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Active clinical trials for "Anorexia"

Results 41-50 of 422

Health and Exercise Response in Children With Chronic and Auto-immune Pathologies

Juvenile Idiopathic ArthritisDiabetes3 more

The aim of the present project is to assess the effects of the chronic diseases and their associated treatments chronic paediatric diseases (CPD), to further understand their impact on physical fitness for public health perspectives. This is an innovative approach in the treatment of chronic paediatric diseases . This project should yield results that help improving treatments for children and adolescents with chronic paediatric diseases throughout physical activity as therapy, reduced pain, fatigue and inflammation, and improvement in physical fitness and life quality. The originality and novelty of this project is to combine architectural, functional and metabolic components of skeletal muscle to further understand the impact of chronic paediatric diseases as a function of treatment, disease activity and maturation status (prepubertal, pubertal or post pubertal). This study will aim at assessing muscular function (force production capacity and fatigability) in specific or ecologic situations so as to get information about muscle functioning on isolated muscle group (here knee extensors) or during whole body exercise. Moreover, results arising from muscle architecture or quality will allow understanding the decrease in strength or endurance reported in the literature. The data collected will allow us to further understand the impact of the disease on structural, functional and metabolic parameters. Finally, the understanding of these alterations will provide information enabling to establish recommendations in physical activity (PA) to reduce or even counter the effect of the chronic inflammation and prevent at long-term overweight and cardiovascular risks. The long-term objective is to contribute establishing recommendations or guidelines for prescribing physical activity during medical therapy. Values obtained in pathological children will be compared to those of control children matched for gender and maturation.

Recruiting19 enrollment criteria

Oral Naltrexone In Pediatric Eating Disorders

Anorexia Nervosa/BulimiaAnorexia in Adolescence9 more

The objective of this study is to evaluate the effectiveness of oral naltrexone tablets in pediatric and adolescent eating disorders, in particular anorexia nervosa and bulimia nervosa, as compared to placebo. Study participants will be patients in a partial hospitalization program or intensive outpatient program for eating disorder.

Enrolling by invitation26 enrollment criteria

Metabolic Diet for Relapse Prevention in Anorexia Nervosa

Anorexia Nervosa

This is an interventional study that will test the safety, tolerability, and efficacy of the Metabolic Diet, which was designed as a treatment for women with anorexia nervosa to remain weight-stable after they have been restored from low weight. Participants will be adult women with anorexia nervosa who have been recently restored to normal weight and adult women with no history of eating disorders. After enrollment, participants will start meeting weekly with a registered dietitian to implement the Metabolic Diet in their daily lives, and will receive medical monitoring for adherence, side effects, changes in metabolic or psychological parameters, and weight stability.

Recruiting15 enrollment criteria

Preparing for Eating Disorders Treatment Through Compassionate Letter-Writing

Eating DisordersAnorexia Nervosa3 more

Compassion-focused therapy (CFT) seeks to lower shame and help people develop compassion for personal distress and shortcomings. There is increasing evidence to support the benefits of incorporating CFT-based interventions into the treatment of eating disorders (EDs). Building on the investigators' prior research, this study will examine the effects of a two-week CFT-based self-compassion letter-writing intervention on patients with eating disorders. Participants will be recruited from the wait-list of patients scheduled to begin treatment at the outpatient St. Joseph's Healthcare Hamilton Eating Disorders Program, and will be randomly assigned to the two-week letter-writing intervention or to a control group. Results will inform the integration of new empirically-derived interventions into ED treatments to improve the currently dismal rates of ED recovery.

Enrolling by invitation3 enrollment criteria

Individualized Study of Refeeding to Optimize iNpatient Gains

Atypical Anorexia Nervosa

The primary purpose of the trial is to compare the efficacy and safety of Individualized Caloric Refeeding (ICR) to the new standard of care, Higher Calorie Refeeding (HCR), in hospitalized patients with atypical anorexia nervosa (AAN), and clinical remission over one year of follow-up.

Enrolling by invitation13 enrollment criteria

Comparing Olanzapine and Mirtazapine in the Improvement of Unintentional Weight Loss for Patients...

Anorexia Nervosa With Significantly Low Body Weight

To determine whether olanzapine or mirtazapine is more effective in preventing weight loss and appetite loss in cancer patients.

Enrolling by invitation15 enrollment criteria

APPETITE: Plant Protein and Exercise Solutions for the Prevention of Undernutrition in Older Adults....

