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Active clinical trials for "Dyssomnias"

Results 61-70 of 439

Early Psychological Intervention After Rape

Post Traumatic Stress DisorderRape Sexual Assault10 more

Rape is a common cause of post-traumatic stress disorder (PTSD) among women, as around 30-50% will develop PTSD in the aftermath of rape. A modified protocol based on Prolonged Exposure Therapy (mPE), has been developed, consisting of three to five once or twice weekly 60 minutes sessions, and studies indicate that if implemented early after rape, mPE may prevent the development of PTSD. The aim of the study is to conduct a multi-site (4 Sexual assault care centers in Norway) randomized control trial (RCT) in which patients are recruited early after rape, and randomized to intervention (mPE) or treatment as usual (TAU).

Recruiting11 enrollment criteria

Impact of Bed Provision and Sleep Education

Sleep DisturbanceSleep Deprivation2 more

Investigators will recruit up to 100 families (children aged 8-12 years and their primary caregivers) from the Philadelphia-area Beds for Kids charity program, which provides beds, bedding, and sleep education to lower-socioeconomic status (SES) children. The primary objective of this randomized controlled trial is to determine whether bed provision combined with provider-delivered sleep health education can improve sleep in children participating in the Beds for Kids program.

Enrolling by invitation7 enrollment criteria

Frequen-ZZZ SleepPad Investigational Device POC

InsomniaSleep1 more

The investigators propose to examine the potential effects of the Frequen- ZZZ sleep pad - a noninvasive, unobtrusive appliance that generates a localized low-level electromagnetic field via radiofrequency, and that is used on the bed - on multiple sleep outcomes in an 8-week randomized crossover study, and to calculate the effect sizes of the intervention to inform power and sample size for future studies.

Recruiting23 enrollment criteria

Reducing Sleep disTurbance in Cancer

CancerSleep Disturbance4 more

In a randomized controlled trial (RCT), the investigators will recruit participants to an 8-week "app-based wellness" intervention: the active daily meditation intervention (Calm) or the health education podcast control group (POD), followed by a 12-week follow-up period. The investigators will recruit a total of 276 self-declared Chronic Hematological Cancer (CHC) patients who (representative of age, race/ethnicity, and gender) will be on stable CHC pharmacologic therapy (if any), self-identify as sleep disturbed (>5 on Pittsburgh Sleep Quality Index), do not have a sleep disorder diagnosis, do not take sleep medication/supplements >3 times per week, and are not currently practicing regular meditation. Aim 1: Test the efficacy of daily meditation (10 minutes/day) delivered via Calm compared to POD on the primary outcome of self reported sleep disturbance (Insomnia Severity Index (primary) and PROMIS Sleep Disturbance (secondary)) and secondary sleep outcomes including sleep impairment (PROMIS Sleep Impairment Scale) and sleep efficiency measured via sleep diaries and actigraphy. Hypothesis: Participants who are administered Calm will experience reduced sleep disturbance, and improvements in secondary sleep outcomes compared to POD at eight weeks. Aim 2: Test the efficacy of daily meditation (10 minutes/day) delivered via Calm compared to POD on inflammatory markers (i.e., TNF-a, IL-6, IL-8, CRP), fatigue, and emotional distress (i.e., anxiety, depressive symptoms measured with PROMIS®). Hypothesis: Participants who are administered Calm will have greater reductions in fatigue, emotional distress and inflammatory markers compared to POD at eight weeks. Aim 3: Explore the sustained effects (i.e., 20 weeks from baseline) of Calm in CHC patients. Hypothesis: (a) Participants in Calm will have greater reductions in sleep disturbance, fatigue, emotional distress and inflammatory markers compared to POD at 20 weeks; (b) Total meditation time and sustained meditation usage overtime, but not time of day or use of non-meditative content (e.g., Sleep Stories), will be related to improved outcomes at 20 weeks.

Recruiting17 enrollment criteria

Effects of Herbal Sleep Formula on Patients With Insomnia and Tinnitus

Sleep DisturbancesTinnitus

This project is planned to collect non-dialysis adults who suffer from sleep and tinnitus disorders and refuse to take sleeping medicines in our hospital by random assignment and double-blind method. 120 adults were divided into 3 groups. Control group: receive placebo treatment, once a day, four pills each time. Herbal compound low-dose group: once a day, two herbal compound capsules and two placebos each time. The total amount of herbal compound capsules is 557 mg. Herbal compound high-dose group: once a day, four capsules each time. The total amount of herbal compound capsules is 1114 mg. All subjects received health questionnaire, sleep questionnaire and tinnitus questionnaire before the start of the test At the end of the treatment(3 months), the health questionnaire, sleep questionnaire, and tinnitus questionnaire were accepted.

