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NCT06549049
Sleep disturbance is a major problem in Veterans with posttraumatic stress disorder (PTSD). This study will test a version of a sleep treatment that's been shown to be effective in the general population, with some changes to tailor it to the needs of Veterans with PTSD and sleep disturbance.
NCT07277101
Sleep problems are very common in children on the autism spectrum and can worsen daytime behaviour, learning, and family stress. Many families have limited access to specialist sleep services. This study evaluates a school-based, sensory-friendly physical activity program designed to improve sleep and wellbeing in autistic children. This multicenter, parallel-group, cluster-randomized controlled trial was conducted in special education schools in China. Classrooms of children aged 7-12 years with a diagnosis of autism spectrum disorder were randomly assigned to either: (1) a teacher-led, sensory-friendly physical activity program integrated into regular physical education lessons for 16 weeks, or (2) usual school activities without the program. The intervention emphasized predictable routines, gradual warm-up, adjusted sensory input (for example, noise and light), and calming cool-down activities to support self-regulation and readiness for sleep. The primary outcomes are children's sleep parameters measured by wrist actigraphy, including sleep efficiency, sleep onset latency, sleep duration, and wake after sleep onset. Secondary outcomes include parent-reported sleep problems, children's daily moderate-to-vigorous physical activity, and caregivers' sleep quality, mental health, parenting sense of competence, and quality of life. Outcomes are assessed at baseline, immediately after the 16-week program, and 6 months after the program ends.
NCT03642028
Post-traumatic stress disorder (PTSD) is a common consequence of combat that can result in trauma-related hyperarousal and sleep disturbances. Poor sleep, one of the most common complaints in Veterans with PTSD, can be distressing, impair concentration and memory, and contribute to physical health conditions, such as metabolic syndrome, inflammation, and cardiovascular disease. The orexin neuropeptide system underlies both sleep and stress reactivity. Suvorexant, a drug that reduces orexin, improves sleep in civilians, but has not yet been tested in Veterans with PTSD. This study will test whether suvorexant can improve sleep disturbances and PTSD symptoms in Veterans. Suvorexant may benefit Veterans by improving sleep quickly while also reducing PTSD symptoms over the long term, and with fewer side effects that were common in previous medications used to treat these conditions. Improving Veterans' sleep and PTSD symptoms could lead to better emotional and physical well-being, quality of life, relationships, and functioning.
NCT05594589
The primary purpose of the study is to evaluate the treatment difference between lemborexant 5 milligram (mg) (LEM5) and placebo (PBO) on latency to persistent sleep (LPS) using polysomnography (PSG) on Day 30.
NCT06744673
The primary purpose of the study is to compare the occurrence of major congenital malformations (MCMs) among live births between women with insomnia who are exposed to Dayvigo during the 1st trimester of pregnancy and women with insomnia who are not exposed to any prescription insomnia drugs at any time during the pregnancy and to compare the occurrence of MCMs among live births between women with insomnia who are exposed to Dayvigo during the 1st trimester of pregnancy and women with insomnia who are exposed to a prescription insomnia drug other than Dayvigo during the 1st trimester of pregnancy.
NCT05965609
The aim of the proposed study is to pilot test two behavioral sleep intervention strategies for improving insomnia among night shift working nurses.
NCT04560595
The purpose of this online research study is to determine whether or not a gradual caffeine reduction program developed at Johns Hopkins can help people reduce their caffeine use. The investigators will provide materials to help guide caffeine reduction and ask questions to track caffeine use over several weeks. The investigators will also assess how reducing caffeine may benefit common caffeine-related problems such as anxiety, sleep disturbances, and gastrointestinal distress. The study will also determine whether or not people like participating in this caffeine reduction program in an online format.
NCT04549168
The primary purpose of this study is to confirm using polysomnography (PSG) that lemborexant 10 milligram (mg) is superior to placebo on objective sleep onset as assessed by latency to persistent sleep (LPS) during the last 2 nights of 1 month of treatment in participants with insomnia disorder.
