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Active clinical trials for "Personality Disorders"

Results 31-40 of 322

Dialectical Behavior Therapy vs Enhanced Usual Care for Suicidal and Self-harming Adolescents. 10...

Self-HarmDeliberate1 more

The purpose of the study is to evaluate the long-term efficacy of dialectical behavior therapy (DBT) in treatment of adolescents with deliberate self harm compared to enhanced usual care (EUC). This study follows-up 77 patients in the ages of 12-18 yrs who have been included in an RCT of DBT-A vs EUC. The main inclusion criterion for this study was repetitive self-harm behaviour. The patients were randomly allocated to receive 16 weeks of outpatient DBT or EUC in child and adolescent psychiatric clinics in Oslo. Participants have been assessed so far on six different time-points: baseline (before starting treatment), 9 weeks, 15 weeks, 19 weeks, 71 weeks and 3 years after start of the treatment. In the current project patients will be assessed a 7th time 10 years after treatment completion. It is hypothesized that compared with participants who had received EUC in the original trial during their adolescence participants who had received DBT-A will: A) report a significantly lower frequency of episodes of self-harm, both last year and over the extended 10-year follow-up interval. B) be significantly less impaired with respect to social, family and occupational functioning and report a higher quality of life. C) have retained significantly fewer diagnostic criteria of BPD and have less severe borderline features according to dimensional measures and have significantly fewer signs of emotion dysregulation.

Enrolling by invitation11 enrollment criteria

ONLINE AEROBIC THERAPEUTIC EXERCISE PROGRAM FOR PATIENTS WITH LIMITATION OF PERSONALITY

Borderline Personality Disorder

Introduction: Borderline personality disorder is a serious mental illness with high prevalence and difficult to diagnose. BPD is characterized by unstable relationships, distorted sense of self, emotional instability and a strong impulsiveness with weak impulse control. Physiotherapy in mental health, currently being developed, is considered potentially effective in order to improve physical and mental health and the quality of life related to health. Objective: The main objective of this study is to analyze the effect of an aerobic therapeutic exercise plan in the quality of life of patients with BDP. Methodological design: A random controlled critical trial is going to be carried out. A sample of 50 participants diagnosed with BPD, aged 18 years and older, will be taken. They will be divided randomly in two groups: control group and treatment group. The treatment group will carry out a program of aerobic exercise twice a week for five weeks divided in four defined levels of variable length. The variables that will be compared before and after the intervention are: seriousness according to symptomatology, depression and anxiety level, emotion regulation difficulty, life quality level, physical condition level and ability of effort. After the intervention, the results will be analyzed by means of statistical processing based on the data obtained.

Enrolling by invitation8 enrollment criteria

A Dimensional Model for Personality Disorders in Later Life

Psychiatric Disorders

Research on personality disorders (PDs) in older adults is currently limited. This is surprising, given that PDs are also common in this age group. Moreover, PDs show high co-morbidity with other disorders (both mental and physical) and often have a negative effect on treatment. With this in mind, the conceptualization, diagnosis and treatment of PDs in older adults represents an important task for mental health care. To this end, problems with the current classification of PDs need to be tackled, as they currently complicate this task. The current DSM-5 (Diagnostic and Statistical Manual, Edition 5) (APA, 2013) categorical PD criteria are mainly based on the living conditions of younger adults and are therefore often not suited for PD diagnosis in older adults. Currently, however, a paradigm shift is taking place from a categorical to a dimensional approach of PDs. The "Alternative Model for Personality Disorders" (AMPD) (APA, 2013) and the approach by ICD-11 (International Classification of Diseases 11th Revision) (WHO, 2019) are examples of new, dimensional models for PDs. These models conceptualize PDs using two dimensional criteria: (1) criterion A, which captures the overall level of personality (dis)functioning and (2) criterion B which describes the PD style by pathological/maladaptive personality traits. This paradigm shift offers the possibility to give the aging context the attention it deserves, by examining the suitability of this new dimensional conceptualization of PD among older adults. The goal of this research is to examine whether the combined AMPD and ICD-11 dimensional approach is appropriate for use in older adults. This will be done by administering instruments capturing criterion A and B in the general population in younger (18-64) and older (65 and older) adults to evaluate their age-neutrality, as well as in a clinical sample of older (65 and older) adults, to empirically evaluate its clinical relevance in later life.

Recruiting5 enrollment criteria

Trial of a Brief Psychological Intervention for Suicidal Patients With Borderline Personality Disorder...