Recruiting11 enrollment criteria

Effects of a Novel Supplement on Sleep, Metabolism, Body Composition and Performance

Sleep HygieneSleep Disturbance

This study aimed to investigate the effects of a novel dietary supplement, consisting of melatonin and magnesium in a pod (coffee machine capsule) format, on sleep quality, stress, mood, sleepiness, biological rhythms, metabolism, body composition and performance, in individuals with sleep disturbances according with the Pittsburgh Sleep Quality Index. A randomized, double-blind, crossover trial will be conducted to compare the effects of the melatonin and magnesium-containing supplement against a placebo. The protocol comprises 4 weeks of supplementation with an experimental or placebo condition, with a week-long washout period. Biochemical markers of sleep and stress, actigraphy for sleep patterns and sleep hygiene, resting metabolic rate, food and fluid intake, body composition, and handgrip strength measures will be evaluated at baseline and 4 weeks post each randomly assigned intervention. The working hypothesis is that this innovative supplement will provide greater objective and subjective improvements regarding sleep patterns and quality, overall mood, biochemical markers of stress, resting metabolic rate, energy intake, body composition and strength, than the placebo comparator, due to the synergic effects of melatonin and magnesium.

Recruiting4 enrollment criteria

Sleep Assessment: The Benefits of Identifying Sleep Disturbance Using a Sleep Questionnaire

Sleep Disturbance

The investigators are interested in measuring the influence of addressing sleep in the orthopedic setting. This includes assessing patient experience measures (satisfaction with the visit, perceived empathy, communication effectiveness) as well as greater engagement in their healthcare (patient activation). The investigators will also see what factors might be associated with sleep disturbance and if addressing sleep leads to an intervention such as cognitive behavioral therapy.

Recruiting5 enrollment criteria

REmotely-delivered Supportive Programs for Improving Surgical Pain and disTrEss

Postoperative PainAcute4 more

The purpose of this research study is to learn how two different supportive programs may help women feel better after surgery. This study will measure if one type of supportive program is more useful than the other for improving wellbeing after surgery.

Recruiting9 enrollment criteria

WEsleep Trial: Improving Sleep in Hospitalized Patients

SleepSleep Disturbance5 more

In the WEsleep study, the investigators will perform a cluster randomized controlled trial. 3 surgical and 3 medical departments will be randomized to implement low-cost and simple interventions aimed at improving sleep in admitted patients. Another 3 surgical and 3 medical departments will be randomized to function as control groups. Subjective sleep quality and sleep-wake timing will be assessed in adult medical and surgical patients admitted into one of 12 participating wards, using questionnaires and a sleep diary. In addition, in a subset of participants, objective sleep measures will be assessed in with an EEG headband and a sleep mat.

Recruiting17 enrollment criteria

Acute Sleep Deprivation on Whole-body Heat Exchange During Exercise-heat Stress in Young and Older...

ThermoregulationSleep Disturbance3 more

Sleep deprivation has long been thought to modulate thermoregulatory function. Seminal work on sleep deprivation and thermoregulation has demonstrated that sleep-deprived individuals experience greater elevations in core temperature during exercise-heat stress due to reductions in the activation of local heat loss responses of cutaneous vasodilation and sweating. However, it remains unclear 1) if reductions in local heat loss responses would compromise whole-body heat loss (evaporative + dry heat exchange) and 2) if differences exist, are they dependent on the heat load generated by exercise (increases in metabolic rate augments the rate that heat must be dissipated by the body). Further, much of the understanding of the effects of sleep deprivation on thermoregulation has been limited to assessments in young adults. Studies show that aging is associated with reduction in cutaneous vasodilation and sweating that compromise whole-body heat loss exacerbating body heat storage during moderate- and especially more vigorous-intensity exercise in the heat. However, it remains unclear if sleep deprivation may worsen this response in older adults. The purpose of this study is therefore to evaluate the effects of sleep-deprivation on whole-body total heat loss during light, moderate, and vigorous exercise-heat stress and to assess if aging may mediate this response. To achieve this objective, direct calorimetry will be employed to measure whole-body total heat loss in young (18-30 years) and older (50-65 years) men during exercise at increasing, fixed rates of metabolic heat production of 150 (light), 200 (moderate), and 250 W/m2 (vigorous) in dry heat (40°C, ~15% relative humidity) with and without 24 hours of sleep deprivation.

Recruiting9 enrollment criteria
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