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Active clinical trials for "Bipolar Disorder"

Results 221-230 of 1390

Intranasal Ketamine In the Treatment of Pediatric Bipolar Disorder

Bipolar Disorder

The investigators plan to evaluate the efficacy and safety of intranasal Ketalar (ketamine hydrochloride) in the treatment of primary symptom manifestations of pediatric bipolar disorder; Fear of Harm (FOH) phenotype. This phenotype represents those children who are most resistant to traditional treatments and suffer repeated hospitalizations. Primary symptoms include fearfulness, aggression secondary to threat, mood and/or arousal instability, and psychosis. In addition to evaluation of efficacy and safety, the investigators will also analyze whether therapeutic response depends upon the degree to which the subject fits the FOH phenotype.

Terminated18 enrollment criteria

Adjunctive Isradipine for the Treatment of Bipolar Depression

Bipolar Disorder

This study investigates the medication isradipine, which is currently approved by the FDA to treat high blood pressure, in the treatment of depression in bipolar disorder. Isradipine or placebo (contains no active medication) will be used as an "add-on" to lithium, valproate, and/or atypical antipsychotics for individuals currently experiencing a major depressive episode. Our hypothesis is that isradipine will be superior to placebo in improving depressive symptoms.

Terminated23 enrollment criteria

Add-On Ramelteon in Bipolar I Disorder With Clinically Significant Sleep Disturbance

InsomniaBipolar Disorder

The purpose of this research study is to evaluate the safety and efficacy of ramelteon (Rozerem™) as an add-on treatment for sleep problems in patients with bipolar disorder. This study will determine whether or not the addition of ramelteon to ongoing medication(s) for bipolar disorder is useful in improving sleep.

Terminated17 enrollment criteria

Fluoxetine for Obsessive-Compulsive Disorder in Children and Adolescents With Bipolar Disorder

Pediatric Bipolar DisorderPediatric OCD

This will be a 12-week open-label pilot treatment study for children and adolescents (ages 6-17) who meet DSM-IV criteria for bipolar disorder (BPD) and obsessive-compulsive disorder (OCD) who are adequately mood stabilized on a stable regimen based on standard clinical care. Specific hypotheses are as follows: Hypothesis 1: Children and adolescents with comorbid OCD and BPD who have achieved adequate mood stabilization using a naturalistic clinical practice approach, will benefit from an FDA-approved selective seratonin reuptake inhibitor (SSRI) on their OCD symptoms in a clinically meaningful way without exacerbation of bipolar symptoms.

Terminated24 enrollment criteria

A Study in the Treatment of Acute Mania

Bipolar Disorder

The purpose of this study is to test the efficacy and total costs of olanzapine versus commonly used conventional antipsychotics in Sweden.

Terminated17 enrollment criteria

Escitalopram in Bipolar Depression: a Placebo-controlled Study of Acute and Maintenance Treatment...

Bipolar Disorder

Funding: An investigator-initiated trial funded by H. Lundbeck AS. Study design: Prospective, randomised, placebo-controlled parallel-group multicenter study. Aim: To investigate efficacy and side effects (especially mood switches) of escitalopram,a selective serotonin reuptake inhibitor, in the acute and maintenance treatment of bipolar depression. Hypotheses: Escitalopram, given in addition to mood stabilising medications, is significantly more efficacious, measured by response and remission rates than placebo in bipolar depression (the acute phase study). Continuation therapy with escitalopram gives significantly longer mean time to depressive relapse and fewer depressive relapses compared to placebo (the continuation study). The incidence of "mood switching" (defined as development of mixed episodes, mania, or hypomania according to DSM-IV criteria) do not differ significantly between escitalopram and placebo in either the acute or the continuation phases. Patients: In- and outpatients receiving care in the specialised psychiatric services of Western Norway. The population is intended to be representative of the patients treated for bipolar depression in ordinary specialist care. Patients must have a MADRS score of at least 20 at baseline. Patients with ongoing substance abuse or dependence, organic mental illness, and non-affective psychotic symptoms are excluded. Medication: Escitalopram 10-20 mg daily or placebo in addition to mood stabilisers. The dose of mood stabilisers must have been constant for the last six weeks prior to randomisation. Method: Phase 1 is a eight-week acute treatment trial with six clinical assessments. Patients treated with escitalopram who have not responded after eight weeks (defined by at least 50% reduction of MADRS score compared to baseline) leave the study. Placebo non-responders are treated openly with escitalopram and repeat phase 1. Responders are re-randomised to 32 weeks of maintenance treatment (phase 2). Phase 2 has nine clinical assessments. Patients who develop hypomania, mania or depressive episodes (defined as episodes meeting DSM-IV criteria for Major Depressive Episode with MADRS scores of at least 20 points) leave the study in this phase. Patients leaving the study prematurely will be offered alternative treatment.

Terminated20 enrollment criteria

FAST-A Study to Evaluate the Efficacy and Safety of Quetiapin IR in Patients With Acute Psychosis...

Psychotic DisordersSchizophrenia1 more

The purpose of this study is to compare the efficacy of quetiapine IR, following rapid titration versus conventional titration in patients with acute psychosis

Terminated8 enrollment criteria

Ziprasidone for the Treatment of Generalized Anxiety in Patients With Bipolar Disorder

Generalized Anxiety DisorderBipolar Disorder

This study proposes to examine the potential safety and efficacy of ziprasidone for patients with anxiety and bipolar disorder on anxiety outcomes, bipolar symptoms, and on measures of quality of life and resilience.

Terminated17 enrollment criteria

Pilot Study Evaluating the Safety and Efficacy of Open-Label Olanzapine

Bipolar Disorder

Inpatient Study Evaluating the Safety and Efficacy of Open-Label Olanzapine Monotherapy in Treatment Refractory Bipolar Mania: This study recruits adult subjects who are diagnosed with Bipolar I Disorder and presently experiencing an episode of mania. Patients must be willing to spend initial 7 days in the hospital to observe response to medication. Patients must be refractory (intolerant or non-responsive) to treatment with lithium and valproate or carbamazepine. Patients receive study-related care at no cost. This study is sponsored by Eli Lilly and Company.

Terminated8 enrollment criteria

Low Field Magnetic Stimulation Treatment for Bipolar Depression

Bipolar DepressionBipolar Disorder1 more

Individuals with bipolar depression who had a particular kind of brain imaging reported improved mood after the imaging. This effect may be linked to the changing magnetic fields used during these magnetic resonance imaging studies. The current studies are designed to further explore the important parameters of this effect and to clarify the degree and duration of the mood effects.

Terminated6 enrollment criteria
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