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Browse 661 clinical trials for schizophrenia. Find studies that match your criteria and connect with research centers.
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NCT05893862
The primary purpose of this study to evaluate the effect of a supratherapeutic dose of 80 mg MK-8189 on the QT interval corrected for heart rate (QTc interval) and to assess the safety and tolerability of multiple once-daily doses of MK-8189 in participants with schizophrenia. The effects of 3 treatment sequences 1) MK-8189 (48 mg \[Day 1\] and 80 mg \[Day2\]); 2) standard image placebo (Day 1) and moxifloxacin 400 mg (Day 2); and 3) MK-8189 placebo (Day 1 and Day 2) were assessed with 5-day washout intervening sequence. Participants received all treatments in a counter-balanced order according to 1 of 6 possible treatment sequences. The primary hypothesis is that the administration of an 80 mg MK-8189 dose on Day 2 does not prolong the QTc interval to a clinically significant degree. Specifically, the true mean difference (MK-8189 - placebo) in QTc change from baseline is less than 10 milliseconds (msec).
NCT06936397
This study aims to determine whether Cognitive Remediation Therapy (CRT) can improve attention, memory, and emotional regulation in people with schizophrenia. CRT is a structured program that includes exercises to strengthen cognitive skills such as problem-solving, working memory, and emotion regulation. The study will recruit 60 participants: 30 individuals with schizophrenia and 30 healthy individuals of similar age and gender. Those with schizophrenia will be randomly assigned to either receive CRT or be placed on a waitlist without therapy. All participants will undergo non-invasive brain activity (EEG) and emotional response (GSR) recordings before and after the therapy. The study's main question is: Does participating in a 12-week CRT program improve brain-based markers of attention and emotional regulation in people with schizophrenia? Additional tests, such as memory and emotion recognition tasks and self-report questionnaires, will help assess changes in thinking skills and emotional well-being. The study may help better understand how CRT affects both brain function and quality of life in schizophrenia.