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Browse 340 clinical trials for bipolar disorder. Find studies that match your criteria and connect with research centers.
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NCT00280566
The purpose of this study is to determine if ziprasidone plus a mood stabilizer will continue to be a safe and effective treatment regimen for adults with Bipolar I Disorder (manic or mixed symptoms) after they have achieved 8 consecutive weeks of symptom improvement on the regimen.
NCT00055575
This study looks at the role of a specific brain chemical system in the mood and attention symptoms seen in major depression and bipolar disorders using functional brain imaging.
NCT01113541
The purpose of this study is to explore the impact of Ziprasidone HCl on the distribution of metabolic syndrome (MS) risk factors in a population of Bipolar patients presenting with glucose intolerance, dyslipidemia and/or elevated waist circumference associated with their current antipsychotic medication.
NCT00584961
To assess the prevalence of Metabolic Syndrome in Spanish population with Bipolar I or II Disorder. To analyse the clinical progress disease in patients with Bipolar I or II Disorder for 12 months using the assessment of the symptoms disease and the progress of metabolic and cardiovascular risk. To analyse the health status, quality of life and functioning/disability of patients.
NCT02519543
In a previous study by Dr. Calkin, the principal investigator of this study, persons with bipolar disorder and either type II diabetes or insulin resistance were found to experience more severe symptoms of bipolar illness and a lower response to treatment, compared to persons with bipolar disorder who did not have type II diabetes or insulin resistance. To further explore these findings, the investigators have developed this study to see if treating insulin resistance (using metformin, a drug used to improve the body's use of insulin) may also help improve the symptoms of bipolar illness.
NCT02738944
Background: Community Health Centers care for over 20 million rural, low income and minority Americans every year. Patients often have complex mental health problems such as Posttraumatic Stress Disorder (PTSD) and Bipolar Disorder. However, Community Health Centers located in rural areas face substantial challenges to managing these patients due to lack of onsite mental health specialists, stigma and poor geographic access to specialty mental health services in the community. As a consequence, many rural primary care providers feel obligated, yet unprepared, to manage these disorders, and many patients receive inadequate treatment and continue to struggle with their symptoms. While integrated care models and telepsychiatry referral models are both promising approaches to managing patients with complex mental health problems in rural primary care settings, there have been no studies comparing which approach is more effective for which types of patients. Objectives: The central question examined by this study is whether it is better for offsite mental health specialists to support primary care providers' treatment of patients with PTSD and Bipolar Disorder through an integrated care model or to use telemedicine technology to facilitate referrals to offsite mental health specialists. We hypothesize that patients randomized to integrated care will have better outcomes than patients randomized to referral care. Methods: 1,000 primary care patients screening positive for PTSD or Bipolar Disorder will be recruited from Community Health Centers in three states (Arkansas, Michigan and Washington) and randomized to the integrated care model or the referral model. Patient Outcomes: Telephone surveys will be administered to patients at enrollment and at 6 and 12 month follow-ups. Telephone surveys will measure access to care, therapeutic alliance with providers, patient-centeredness, patient activation, satisfaction with care, appointment attendance, medication adherence, self-reported clinical symptoms, medication side-effects, health related quality of life, and progress towards life goals. A sub-sample of patients will be invited to participate in qualitative interviews to describe their treatment experience using their own words. Likewise, primary care providers will be invited to participate in qualitative interviews to voice their perspective.
NCT04237610
Bipolar disorder (BD) represents a chronic mood disorder and one of the leading causes of disability worldwide. Complexity of its clinical presentations leads to delayed diagnosis and difficult management in routine clinical settings. Whereas distinguishing BD-I and BD-II main subtypes has a significant relevance for treatment strategy and for outcome, there are currently no clinical determinants of the BD subtype which could be used as early diagnostic predictors. * While neurobiological specificity of each BD subtype is still controversial, available evidence suggest different dopaminergic abnormalities in each subtype. Dopaminergic function is involved in decision making and reward processing which may represent useful BD subtype markers. * This study aims at assessing decision making during appetitive and punitive reinforcement learning in patients with BD I and BD II subtypes compared to healthy controls
NCT01869374
To evaluate the feasibility, tolerability and efficacy of Magnetic Seizure Therapy (MST) in elderly patients with a major depressive episode, who are randomly assigned to receive an acute course of MST or ECT. The investigators hypothesize: 1. MST and ECT will have similar antidepressant efficacy 2. MST will have less post-treatment amnesia than ECT as reflected in a primary measures of anterograde and retrograde amnesia following the acute treatment phase. 3. At follow up, MST will show a lesser degree of persisting deficit in measures of retrograde amnesia than ECT.
