's severity or for assessing the progression of the treatment. The purpose of this study is to assess and monitor the nutritional rehabilitation of patients with AN during hospitalization treatment. Throughout the treatment's course, nutrition and feeding process, vital signs, psychopathology and biological samples will be gathered and statistical analysis of these data is expected to reveal potential biomarker/s for monitoring the progression of recovery.

Recruiting2 enrollment criteria

The CORTEX Randomized Control Trial

Anorexia Nervosa

Background: This study aims to evaluate the feasibility and efficacy of a novel Computer-Assisted Cognitive Remediation Therapy (CA-CRT) program as adjunctive treatment to standard care (TAU) in improving cognitive skills in adult inpatients with anorexia nervosa (AN) Methods: A multicenter randomized controlled trial (RCT) will be conducted to compare the experimental condition with controls receiving TAU only. A minimum sample of 54 subjects with a diagnosis of AN will be recruited in each site. After the initial screening, participants will be randomized to either the experimental group or the control condition. The treatment will last 5 weeks and consists of 10 individual CRT sessions with 15 individual CA-CRT sessions. The impact of the intervention on selected primary and secondary outcomes will be tested at the end of the intervention. Expected results: We expect subjects assigned to the CA-CRT group to develop more flexible and holistic thinking styles, and achieving increased clinical outcomes.

Not yet recruiting1 enrollment criteria

Home-based Adapted Physical Activity in Anorexia Nervosa: a Feasibility Pilot Study

Anorexia Nervosa

The goal of this pilot clinical trial is to assess a program of Home-based Adapted Physical Activity in Anorexia Nervosa.

Not yet recruiting14 enrollment criteria

Clinical and Cost-effectiveness of Group Schema Therapy for Complex Eating Disorders: the GST-EAT...

Anorexia NervosaAtypical Anorexia Nervosa (Other Specified Eating Disorder)2 more

Amongst psychiatric illnesses, eating disorders (EDs) are notoriously difficult to treat and have a high mortality rate. The average duration of an ED is 6 years and for a majority of ED patients, the disorder will become chronic. Comorbid personality pathology such as negative core beliefs and early maladaptive schemas (EMS) are strongly related to ED severity and chronicity. Enhanced cognitive-behavioural therapy for eating disorders (CBT-E) is used as the first line transdiagnostic treatment for EDs. However, CBT-E is mainly symptom-focused and does not tap into these underlying core beliefs and EMS. Given the limited treatment effects of existing ED treatments, and the importance of comorbid personality pathology, there is an urgent need to examine more effective treatments for EDs. Group-schematherapy (GST) overcomes the limitations of CBT-E and preliminary results for treatment-resistant EDs are promising. However, robust evidence regarding the clinical and cost-effectiveness of GST for patients that do not benefit from CBT-E is not yet available. The central aim of this project is to investigate the clinical and cost-effectiveness of GST for EDs in patients with comorbid personality pathology, who do not show a clinically significant response in the first phase of CBT-E. This is relevant and important as studies examining the effectiveness of GST for EDs are scarce. This project is a joint research initiative of three academic centers (Dutch Universities), four large nation-wide mental health organizations, and two foundations for client empowerment and participation. Eligible patients will be randomized to either GST or continuation of their CBT-E treatment after failing to show a significant treatment response in the first phase of CBT-E. Based on encouraging findings from previous studies and our own pilot data, a statistically and clinically significant better outcome in terms of ED symptoms, negative core beliefs, EMS, schema modes, and quality of life is expected in the GST group compared to the CBT-E group. GST is also expected to be more cost-effective compared to CBT-E as GST may in the long run prevent chronicity in terms of long treatment trajectories and delayed recovery. Finally, with the proviso of good results for GST, we will disseminate and implement GST in the standard of care for EDs. This project thereby has great potential to improve clinical and cost-effectiveness of treatment for chronic EDs.

Not yet recruiting7 enrollment criteria

Potential Predictive Biological Markers of Major Depression Response to Citalopram Therapy in Anorexia...

Anorexia Nervosa

In patients suffering from anorexia nervosa associated with severe major depression, serotonin reuptake inhibitor drugs have shown little efficacy in significantly reducing depressive symptoms. A possible explanation for this poor efficacy could be that people with anorexia nervosa have a deficiency in amino acids such as tryptophan, which is necessary for the production of the neurotransmitter serotonin. Therefore, tryptophan supplementation has been suggested as a means of increasing the pharmacological response to serotonin reuptake inhibitor drugs in patients with anorexia nervosa. Furthermore, malnutrition present in patients suffering from anorexia nervosa is in some cases associated with problems of intestinal absorption of nutrients, with possible implications on the pharmacokinetics of the drugs administered, including selective serotonin reuptake inhibitors (SSRIs). The present observational study aims to evaluate the correlations between the clinical response to Citalopram therapy (in different o.s. and i.v. formulations) and some nutritional, neurotransmitter and inflammatory biomarkers, in order to identify potential predictive markers of response to therapy for severe major depression in patients with anorexia nervosa. The following parameters will be evaluated in patients enrolled in all 3 observation times described above: Plasma concentration of Citalopram Serum concentration of Serotonin Plasma concentration of dopamine Serum concentration of Tryptophan Serum concentration of BDNF Hamilton scale 17 items and other clinical scales (EDI-3, SCL-90, BUT).

