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Active clinical trials for "Personality Disorders"

Results 61-70 of 322

Effectiveness of a Short and Telematic Version of Cognitive-behavioral Treatment for Borderline...

Borderline Personality Disorder

Standard Dialectical Behavioral Therapy (DBT)is an effective treatment for Borderline Personality Disorder (BPD), particularly for patients with significant behavioral and affective dysregulation, including suicidality. However, DBT in its original format is delivered in 12 months, and even though currently there are shorter versions of the treatment being developed and tested, in the context of public mental health care in Chile a shorter, intensive and lighter version of the treatment is likely needed to help patients seeking help for BPD symptoms. This study will test whether a 3 month, intensive and simplified version of DBT is at least equivalent to standard six months DBT with all its components (skills training, individual therapy, coaching calls, and treatment-team consulting). 120 patients diagnosed with BPD we'll be randomly assigned to receive either the short, intensive 3-month intervention or the longer standard 6-month DBT intervention. Baseline measures will be taken pre-treatment, upon treatment completion, and at a 4-month follow-up. Session-to-session change in BPD symptoms will also be measured throughout the treatments. Primary outcomes for the study are BPD symptoms, frequency, and intensity of suicidal activity. Secondary outcome measures include depression scores, quality of life, and ER visits, and days in inpatient care.

Not yet recruiting12 enrollment criteria

Assessment of Cost-effectiveness in Two Empirically-based Psychotherapies for Borderline Personality...

Treatment 1:Dialectical Behavior Therapy (DBT)Treatment 2:Dynamic Deconstructive Psychotherapy (DDP)1 more

Patients suffering from borderline personality disorder (BPD) are considered frequent utilizers of psychiatric emergency rooms and of psychiatric hospitalizations. Nonetheless, recent studies challenge the effectiveness of psychiatric hospitalizations in reducing BPD symptoms, and some have even indicated potentially harmful effects such as increasing suicide risk post-discharge. These findings highlight the importance of effective outpatient treatments for BPD patients in public psychiatric hospital settings. In this study we aim to assess the effectiveness and cost-effectiveness of two empirically-based treatments for BPD: dialectical behavior therapy (DBT) and dynamic deconstructive psychotherapy (DDP).

Not yet recruiting6 enrollment criteria

SHame prOpensity in bOrderline Personality Disorder

Borderline Personality Disorder

Borderline Personality Disorder (BPD) is a common psychiatric disorder occurring in 2 to 6% of the population. 70% of patients with BPD do at least one Suicide Attempt (SA) in their lives. It makes BPD the most related to SA condition. Negative interpersonal events are among the main stressor inducing a SA. Patients with BPD are characterized by emotional dysregulation, impulsivity (repeated parasuicidal and suicidal behaviors), and instability in interpersonal relationships. The feeling of shame related to this psychiatric disorder could be one of the causes of the high SA rate. In this study, patients with BPD will be follow-up during 5 years. The main objective is to study the propensity to feel shame as a predictor of SA. This include: Study of shame propensity as a predictive factor of suicidal behavior - Identify homogeneous subgroups of patients with BPD based on SA, and overall functioning. Identify biological markers predicting SA Identify predictive and protective treatments (pharmacological and psychotherapeutic) for SA

Recruiting9 enrollment criteria

The BRIDGE Project

Borderline Personality Disorder

Borderline Personality Disorder (BPD) is characterised by long standing difficulty in managing emotional responses, personal relationships, impulse control and self-image. Many adolescents and young people with complex needs and high suicide risk are left under-diagnosed and untreated. The overall aim of the study is to assess the possibility of providing a treatment programme for young people with BPD symptoms in the general population, who may or may not be accessing any mental health services.

Recruiting7 enrollment criteria

Reactivity of Patients With Borderline Personality Disorder to an Ecological Interpersonal Stress...

FemaleBorderline Personality Disorder

Use lay language. According to the World Health Organization 1 death by suicide occurs every 40 seconds, leading suicide prevention to one of the public health priority. BPD (Borderline Personality Disorder) is a common condition affecting 6% of the population. This disorder is characterized by unstable emotions, unstable mood, difficulties with relationship and feer of abandonment. Borderline Personality Disorder is also the psychopathology the most related to suicidal attempts. Indeed, up to 50% of the patients admitted to hospital after a suicide attempt are diagnosis with a Borderline Personality Disorder Negative interpersonal events (events occurring between two people) are known as the main stressor that trigger a suicidal attempt. People with a Borderline Personality Disorder are highly sensitive to it. Moreover, neuropeptides such as oxytocin (OXT), vasopressin and opioid are known to be involved in the regulation of the emotions, especially those linked to relationship. The purpose of this study is to improve knowledge in suicidal behaviors. After simulating an interpersonal stress, the evolution of plasma neuropeptides level (OXT, vasopressin and opioid) of patients with a BPD will be compared to healthy controls (HC). Clinical data reflecting how the participant is feeling will be collected as well.