Appetite LossPhysical Inactivity4 more

The APPETITE Trial aims to investigate the efficacy of innovative plant protein fibre (PPF) products (developed in a previous workpackage) as part of a personalised diet with/out physical activity on appetite and incidence of undernutrition in older persons from three European countries at high risk of undernutrition.

Recruiting18 enrollment criteria

Outcomes of a Skill-Based Program for Eating Disorders

Anorexia Nervosa

This study aims to measure the effect of a neurobiologically-guided intensive family based treatment for adults with anorexia nervosa.

Enrolling by invitation8 enrollment criteria

Implementing FBT for Adolescent AN for Providers in Private Practice

Online Training for Therapists

There is a critical need to disseminate efficacious psychosocial treatments for mental disorders as there is a significant gap between evidenced-based approaches and common clinical practice. One example of the need to improve dissemination and implementation of psychosocial treatments is for adolescent Anorexia Nervosa (AN), a serious mental disorder with an incidence rate of about 1% that can become life-threatening. Based on outcomes from a series of randomized clinical trials (RCTs), the first-line treatment for adolescent AN is Family-based Treatment (FBT); however, very few therapists are trained to use FBT for AN. Further, while approximately 45-50% of US mental health outpatient providers are in private practice, little attention has been paid to how best to train this group. Care for adolescent AN, in particular, is provided in private practice at high rates, because specialist programs in non-private settings are few and not readily accessible. Motivations, incentives, and rationale for learning evidence-based treatments (EBTs) differ in this group compared to therapists embedded in an organization or health care system. In this application, we propose to use an online training strategy to study the adoption of FBT to better understand factors that limit or enhance uptake and implementation of this treatment in private practice. We developed and piloted a self-directed enhanced online training (ET-FBT) aimed at improving therapist skills and knowledge related to key components of FBT for AN that predict patient outcome in a group of therapists of which 64% were in private practice. We propose to build on these findings to examine the feasibility of new methods to retain therapists during supervision, assess fidelity, and collect patient outcomes from clinicians in private practice. Thus, our specific aims are: Aim 1: The overall aim of the study is to assess the feasibility of conducting a randomized clinical trial comparing two implementation strategies (online training vs webinar training) for training clinicians in private practice in FBT for AN. We predict that those randomized to online training will be retained, receive supervision, and provide patient data at higher rates than those who receive webinar training. Aim 2: Patient outcomes (reflecting therapist effectiveness) will be assessed by comparing patient weight gain from session 1 to 4 of FBT before and after training (target for training effect) and compared between randomized groups. We predict a moderate efficacy signal difference favoring those who are received the online training. because of increased training in key components in the online training program. Aim 3: Validate training effect by examining the association between therapist fidelity to FBT and patient outcomes. We predict that fidelity will be correlated (target validation) with patient outcome. The effects of therapeutic alliance, participation in supervision, and self-efficacy on both fidelity and patient outcome will be explored. Aim 4: Explore BL factors associated with implementation processes (e.g. prior training, experience, family work).The primary significance of this study is its potential to increase the availability of FBT--the most effective treatment for adolescent AN. Increased availability of FBT will decrease cost, hospitalization, morbidity, mortality, and chronicity of the disorder.

Recruiting8 enrollment criteria

Efficacy of a Phone-based Relapse Prevention for Anorexia Nervosa After a First Hospitalization...

Anorexia Nervosa

Anorexia Nervosa (AN) is a highly challenging disease which consequences are serious. Relapse rate is estimated between 38 and 41% during the year following hospitalization. The efficacy of patients' phone contact procedure on relapse has been assessed and has shown interest in numerous disorders. However, no study has ever used phone contact as a relapse prevention intervention tool in AN. Objective: To evaluate efficacy of a phone contact procedure to increase body weight at 12 months after a first hospitalization for AN, by comparison to standard medical follow-up. Secondary objectives are to evaluate effect of phone contact procedure on: change in body weight at 6 month, general psychopathology disorder, psychopathology disorder specific to AN, rate of usual follow-up visit, and medico-economic impact. Method: Prospective, multicenter, open-label, randomized controlled clinical trial, for subject over 15 years old presenting with diagnosis of AN. Patients randomized in EATLINE group will be contacted by phone at 15 days, 1, 2, 4 and 9 months after discharge from hospitalization. Patients in control group will benefit from usual follow-up. Expected outcomes and perspectives:that there will be a significant decrease in relapse due to phone contact procedure compared to control group. Results would justify additional devices at the end of hospitalization, until development of various connected tools allowing to "stay in contact" with patients in order to optimize the current therapeutic possibilities of AN.

Recruiting13 enrollment criteria
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