Recruiting8 enrollment criteria

Developing an EEG Paradigm to Study Prediction Error in Anorexia Nervosa

Anorexia Nervosa

Adolescent anorexia nervosa (AN) is an eating disorder associated with intense fear of weight gain, food refusal, and severe weight loss. AN is the third most common chronic illness among adolescent females with a mortality rate 12 times higher than expected for females 15-24 years old. Little is known about biomarkers in adolescent AN. Neuroimaging studies have repeatedly suggested altered reward processing in AN including in studies using the dopamine associated prediction error (PE) model. The brain PE response is elicited during unexpected receipt or omission of reward stimuli and thought to reflect the functionality of brain dopamine circuits. This is an important research direction as the dopamine system can be manipulated pharmacologically. In ill and recovered adult AN, unexpected or randomly applied sucrose taste stimuli evoked higher insular and striatal responses and unexpected omission or receipt of monetary or taste reward was associated with a similar response pattern in adolescent AN. PE was also inversely related to weight gain in treatment. Thus, PE brain response promises to be an important biological marker for adolescent AN with predictive value for treatment outcome. However, functional brain imaging is costly, prohibitive for instance for individuals with braces or other metal in their body and only available at certain centers. In order to study PE in AN in larger scale studies, a more practical approach and method need to be developed. In this application, we will use the exploratory/developmental R21 mechanism to develop a study protocol using electroencephalography (EEG) to study PE signals in adolescent AN. Recent studies in healthy individuals support that this is a valid approach. Our primary goal for this study is to test the feasibility of the use of EEG for prediction error and reversal learning studies in AN with the longer term goal of replacing fMRI that is costly and associated with frequent participant rule out. In Aim 1. we test the feasibility of adapting a computational taste PE reinforcement learning paradigm from fMRI to EEG in adolescents with AN and healthy controls. We expect that we will find internal consistency of taste PE brain response across fMRI and EEG in adolescents with AN as well as age-matched healthy controls, within each group. We further expect that we will find preliminary evidence that the EEG paradigm will be able to discriminate the AN group from the HC adolescents based on feedback related negativity and higher event-related potential amplitudes, which will correlate with fMRI PE brain response. In Aim 2., we test whether a monetary PE paradigm will show similar EEG brain response as taste PE in Aim 1. to establish the generalizability of EEG taste and non-taste paradigms. The development of an EEG based reward PE study paradigm will enable us in the future to conduct large-scale studies that will be less costly and independent from brain imaging centers that are only available to a small subset of adolescents with AN.

Recruiting97 enrollment criteria

Health Related Quality of Life for Patients With Anorexia Nervosa in Denmark.

Anorexia NervosaHealth-Related Quality Of Life

Eating disorders (ED) comprise a multitude of symptoms involving a disturbed body image and a preoccupation with food or bodyweight. EDs are often difficult to treat, in part due to the lack of motivation for improvement. Anorexia nervosa (AN) has the highest mortality rate of any psychiatric disease, and less than half of patients will recover from the disease. Studies have found that patients suffering from AN have impaired health-related quality of life (HRQoL) compared to the general population. It has also been suggested that despite improvement in clinical parameters, patients report deterioration in HRQoL, which is in line with a study finding low agreement between patient perceived outcome and clinician assessed characteristics. To evaluate the patients' perception of their disease, it is important to develop reliable and valid assessment tools. Previously generic questionnaires have been used to assess HRQoL in Danish ED patients, as no disease-specific questionnaires have been developed. Translating and validating a disease-specific questionnaire would provide a useful tool in assessing current treatment and in developing new treatment options. This study aimed to develop a Danish version of an internationally disease-specific HRQoL questionnaire. Furthermore, HRQoL is assessed in patients who have gone through shorter or longer treatment.

Recruiting3 enrollment criteria

Open vs. Blind Weighing Study In Adolescents and Young Adult With Eating Disorders

Eating DisordersAnorexia Nervosa

Current treatments for adolescents and young adults (AYAs) with eating disorders (EDs) do not effectively address a central ED symptom - anxiety about weight gain - which contributes to poor outcomes. The proposed study evaluates the feasibility, acceptability, efficacy, and underlying mechanisms of an enhanced version of "open weighing," a cognitive-behavioral intervention designed to target anxiety about weight gain in AYAs with EDs. Understanding how to better treat AYAs with EDs, and identifying the mechanisms by which interventions lead to improvement, will aid in the development of more effective and personalized treatments, ultimately improving the lives of AYAs with EDs.

Not yet recruiting8 enrollment criteria
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