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Showing 1-20 of 25 trials
NCT07395453
This observational, cross-sectional case-control study evaluates obsessive-compulsive symptoms among adults with substance use disorder compared with a demographically similar control group without substance use disorder. Patients aged 18-50 years attending the addiction management inpatient and outpatient services at Assiut University Hospital, and healthy controls recruited from relatives, friends, and hospital staff, will complete structured clinical interviews, the Yale-Brown Obsessive-Compulsive Scale, and other standardized scales for psychiatric symptoms, cognition, and quality of life. The main objective is to estimate the prevalence and severity of obsessive-compulsive symptoms in substance use disorder and examine their associations with sociodemographic and clinical factors, addiction severity, and quality of life in the recovery stage.
NCT03184454
This study involves the use of the Medtronic PC+S deep brain stimulation for the treatment of intractable OCD.
NCT07011901
Psychiatric disorders characterized by compulsivity, such as obsessive-compulsive disorder (OCD), result in considerable functional impairment and many individuals do not respond to gold-standard treatments. Compulsivity has long been thought to occur due to exaggerated habits and reduced goal-directed control, although more recently, this conceptualization of compulsivity as an imbalance of two cognitive systems has been challenged as overly narrow. This study will recruit 100 individuals (50 adults diagnosed with OCD, 50 healthy controls) and leverage the measurement precision offered by theory-driven computational modeling in combination with electroencephalogram (EEG) to go beyond this binary theory of compulsivity, revealing how more complex interactions of neurocognitive subcomponents contribute to compulsivity-information that could ultimately lead to improved treatment personalization and clinical outcomes.
NCT06763081
The purpose of this study is to identify and validate a panel of genetic markers associated with selective serotonin reuptake inhibitors (SSRI)-induced behavioural activation in children and youth with major depressive disorder (MDD), anxiety disorders, or obsessive-compulsive disorder (OCD) that could be used clinically to reduce the incidence of this adverse event and improve health outcomes.
NCT06956157
This is a randomized, double-blind, placebo-controlled study investigating N-acetylcysteine (NAC) as an augmentation therapy for individuals with treatment-resistant obsessive-compulsive disorder (TR-OCD), studied within a broader cohort of treatment-resistant Obsessive-Compulsive and Related Disorders (OCRDs). The study's primary aim is to investigate the neurobiological mechanism by which NAC improves inhibitory control deficits in TR-OCD. This is achieved by using Magnetic Resonance Spectroscopy (MRS) to measure changes in thalamic glutamatergic metabolism. A secondary aim is to assess the clinical efficacy of this augmentation strategy on symptom severity. The central hypothesis is that improvements in inhibitory control are mediated by NAC-induced changes in brain glutamate levels.
NCT06983301
Obsessive-Compulsive Disorder (OCD) is a common and often disabling condition in young people, characterised by distressing, intrusive thoughts, images or urges, and repetitive behaviours intended to reduce discomfort or prevent harm. Around 1% of adolescents in the UK experience OCD, with many cases beginning in childhood or adolescence. Cognitive Behavioural Therapy (CBT) is the recommended treatment for OCD in young people, but access to treatment is limited due to high demand, long waiting lists, and lack of trained clinicians. A brief form of CBT for OCD, supported by workbooks, has previously shown promising results in research settings. However, it remains unclear whether this approach is feasible, acceptable, and effective when delivered within routine NHS child and adolescent mental health services (CAMHS), especially for young people with co-occurring autism. This single-arm feasibility trial aims to explore whether brief CBT can be delivered effectively in routine NHS and NHS-commissioned services to young people aged 11-18 years with OCD as their main presenting problem. The trial will also assess whether the intervention is acceptable to young people, their parents/carers, and clinicians, and whether outcomes are comparable to existing evidence. Intervention Overview: The brief CBT intervention consists of five core sessions, with the option of two additional booster sessions, delivered over 24 weeks. Sessions are delivered face-to-face by trained clinicians and last between 60 to 90 minutes. The intervention is supported by a series of co-designed workbooks to be completed by the young person between sessions. Parents/carers are also provided with a