NCT05000528
20 to 30% of the general population suffers from chronic insomnia. Cognitive behavioral therapy (CBT) is the first-line treatment, but unfortunately its implementation is complex. Long waiting times for a consultation / exploration, too short a consultation period, non-reimbursement of specialists and a lack of trained staff make the current care of insomniac patients difficult. Patients are thus treated late, often with heavy drug treatment, dependence on sleeping pills, difficult withdrawal and / or reactive mood disorders. The treatment is therefore limited to advice on sleep hygiene and a restriction of time spent in bed without ultimately intervening in the cognitive domain. Therapeutic education consists of empowering the patient in the management of chronic insomnia through group education workshops. The patient learns the principles of normal sleep, the way in which sleep evolves with aging, the dangers of treatments as well as the rules of sleep hygiene and the behaviors to modify to sleep well. In addition to benefiting from sharing of experience with other patients, therapeutic education makes the care pathway smoother and considerably reduces the long waiting times of the traditional care pathway in consultation. The study investigators hypothesize that therapeutic education is more effective as a treatment for chronic insomnia than traditional management in individualized consultation (IC). Thus, therapeutic education could constitute an effective alternative to CBT.
NCT06653959
This is a randomized, double-blind controlled study that recruited patients with insomnia problems after suffering a stressful event to undergo individualized transcranial magnetic stimulation
NCT05565833
This randomized controlled trial will evaluate the impact of an Internet-delivered cognitive behavioral therapy for insomnia (CBT-I) intervention on sleep and the extent to which it contributes to cognitive health in individuals with mild cognitive impairment. Participants with insomnia who meet the study criteria for mild cognitive impairment will be recruited to determine the effects of the CBT-I intervention compared to a patient education condition on sleep and cognition. Internet-based recruitment methods will be used, and outcomes include sleep variables, daytime variables, and cognitive status.
NCT06306495
Insomnia is a common, acute, intermittent, or chronic complaint of unwanted sleep difficulties characterized by sleep disturbance. Important risk factors leading to insomnia: advanced age, poor health, work stress, shift work, loss of a loved one, divorce, domestic violence, excessive anxiety, repressed personality, perfectionism, neuroticism, alcohol and substance abuse, excessive caffeine intake, excessive smoking, low socio-economic status and low physical activity level. Research shows that college students face more sleep problems than the general public. Factors that disrupt the sleep hygiene of university students; Students' excessive use of computers during lecture and exam periods, exposure to lights and screens for long periods of time, and environmental changes. The aim of this study is to determine the prevalence of insomnia in healthy individuals after the start of face-to-face education in university students after the pandemic period and to determine the physical activity associated with insomnia in this population group. Examining levels and other behavioral factors. The research was conducted on students studying at Istanbul Rumeli University, Haliç University and Yalova University between March 2022 and August 2022. It will be held online via Google Forms with students between the ages of 18-25. Study data will be collected with the International Physical Activity Survey, Demographic Data Form, Sleep Hygiene Index, Distress Tolerance Scale, and Pittsburgh Sleep Quality Index. An application will be made to obtain approval from the Haliç University Non-Interventional Clinical Research Ethics Committee. Informed consent will be obtained from people participating in the research. Statistical analysis of the data will be done with IBM SPSS 23.0 software.
NCT05778812
The purpose of this study is to investigate improvements in sleep by comparing two 6-week digital programs, either online or app-based, that deliver Cognitive Behavioral Therapy for Insomnia (CBT-I), the "gold standard" treatment for insomnia, with or without a bedside device to help track sleep.
NCT05332717
This randomized controlled trial (RCT) will compare the effects of melatonin vs. placebo in patients undergoing primary total knee arthroplasty (TKA). This RCT aims to study the effects melatonin has on sleep quality after TKA. Patients will be blinded to their respective groups and will be instructed to take either 5mg melatonin or a placebo pill (Vitamin C) for 6 weeks postoperative. Sleep quality surveys will be administered preoperatively and post-operative week 6, 90-days and 1 year. Poor sleep quality is a common issue faced by patients undergoing TKA. The goal of this study is see if melatonin can improve postoperative sleep quality, and if so, does improved sleep quality correlate to improvements in other postoperative outcomes.
