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NCT05686772
The aims of this propsective cohort study are to get a better understanding of the association between problem gambling and psychotic disorders among young adults with first-episode psychosis. The main questions to be answered are: 1. What is the incidence of problem gambling in this population? 2. What are the predictors of problem gambling in this population? To do so, putative predictors of problem gambling will be analyzed using Cox regression models: * Sociodemographics (e.g., age, gender identity, ethnicity, level of education, employment); * Psychiatric comorbidities (e.g., substance use disorders, cluster B personality disorders); * Antipsychotic use (first/second-generation, third-generation \[aripiprazole, brexpiprazole, cariprazine\]); * Prior gambling history.
NCT06467422
The purpose of this research is to investigate the effect of transcranial temporal interference stimulation (tTIS) targeting the dorsal anterior cingulate cortex in patients with gambling disorder.
NCT05833503
The aim of the study is to compare couple-based treatment to individual treatment (treatment as usual) for addiction (gambling or substance use disorder).
NCT06026722
Gambling is a public health risk. The wide panel of games available (poker, sport bets, scratch card games, slot machines, stock speculation …) and the advent of the Internet means that this behaviour is increasingly monitored on an epidemiological level, to the point where its pathological practice is now recognized in the DSM-5. Indeed, the scientific literature suggests a bidirectional link between use disorders and sleep disorders. Sleep deprivation is known to lead to impaired judgment (risk-taking), increased sensitivity to reward, attentional difficulties and poor emotional management. The reverse has also been demonstrated: for example, playing at night has an impact on sleep quality, particularly in terms of difficulty falling asleep, ruminations about the game and a delay in the sleep-wake phase. Sleep disorders also affect patients undergoing withdrawal and/or cessation of a substance or behavior. This established link between addictions and circadian rhythms is important, since it is suggested that patients who are more impaired in both respects are more likely to relapse and respond less well to treatment. In addictology, Behavioral and Cognitive Therapy for Insomnia (CBT-I) has proved effective in alcohol-dependent subjects in four studies. All reported a better quality of life (less depressive cognitions, better lifestyle) after CBT-I, although only one study reported a numerical reduction in consumption.The treatment of substance use disorders (AUD) remains limited : no pharmacological treatment has proved its worth, and the reference treatment remains mainly CBT. Despite the indisputable effectiveness of CBT, between 14% and 50% of patients are reported to have broken off from follow-up and care, and almost 90% of patients end up relapsing.
NCT05854706
The goal of this clinical trial is to investigate the effect of theta burst stimulation for depression and serum brain-derived neurotrophic factor (BDNF) in individuals with major depression. The main question it aims to answer is whether 10 sessions of theta burst stimulation can influence the serum level of BDNF. Participants will be randomized into active group and sham group. Researchers will compare the level of BDNF in these groups.
NCT05331612
The main objective of present project is assess the preliminary efficacy of a blended psychological intervention, by comparing the improvements in the CBT and waiting list control groups of an evidence-based treatment protocol for problems related to gambling applied in a blended format (sessions through an online protocol treatment combining with face-to-face group sessions), as well as to evaluate the opinion and acceptance of the intervention.
NCT03946098
Problem gambling (PG) is a major public health concern worldwide. As awareness of PG has risen, treatment demand is increasing, and internet interventions is a promising alternative for providing fast, evidence-based treatment at scale, to a low cost. This article presents the protocol of an open label, uncontrolled pilot and feasibility trial of a novel internet-delivered cognitive behavioral treatment, conducted in regular addiction care with adult treatment-seeking patients (max N=25) with problematic gambling. Weekly measures of gambling symptoms and gambling will serve as outcome measures. Study results will further guide the development of the intervention and its implementation into regular addiction care.
NCT03354702
Gambling Disorder (GD) is defined as the recurrent and persistent act of betting which leads to clinical impairments,. The latest edition of the Diagnostic and Statistical Manual of Mental Disorders (5th edition) conceptualizes GD as a behavioral addiction due to the similarities between GD and substance addictions in clinical presentation, association with personality factors, genetic transmission and treatment options. Previous studies found potential benefits of physical activity in treatment of addictions in general and GD in particular, such as reducing desire to play, betting and depressive and anxious symptoms.
NCT03669315
In this project the investigators propose a randomized double-blind placebo-controlled design in which 40 patients with GD will receive active or sham cTBS to the pre-SMA for 2 weeks. The investigators will combine TMS, multimodal structural and functional MRI and behavioral measures in order to identify circuit-level mechanisms of action and therapeutic targets (connectivity changes that explain clinical improvement) and assess the efficacy of TMS in modulating inhibitory control and symptom severity in this population.
NCT03497247
To compare two group psychological interventions for Gambling Disorder in terms of effectiveness and efficacy. One group is based in cognitive-behavioral therapy (TAU) and the other group is based in TAU with Mindfulness-Based Relapse Prevention (Chawla, Marlatt \& Gordon, 2011). Both interventions are composed by 14 weekly sessions, and follow-up to a month, three months, six months, one and two years.