NCT03338673
People with serious mental illness often report difficulties with thinking skills like memory. These difficulties can make it harder to perform day-to-day activities. The purpose of this study is to test whether combining a type of non-invasive brain stimulation with computerized cognitive exercises is acceptable to participants, and whether it is helpful in improving a specific type of memory skill in people who have mental health conditions and memory deficits. This study is designed so that all participants will get both treatments: the non-invasive brain stimulation and computerized cognitive exercises. Half of the participants will start with both the brain stimulation and the cognitive exercises (dual therapy), and half will start with just the computerized exercises (monotherapy). After three weeks, participants will switch to the other condition: the people who did both treatments first will switch to just the cognitive exercises alone, and the people who started with the cognitive exercises alone will then switch to doing both the brain stimulation and cognitive exercises. Overall, participants will be in the study for about 7-8 weeks. The brain stimulation treatment involves 10 visits to the clinic over 3 weeks. The computerized cognitive exercises can be done at home, and involve 10 hours of exercises over 3 weeks. Participants will also complete paper-and-pencil assessments at the beginning, middle, and end of treatment.
NCT01396486
The purpose of this study is to a) evaluate the efficacy of omega-3 fatty acids versus inositol in the treatment of pediatric bipolar disorder, b) evaluate the efficacy of omega-3 fatty acid plus inositol in the treatment of pediatric bipolar disorder, and c) assess the side effect profile of omega-3 fatty acids plus inositol. This study will be a 12-week trial with children ages 5-12 years old with bipolar spectrum disorders.
NCT04486092
The potential effects of microbiota in bipolar disorder (BD) with microbiota-related dysfunction have not yet been explored clinically, and the integration of microbiota and pharmacometabolomic approaches can provide us the identification of the significant effects of mood stabilizers on metabolic homeostasis, treatment response, and cognitive performance. Therefore, we propose to develop the integration of the microbiota and pharmacometabolomics knowledge base about the mood stabilizer-induced metabolic abnormalities in BD patients.
NCT04469322
Many patients with depression do not respond well to medication and are diagnosed with treatment refractory depression (TRD). Sometimes medications don't work because an individual metabolizes the drugs in an atypical manner (too fast/slow). Alternatively, drugs may fail to work because the underlying sub-type of depression is not effectively targeted by a medication. This study will use genetic testing of subjects with TRD to personalize the drug treatment of depression and guide the patient to a better clinical outcome. In the guided group, the clinician will receive a pharmacogenetic report to help individually tailor medication selection for TRD patients, potentially allowing the clinician to pick more effective medications right away, and when necessary, use drug combinations that are well-tolerated and less likely to cause unwanted side effects. The control group will receive a sham genetic report and be treated according to typical standards of care. The investigators will conduct our study in a "real world" setting, with few restrictions on which TRD patients can participate. In this way, the findings may be more likely to reveal how useful genetic testing will be when applied more broadly in psychiatry.
NCT00579280
The specific aim of this study is to evaluate the efficacy, tolerability, and safety of quetiapine SR monotherapy and divalproex sodium ER monotherapy in comparison to placebo in the treatment of ambulatory bipolar disorder with co-morbid lifetime panic disorder or generalized anxiety disorder and current at least moderately severe anxiety.
NCT03207048
This study will investigate the effect of Repetitive transcranial magnetic stimulation (rTMS) on cognition and long-term clinical outcomes of bipolar patients.
NCT00566150
A 6-week outpatient, double-blind, placebo-controlled, add-on trial to investigate the effects of levetiracetam on depressive symptoms in bipolar depressed patients.