workbook and encouraged to support the young person's progress where appropriate. Sessions may take place in the clinic or in other agreed settings, such as at home or school. The frequency of sessions decreases over time, with the first four sessions delivered weekly and later sessions spaced further apart. The intervention includes psychoeducation, developing a cognitive-behavioural understanding of OCD, goal setting, and techniques to support motivation and engagement. A key focus is helping young people develop cognitive flexibility by testing and challenging unhelpful beliefs that drive OCD behaviours, supported by behavioural experiments. Parents/carers and other adults in the young person's life may also be involved to help generalise learning and promote progress. Trial Aims: The trial has two primary aims: To establish whether brief CBT for OCD can be delivered with fidelity and acceptability by clinicians in NHS services, and is acceptable to young people and their families. To explore whether the intervention is associated with significant improvements in OCD symptoms for young people, including those with autism or high levels of autistic traits. Trial Design: The study is a single-arm feasibility trial. Between 20-30 young people aged 11-18 years will be recruited alongside their parents/carers. Approximately 8-10 clinicians will be trained to deliver the intervention. OCD symptoms, treatment processes, and acceptability will be assessed at baseline, post-treatment (12 weeks), and at 3-month follow-up (24 weeks). Additional measures will be collected before each therapy session. Qualitative interviews will be conducted with young people, parents/carers, and clinicians to understand their experiences of the intervention. Acceptability will also be measured using standardised questionnaires completed during and after treatment. Outcomes: The primary outcomes are feasibility and acceptability of the intervention, assessed through session attendance, participant engagement, clinician adherence, and feedback from young people, parents/carers, and clinicians. Secondary outcomes include changes in OCD symptoms, responsibility beliefs, family accommodation, and overall functioning, as well as measures of anxiety and depression. Data will be analysed to assess changes from baseline to post-treatment and follow-up, including for young people with and without autistic traits. Treatment adherence and clinician competence will also be evaluated.
NCT00216294
The purpose of this study is to determine the safety and tolerability of RG1068 (Synthetic Human Secretin) when administered three times weekly to outpatients with obsessive compulsive disorder (OCD), to determine the impact of multiple subcutaneous injections of RG1068 on the symptoms of OCD, as measured by changes in clinical scales, and to evaluate the effect of RG1068 on OCD patients' anxiety, quality of life, and depression.
NCT01794156
Obsessional compulsive disorder (OCD) is a very debilitating psychiatric problem which affects around one million Canadians and their families. Obsessions are intense preoccupations about bad, harmful, dangerous, shocking or unlucky events which 'may' occur and which drive sufferers to perform time consuming and distressing compulsive rituals to prevent the possible event occurring. The current psychological treatment of choice is cognitive behavior (CBT) therapy which focuses on treating OCD by reducing obsessional anxiety about the likelihood and the consequences of the preoccupying event. A rival cognitive model termed the inference-based therapy (IBT), developed by the principal investigator and co-workers, considers that the OCD begins with the initial doubting inference 'maybe something is wrong' and focuses on changing the reasoning behind this doubting inference which often trumps the common sense conviction that there is no reason to doubt. This clinical trial randomly allocates participants to either IBT or CBT treatment condition or to a third generic mindfulness condition. The latter condition is a non-specific meditational-based training which has shown evidence of reducing stress and anxiety across a number of psychiatric problems including OCD. Two hundred and forty people will be recruited over a 5-year period from two principal sites (Montreal and Gatineau/Ottawa) with which the principal investigator and co-investigators have clinical links. Therapy will be administered by trained professionals following a treatment manual specific to each approach. The therapy will last a maximum of six months or until the point when the person achieves a non-clinical status. The patients will be assessed pre, post, and at six months following treatment on standard evaluation instruments as well as on subjective measures. We expect the IBT to be superior in terms of number of participants responding to treatment, rapidity of improvement and gains at follow-up.