Recruiting17 enrollment criteria

Short Integrative And Neurocognitive Therapy For Young Adults With Borderline Personality Disorder...

Borderline Personality Disorder

Borderline personality disorder (BPD) is a severe, high-suicidal psychiatric disorder associated with impulsive, endangering behaviors. Young patients between 16 and 25 years old do not respond to traditional psychotherapies, which are often long and not adapted to their neurocognitive alterations linked to early trauma. The study authors hypothesize the SINTYA therapy program (one group session and one individual session weekly for 10 weeks) would reduce the level of impulsivity and clinical symptomatology (severity of the BPD; emotional regulation difficulties; dissociative symptoms; aggressiveness; ruminations; the number of self-destructive behaviors and suicidal acts; impulsive behaviors; level of suicide risk and hopelessness; the number of psychiatric hospitalizations and emergency visits for psychiatric reasons; and finally improving psychosocial functioning).

Not yet recruiting15 enrollment criteria

Aspects of Self-harm - Cognition, Imaging and Treatability

Self-HarmDeliberate3 more

Deliberate self-harm (DSH) is a common symptom in psychiatric disorders. This study aim at increased understanding of parameters associated with DSH with the long term goal to potentially improve and possibly personalise its treatment. In short, the study will characterise cognitive, psychiatric and demographic factors with focus on executive function and will compare results from individuals with DSH, individuals who have ceased DSH as well as psychiatric patients without DSH and individuals who never engaged in DSH. Adequate statistical tests will be used to compare groups. Participants will be interviewed by a trained physician for basic medical history, history of self-harm and treatment for that, demographic data and diagnostic evaluation. Thereafter the participants will undergo standardised neuropsychological testing focusing on emotional response inhibition, decision making and risk taking, attention set shifting, working memory, inhibition and planning. Some participants will redo parts of this testing during fMRI, as well as undergo DTI and volumetry.

Recruiting32 enrollment criteria

Empathy Anomalies in Emotionally Unstable (Borderline) Personality Disorder

Emotionally Unstable Personality DisorderBorderline Type

Emotionally unstable (borderline) personality disorder (BPD) is characterised by changeable and extreme emotions and difficulty maintaining relationships. It is often associated with self-harm. Empathy has two components; cognitive empathy (imagining someone else's thoughts and feelings) and emotional empathy (the reciprocal emotional response). People with BPD score low on cognitive empathy but high on emotional empathy. This suggests that they do not easily understand other peoples' perspectives, but their own emotions are very sensitive. This is important because it could align BPD with other neurodiverse conditions. This study will use a computer-based empathy test and short questionnaires to investigate whether empathy changes during the course of BPD, and if the severity of empathy impairments correlate with severity. The tests are the multifaceted empathy test (MET) and the questionnaire of cognitive and affective empathy (QCAE). The MET requires participants to look at photographs of emotive faces, then choose the most appropriate adjective. It takes 30 minutes to complete. The QCAE asks 31 questions like 'it is hard for me to see why some things upset people'. Participants will be invited to join the study when they are diagnosed with BPD. Severity will be measured with the Borderline Symptom List 23, a disability questionnaire, and the number of self-harming episodes per month, the number of hospital assessments per month and the number of hospital admissions per month. Short NHS questionnaires of anxiety, depression and mood will also be completed, along with short reading test. About 30 participants will be assessed 4 times over 2 years.

Recruiting5 enrollment criteria

Triage Survey for Psychiatry Research Eligibility

Major Depressive DisorderBorderline Personality Disorder1 more

TRIAGE-Psych is a survey study designed to assess potential participants' eligibility to screen for industry-sponsored psychiatry clinical trials.

Recruiting8 enrollment criteria

Clinical Characteristics of Patients Referred to a Substance Abuse Liaison Department in an Academic...

Substance AbuseEmergencies2 more

The Coalition on Psychiatric Emergencies (CPE) stressed in 2016 that emergency providers were increasingly recognizing the important role of the Emergency Department (ED) in reducing adverse outcomes associated with untreated with substance abuse liaison department (SUDs). Additional research is required to close identified knowledge gaps and improve care of ED patients with SUD. Of the more than 4.5 million ED visits in 2009 in US for drug-related causes,34-32% involved alcohol use alone or in combination with other drugs. Few studies investigated the clinical characteristics of patients referred to an addiction liaison department in a general hospital. The present study will be retrospective in a sample of 700 patients consecutively admitted for addictive behaviors in the emergency department and in the Medicine or Surgery departments of the Amiens University Hospital Center, France.

Recruiting4 enrollment criteria
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