Borderline Personality DisorderSuicide and Self-harm

When in crisis, people with borderline personality disorder (BPD) frequently seek care in emergency departments (EDs) often presenting with suicide and self-harm behaviour. There is no established evidence-based brief intervention for patients with BPD in ED settings, however a 4-session psychotherapeutic intervention for people with personality disorders in ED settings was tested in Australia and showed promising results in reduced health care utilization. The proposed pilot randomized controlled trial will assess the feasibility of delivering this 4-session intervention in the ED for people with BPD who present with suicidal ideation or self-harm with the aim of reducing health care utilization.

Enrolling by invitation6 enrollment criteria

STAIR for Trauma and Emotion Dysregulation

Posttraumatic Stress DisorderBorderline Personality Disorder1 more

This study will examine the impact of Skills Training in Affective and Interpersonal Regulation (STAIR) group, using self-report measures, on Posttraumatic Stress Disorder (PTSD), emotional dysregulation, borderline personality disorder symptoms, global psychopathology, and access to quality mental health care. Aims include assessing the feasibility of STAIR, reducing patients' trauma and emotion dysregulation symptoms, examining whether STAIR may be used as an alternative to DBT for patients on the DBT, and improving patient satisfaction and clinic efficiency

Enrolling by invitation7 enrollment criteria

The Impact of the Use of the MAURISSE Application in People Suffering From an Addiction.

Substance Related DisorderPersonality Disorders

Substance Use Disorders (SUD) are associated with cognitive schemas that lead to care attrition and mistrust towards care. Considering this, establishing a strong, trustful relationship between the patient and the healthcare team is important to promote patient engagement within SUD management. However, it requires an important availability of the healthcare team, allowing for frequent interactions at all times, including at night and during days off. We postulated that a mobile application called MAURISSE, which aims to help the caregivers maintaining a link with the patient in order to facilitate trust in the relationship, could foster patient engagement as well as the therapeutic alliance. This research aims to compare the effect of the application MAURISSE on the therapeutic alliance in a population of patients treated for a disorder related to substance use at the Toulouse University Hospital.

Recruiting11 enrollment criteria

The Effect of Oxytocin Administration on Interpersonal Cooperation in Borderline Personality Disorder...

Borderline Personality Disorder

The study will examine behavioral patterns and underlying neural correlates which distinguish patients with borderline personality disorder (BPD) from healthy subjects as they participate in a two-person trust game and will determine whether administration of intranasal oxytocin (OT) will normalize trust game performance and concomitant neural processing in the BPD group.

Recruiting10 enrollment criteria

The Short-Term MBT Project

Borderline Personality Disorder

The study will evaluate the benefitial and harmful effects of short-term (20 weeks) compared to long-term (14 months) mentalization-based therapy for outpatients with subthreshold or diagnosed borderline personality disorder.

Active10 enrollment criteria

Five Factor Model Treatment for Borderline Personality Disorder

Borderline Personality Disorder

The primary purpose of this study is to explore acceptability, feasibility, and preliminary efficacy of a novel cognitive-behavioral treatment for borderline personality disorder (BPD). Extant treatments for this condition are intensive, long-term (usually at least one year), and have, understandably, focused on targeting the life-threatening and therapy-interrupting behaviors that often characterize this disorder. BPD, however, is a heterogeneous disorder with diagnostic criteria that can be combined to create over 300 unique symptom presentations (Ellis, Abrams, & Abrams, 2008); to date, no treatments have been explicitly designed with lower risk presentations of BPD in mind. This is unfortunate, as there is evidence to suggest that the majority of individuals with BPD do not demonstrate the recurrent life-threatening behaviors that warrant intensive, long-term care (Trull, Useda, Conforti, & Doan, 1997; Zimmerman & Coryell, 1989). Additionally, various studies have shown that the difficulties experienced by individuals with BPD can be understood as manifestations of maladaptive variants of personality traits (e.g., Mullins-Sweatt et al., 2012). Specifically, individuals with BPD demonstrate high levels of neuroticism, and low levels of agreeableness (antagonism) and conscientiousness (disinhibition); these traits may not be universally present across all individuals with BPD, perhaps underscoring the heterogeneity in presentations of this condition.

Active5 enrollment criteria

Study to Test the Efficacy and Safety of Vafidemstat in Adult Borderline Personality Disorder Population...

Borderline Personality Disorder

PORTICO is a Phase IIb study to evaluate the efficacy and safety of vafidemstat in an adult borderline personality disorder (BPD) population.

Active36 enrollment criteria
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