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Active clinical trials for "Fibromyalgia"

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Study Assessing the Efficacy of Etoricoxib in Female Patients With Fibromyalgia

Fibromyalgia

The main of the proposed study is to assess whether the use of the Cox-2 inhibitor Etoricoxib is beneficial for the use in fibromyalgia. We intend to seek whether this medication may improve psychiatric and rheumatologic parameters of the disease.

Unknown status15 enrollment criteria

Mindfulness-Based Stress Reduction Program as an Intervention in Patients With Fibromyalgia

Fibromyalgia

Fibromyalgia is a clinical syndrome with chronic pain, fatigue, and sleep disorders being the main symptoms. There is no commonly accepted efficacious treatment modality. Training in mindfulness-based stress reduction (MBSR) is a structured, 8-week, cognitively and affectively oriented intervention program, and has been shown to produce health benefits in a number of studies. We plan to conduct a randomized, controlled, clinical study with the aim of testing the efficacy of MBSR for fibromyalgia. Because fibromyalgia is almost exclusively a female disorder, we will limit this investigation to women. 180 female, fibromyalgia patients will be randomized into three groups: Mindfulness training Active control Wait-list control. The main outcome criteria are self-reported and fibromyalgia-specific Quality of Life (QOL), and a Biobehavioral Fibromyalgia Index composed of a variety of psychophysiological and behavioral variables. This index will be generated from data gathered via an ambulatory psychophysiological monitoring system, which comprises parameters of mobility, sleep quality, and cardiovascular well-being. These and other relevant variables (depression score, general QOL, pain quality, anxiety, mindfulness, compliance, other therapeutic measures) will be assessed at the beginning and end of the training, as well as at 4- and 12-months post-treatment. A primary focus will be assessing whether it is possible to promote psychological well-being through the learning of attentive presence and any resultant affective affirmation.

Unknown status8 enrollment criteria

Effect of an Amino-Acid-Based Blend on Human Growth Hormone (hGH) and Fibromyalgia (FM) Symptoms...

Fibromyalgia

The purpose of the study is to investigate the effect of the amino acid-based blend on growth hormone levels (measured by IGF-1) and clinical symptoms in individuals with treatment-resistant FM and low-normal hGH.

Unknown status10 enrollment criteria

An Emotional Regulation Brief Procedure (PbRE) for Fibromyalgia Using ICT's

FibromyalgiaChronic Pain

The study aims is to test the efficacy of an emotional regulation procedure for fibromyalgia patients using Information and Communications Technologies (ICTs). This procedure is based in a task that implies exposition to emotional words. The principal hypothesis is that exposition will improve the clinical symptomatology because the procedure restore an adequate emotional regulation.

Unknown status7 enrollment criteria

A Comparison of the Effect of Two Types of Whole Body Vibration on Fibromyalgia. A Randomized Controlled...

Fibromyalgia

The objective of this study is to compare the effectiveness of two types of body vibration platform, one vertical and one rotational, through a 12-week training in patients with fibromyalgia.

Unknown status5 enrollment criteria

Comparison of Ketamine and Esketamine in Patients Suffering From Fibromyalgia Syndrome.

Fibromyalgia

Ketamine and Esketamine intravenous perfusions can modulate chronic pain. The purpose of this study is to determine if Ketamine or Esketamine are favorable for outpatients suffering from fibromyalgia.

Unknown status16 enrollment criteria

Effects of Manual Therapy on Autonomic Nervous System's Balance, Pain and Well-being in Patients...

FibromyalgiaManual Therapy

Scientific literature dealing with patients with fibromyalgia conveys they suffer from an abnormal response of the autonomic nervous sýstem, where a marked sympathetic hyperactivity and a decrease in heart rate variability are emphasized. It is important to know what manual therapy techniques may manage to decrease the sympathetic activity and balance the sympathetic-vagal tone, therefore improving pain and life quality. This study will compare the effects of joint passive mobilization with the effects of soft tissue active mobilization on heart rate variability (as an indicator of autonomous regulation), psychological well-being (measured by the Ryff scale) and pain in patients with fibromyalgia.