NCT03837340
A single-blinded hybrid effectiveness-implementation trial (Type II), that both evaluates the intervention outcomes (clinical and service use outcomes) through patient-randomization in the implementation sites, as well as evaluates the implementation strategy chosen for the intervention and its impact on implementation outcomes (e.g. adoption, fidelity, acceptability and maintenance (continued implementation) of the intervention).
NCT04034147
Metacognitive abilities have been scarcely investigated in bipolar disorders, with inconsistent results. This may appear somewhat surprising, as metacognitive training is a very promising intervention aiming at improving psychosocial functioning in bipolar disorders. One way to investigate metacognition is to address the discrepancy between objectively measured cognition (through neuropsychological testing) and subjective cognition (through self-reported questionnaire investigating one's perception of cognitive functioning). Objective and subjective cognition are two fundamental determinants of functioning in bipolar disorder. Objectively-measured cognition is directly associated with performance-based functional capacity but not with self-reported or interview-based functional capacity. In contrast, subjectively-measured cognition is associated with self-reported and interview-based functional capacity, but not performance-based functional capacity. Associations between subjective cognitive functioning and neuropsychological performances are usually weak, with a moderating effect of manic and depressive symptoms. Manic symptoms are associated with a decrease in cognitive complains, whereas depressive symptoms are associated with an increase in cognitive complaints. Predictors of the discrepancy between objective and subjective cognition in bipolar disorder are still weakly understood. One study reported that the subjective overestimation of cognitive dysfunctioning was positively predicted by more subsyndromal depressive and manic symptoms, hospitalizations, and BD type II. This study also reported that the subjective overestimation of cognitive dysfunctioning was associated with greater socio-occupational difficulties, more perceived stress, and lower quality of life. However, these previous studies had relatively limited sample sizes (below 150). They also ignored other potential predictors of the discrepancy between objective and subjective cognitions such as psychotic features, impulsiveness, and childhood trauma. Moreover, they also ignored whether this discrepancy was associated with medication adherence. The present study intends to explore the predictors of the discrepancy between objective and subjective cognition in bipolar disorder in a cross-sectional sample of 387 stable outpatients with bipolar disorders (type 1, type 2, not otherwise specified). The second objective is to determine whether the discrepancy between objective and subjective cognition in bipolar disorder predicts functioning, quality of life and medication adherence.
NCT00690859
Observational, prospective (1 year follow up), multicenter, non-interventional open label study in order to assess the factors that predict onset of mood disorders episodes (depression, mania, hypomania and mixed) in stabilized patients with bipolar disorder I or II in Spain. Other objectives are 1. to describe the clinical course of illness in a cohort of patients with TB I or II: duration, severity, polarity and seasonality 2. to describe clinical and functional situation of patients during the different phases, evaluating prognostic meaning of subsyndromal symptoms 3. to evaluate the economical impact on health service of these patients (hospitalization, primary care, treatments…). Target population is ambulatory bipolar I and II patients, clinically stabilized for at least the two months prior to recruitment and who had at least one acute episode (depressive, manic, hypomanic or mixed) within the year prior to recruitment. The primary endpoint is the onset of mood disorders episodes (depression, mania, hypomania and mixed) during the follow-up period and evaluation of which factors predict onset of mood episodes
NCT02448108
The investigators will conduct a small pilot study to test the feasibility and acceptability of treating bipolar disorder (BP) in primary care with online psychotherapy delivered both with and without telephone, text, and email support from a clinical helper (CH). The ultimate goal of this work is to provide preliminary data needed to design a larger scale effectiveness study of online psychotherapy for treating BP in primary care.
NCT01973478
Major depressive disorders are real public health issues in terms of diagnosis and treatment. Some forms of depression are chronic and resistant to treatment (TRD). In these forms suicide risk is important. Patients with TRD are potential candidates for neurosurgical interventions to treat depression. However, psychosurgery interventions based upon lesions, showed their limitations related to 1. the large variability in neurosurgical gestures, 2. their side effects, and of course 3. the irreversible damage caused by the surgery. Thus, deep brain stimulation (DBS) could represent an opportunity for patients suffering from TRD. Our preliminary study based upon the stimulation of the accumbens nucleus showed encouraging results. The investigators have thus planned a randomized controlled trial versus sham stimulation to confirm the therapeutic value of nucleus accumbens DBS.