NCT01695291
This study will examine the feasibility and potential efficacy of augmenting SRIs with minocycline. The study will assess whether the addition of minocycline leads to measurable changes in striatal glutamate (Glu) levels. This study will recruit up to 45 youth ages 8-20 diagnosed with clinically significant OCD who have demonstrated no more than minimal response to SRI treatment and are currently on a stable dose of SRI medication for at least 12 weeks. Participants will be randomized to receive either 12 weeks of minocycline treatment or pill placebo. Randomization will be 2:1 so that 2 of 3 participants receive minocycline. Screening for eligibility will take place for 1-4 weeks. Participants will undergo magnetic resonance spectroscopy (MRS) scans to measure striatal Glu levels prior to randomization, and again immediately following the treatment period. During the treatment period, participants will meet initially weekly and then every other week with the study psychiatrist. All participants will be offered three months of open medication treatment following participation. The clinical trial will only be conducted at the New York State Psychiatric Institute (NYSPI) and the MRS scans may be conducted at Weill Cornell Medical Center or NYSPI.
NCT01348529
The main aim of this study is to test whether cognitive behavior therapy could be effective in treating obsessive compulsive disorder. Here, the investigators test the in group effects of a 15 week long treatment delivered via the Internet for residents in Stockholm County.
NCT01933919
The objective of the first phase of this study is to evaluate the efficacy of fluvoxamine compared to placebo on change in total score of Japanese version of the Children's Yale-Brown Obsessive Compulsive Scale (JCY-BOCS) 10-item from baseline to the last observation visit (10 weeks) in pediatric/adolescent participants with obsessive compulsive disorder (OCD). The objective of the second phase of the study is to evaluate the long-term safety and efficacy of fluvoxamine in pediatric/adolescent patients with OCD.
NCT00466609
This will be a controlled, randomized, double-blind and double-dummy study on the treatment augmentation strategy for obsessive compulsive disorder patients non-respondent to first line pharmacological treatment. The investigators will compare: fluoxetine maintenance at maximum dosage for additional 12 weeks; the association of fluoxetine with quetiapine; and the association of fluoxetine with clomipramine.
NCT01849809
A research study of the effectiveness and safety of gamma knife ventral capsulotomy in patients with severe intractable obsessive-compulsive disorder (OCD).
NCT02616341
The overall aim of this study is to determine modifications to Exposure and Response Prevention (ERP) therapy that are needed in order to effectively deliver treatment for Obsessive Compulsive Disorder (OCD) in a community mental health center. This study is the final study in a series of three projects executed to adapt and pilot-test a team ERP (T-ERP) intervention that will optimize therapist time by utilizing paraprofessionals to assist with group-ERP treatment plans. The intervention will be tailored to meet the unique needs of low-SES individuals with OCD and be implemented in a community mental health center (CMHC).
NCT00004550
The purpose of this study is to better understand the long-term progress of people with obsessive-compulsive disorder (OCD) and related conditions such as anorexia nervosa, Tourette syndrome, and trichotillomania. This study involves the screening and follow-up of individuals with OCD and OCD-related disorders. Participants will be screened with a medical and psychiatric evaluation, questionnaires, and neurological testing. Participants will then have study visits every 4 to 12 weeks to undergo symptom and daily functioning evaluations, personality tests, blood and urine tests, memory tests, brain scans, and other clinical exams. Participants will be assessed with interviews and paper-and-pencil or computer-assisted tests. Participants may have the opportunity to participate in drug studies and to join a monthly OCD support group. At the end of the study, participants will be referred to community or private treatment centers.
NCT02656784
This is a sample made up of ninety-six adult individuals of both sexes to be divided into three groups: the experimental group of thirty-two patients with OCD who will be undergone Trial-Based Cognitive Therapy; the gold standard, with thirty-two people with OCD subject Exposure and Response Prevention and the control group of thirty-two healthy individuals. Interviews and therapeutic intervention occur in private practices researchers or medical schools accredited by UESPI. Experimental group: Will be eligible adults of both sexes with educational level equal to or higher education complete primary, aged between 18 and 60 years with OCD diagnosis confirmed according to criteria DSM-IV (APA, 1994). It is going to be excluded patients who had previously undergone treatment behavioral psychotherapy or cognitive-behavioral approach.