Unknown status2 enrollment criteria

Two Point Discrimination

Ehlers-Danlos Syndrome (EDS)Complex Regional Pain Syndrome (CRPS)4 more

SPECIFIC AIMS Pain in both youth and adults is a complex, subjective and personal experience, and remains poorly understood. One particularly perplexing dimension of some forms of pain is the tendency of pain to spread outside of an affected body site to adjacent location, and then to unaffected body sites. Such widespread pain may reflect an altered spatial tuning of somatosensory processing, such that lateral inhibition is diminished, thereby allowing pain to spread. To date, no therapies exist which are designed specifically to diminish or even reverse the spatial spread of pain. However, training in two-point discrimination holds the potential to retune spatial aspects of somatosensory processing and may represent a novel therapy for widespread pain. Thus, the present investigation will test the following aims: Aim 1. Do youth with chronic pain have disrupted spatial tuning of somatosensory processing? Deficits in two point tactile discrimination have long been noted in adults with chronic pain, but such deficits remain poorly documented in pediatric chronic pain patients. In order to determine if such deficits exist, youth with both chronic pain and healthy youth will undergo assessment of two point discrimination thresholds. Aim 2. Does two-point discrimination training result in diminished pain and disability in youth with somatic pain? After initial characterization of tactile discrimination thresholds, youth with chronic pain will participate in multiple sessions of either two-point discrimination training or a single-point spatially-directed attentional control condition. Training will involve up to 9 additional sessions. Efficacy of training will be assessed by 1) reductions in the spatial extent of pain, 2) reductions in pain intensity and unpleasantness, and 3) reductions in pain-related disability.

Unknown status17 enrollment criteria

Effects of Instrument-assisted Soft Tissue Mobilization (IASTM) on Pain and Disability in Individuals...

Neck PainMyofascial Pain Syndrome

INTRODUCTION: Cervical pain is a very common clinical condition in the world population, and can affect 70% of people at some point in life. Many of these conditions arise from musculoskeletal disorders, which may be caused by myofascial dysfunctions. Instrument-assisted soft tissue mobilization (IASTM) may be an important therapeutic tool as a means of treatment under these conditions. PURPOSE: To verify the effect of instrument-assisted soft tissue mobilization (IASTM) on pain, disability and range of motion (ROM) in individuals with non-specific chronic neck pain. DESIGN: Randomized Clinical Trial. METHODS: The sample will consist of 46 volunteers with non-specific chronic neck pain of both sexes, aged between 18 and 60 years, who presented pain for at least 12 weeks, without irradiation to the upper limbs distally to the shoulders. Of these, those that are not excluded, will be allocated randomly in one of the two groups present: Experimental Group (GE) - IASTM in the neck and Control Group (CG) - Manual myofascial release in the neck region. A blinded evaluator will be assigned to conduct the evaluation process for both groups. DESPECTS: The outcomes will be neck pain, neck disability and range of motion of the neck.

Unknown status19 enrollment criteria

Whole Body Hyperthermia Registry Study

DepressionAnxiety3 more

This protocol will allow for the implementation of a research registry pertaining to Whole Body Hyperthermia (WBH) use in various subject populations. The primary objective of the proposed study is to determine if WBH can have beneficial effects in various subject populations currently experiencing numerous other comorbidities, and the duration of the effect(s). This protocol is intended to become a secondary resort for individual's interested in receiving a Hyperthermia treatment for potential beneficial gain related to symptoms stemming from comorbidities other than depression (i.e. Fibromyalgia, Perimenopausal symptoms, arthritis, etc). Due to the fact that no external research funding has been acquired for this broad application this protocol is intended to charge a fee for cost covering purposes only. The registry trial will not be limited to only include individuals with major depressive disorder, however, this protocol will allow for an expanded use in all populations (while still excluding subjects based on safety parameters). We will monitor subject's physiological and clinical outcomes (if applicable) from a single Whole Body Hyperthermia treatment in an open fashion (no placebo/control condition). This registry study will include safety assessments 5 days prior to WBH, the day of WBH and 1 week following WBH.

Terminated17 enrollment criteria
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