NCT03843645
Major surgery can lead to postoperative disturbances in sleep patterns with subjective deterioration of sleep quality according to patients' reports as well as objective alterations of sleep architecture, as recorded by polysomnography Factors implicated in postoperative sleep disturbances include but are not limited to the severity of the surgical procedure, the neuroendocrine response to surgery, inadequate treatment of postoperative pain and external factors interfering with sleep, such as light, noise and therapeutic procedures There are no adequate data from current literature as to whether regional anesthesia is superior to general anesthesia regarding postoperative sleep quality in patients subjected to either mode of anesthesia. So, the aim of this study will be to assess the effect of two different anesthetic techniques (general versus regional) in patients subjected to similar operations Patients will be assessed with the Pittsburgh Sleep Quality Questionnaire (PSQI), regarding preoperative and long term postoperative sleep quality and sleep diaries regarding early postoperative sleep quality
NCT04598425
Insomnia is common in patients with co-morbid mental illness and sleeping difficulties is a frequent complaint in most psychological disorders. Mental illness may cause sleep problems, however, sleep problems like insomnia, may also cause or exacerbate mental illness. Insomnia may aggravate symptoms of depression, anxiety and fatigue, and reduce daily functioning in patients with co-morbid insomnia and mental illness. This project aims to evaluate a course offered to patients with insomnia and mental illness at Diakonhjemmet Hospital. The course is based on cognitive behavioral therapy, a documented treatment for insomnia.
NCT04661306
This study will identify whether - and if so, how - tailoring would increase adoption of and benefit from an interactive internet intervention for insomnia called SHUTi (Sleep Healthy Using the Internet) for cancer caregivers. Participating caregivers' sleep and sleep-related characteristics will be characterized from a baseline assessment; then, caregivers will receive complementary and voluntary access to SHUTi. Among caregivers who choose to use SHUTi, intervention use, perceived appropriateness, and effects on sleep and quality of life will be assessed. Among caregivers who choose not to use SHUTi, reasons and barriers to using the intervention will be assessed.
NCT03852966
Comorbidities, including sleep problems, are common in adult Attention Deficit Hyperactivity Disorder (ADHD). Treatment of choice for insomnia is cognitive behavioral therapy (CBT-i), but evidence is lacking for CBT-i in patients with ADHD and sleep problems. The purpose of this study was to investigate if patients at a specialist clinic for ADHD benefit from a group delivered CBT-i treatment; whether insomnia severity improves following this treatment. This pragmatic within-group pilot study with a pre to post and three-month follow-up design was set at a specialist psychiatric out-patient clinic for adult ADHD. As an adjunct to care-as-usual at the clinic, a CBT-i-based group treatment targeting sleep problems prevalent in the ADHD-population, designed for patients with executive difficulties, was offered as 10 weekly 90-minute group sessions and scheduled telephone support. All outcome measures were subjectively reported by participants. Data analyzed with dependent t-tests according to intent-to-treat.
NCT03934658
This study will provide measures of safety and efficacy of the NightWare digital therapeutic system (iPhone + Apple watch + proprietary application) for the treatment of nightmare disorder associated with post-traumatic stress disorder (PTSD)-related sleep disturbance and the impact of improved sleep with the NightWare digital therapeutic system. The investigators hypothesize that the NightWare digital therapeutic system will significantly improve sleep quality in participants with PTSD-Related nightmares and poor sleep quality.
NCT02521324
The current study is designed to evaluate the effect of device guided breathing (DGB) on sleeplessness. Healthy subjects with mild to moderate sleeplessness that wish to improve their sleep quality will be included in this study. The subjects will receive a belt type breathing sensor, download the app on their smartphone, and will be required to perform DGB at their home setting for 2 weeks after a baseline period.