NCT01708226
Pediatric Obsessive Compulsive Disorder (OCD) is a chronic, impairing condition that accrues significant concurrent and long-term risk to affected youth. Although empirically supported psychosocial and pharmacological treatments for OCD exist, many children and their families are not able to adequately access these treatments or derive only partial benefit from them. Such findings highlight the importance of developing more effective treatment options which have the potential to be widely accessible to OCD youth. The investigators are proposing to test a computerized attention modification program, AMP, in six youth with OCD in an open case series to gather information regarding protocol acceptability, feasibility and preliminary efficacy. This phase includes the development and refinement of stimuli selection procedures, behavior avoidance task, EEG protocol, and AMP parameters for use with children. Following ascertainment of study eligibility, participants will undergo a baseline assessment consisting of a clinical interview, neurocognitive assessments, EEG, attention bias assessment, and self report questionnaires. Study participants will then receive 12 sessions of AMP treatment over the course of three weeks. All youngsters and their families will be reassessed at treatment endpoint (week 4). Participation will take a total of about 24 hours over the course of six weeks. Participants who are treatment responders may be asked to return approximately 3 months after completing treatment for a follow-up assessment. Preliminary hypotheses: 1) AMP will be acceptable to youth and families and feasible to administer; 2) Youth receiving AMP will demonstrate decreases in threat bias and OCD symptom severity.
NCT02196090
Obsessive Compulsive Disorder (OCD) is a condition associated with recurrent intrusive distressing thoughts, images and urges compelling the person to perform neutralizing acts or thoughts to the extent of significantly interfering with their daily activities. The symptoms of OCD are associated with both subjective and objective signs of distress. Treatment for Obsessive Compulsive Disorder is often associated with significant subjective distress with high dropout rates and often only limited improvement. Attempts to reduce distress in anxiety often focus on re-establishing the sympathovagal balance by enhancing the vagal or parasympathetic tone and it has been suggested that this can reduce the mobilization behaviours of fight or flight response and improve emotion regulation. This study will investigate the effect of a procedure potentially reducing distress and improving outcome of treatment in inpatients admitted for treatment for OCD to the Anxiety Disorders Residential Unit. The procedure will be based on increasing vagal tone by application of cold face mask on 3 consecutive days in addition to the standard Exposure and Response Prevention therapy (ERP).
NCT02511392
Objectives.-Repetitive transcranial magnetic stimulation (rTMS) is a non-invasive stimulation methods that became widely used as therapeutic tools in neuropsychiatric research. The aim of this study is to Evaluate the therapeutic impact of different frequencies of repetitive transcranial stimulation (1HZ, 10HZ) in OCD patients. Material and Methods; Forty five patients of OCD were participated in the study. All patients fulfilled the diagnostic criteria of DSM-IV-TR. The mean age of the patients was 27.1+4.5 years. Each patient was subjected to the following: Yale-Brown obsessive compulsive scale (Y-BOCS), Hamilton Anxiety Rating Scale (HAM-A), and Clinical Global Impression - Severity scale (CGI-S). The patients were randomly classified into three equal groups using closed envelop: 1st group received 1 Hz rTMS at 100% of the RMT, 2nd group received 10 Hz rTMS with intensity of 100% of the RMT and 3rd group was sham group received the sham stimulation with a total 2000 pulses every day for each group for 10 sessions. Follow up of the patients using the same previous scales after the end of sessions and 3 months later.
NCT01172873
This is a single site, open-label, feasibility study of cognitive behavioral therapy with exposure and response prevention (CBT/ERP) adding the augmentation of D-cycloserine (DCS) for adolescents ages 12-17 with Obsessive Compulsive Disorder (OCD) who are partial or non-responders to first line treatments of CBT or pharmacotherapy.