View clinical trials related to Depressive Disorder.
Filter by:The mission of this project is to develop novel systems of care that can provide efficacious, scalable, cost-effective, participant friendly technology assisted behavioral interventions (TABIs) for the treatment of depression in adults. The investigators define TABIs as interventions that use information and telecommunications technologies such as the internet, mobile or traditional phones, computers and/or other technologies to support and deliver psychological and behavioral interventions. Through usability testing, focus interviews, and field trials, investigators may modify the technologies and intervention based on immediate usage data. The goal of this field trial is to tailor, and test, a peer networked intervention in adults 65 years of age or older. Two versions have been created and will be tested, one with and one without an online social network. The purpose of this study is to pilot a novel intervention, examine methods to improve adherence to Internet based interventions (e.g., peer network), and ultimately, to overcome the numerous barriers to treating depression in later life.
The purpose of this study is to determine the efficacy and safety of 800 mg MSI-195 in reducing symptoms of depression in Major Depressive Disorder (MDD)patients with inadequate response to current antidepressant therapy.
The purpose of this study is to assess the effectiveness of a Relaxation Response Intervention for Depression offered to low income populations at Massachusetts General Hospital (MGH) - Chelsea, Revere and Charlestown health centers.
The purpose of this study is to determine whether the Cervel Neurotech rTMS device is safe and effective in the treatment of depression in people who do not get better with antidepressant medications or cannot take antidepressant medications.
Background: Depression in the elderly, also known as late life depression (LLD) is common and its prevalence ranges from 2 to 6% in the community. Heart Rate Variability (HRV), a physiological autonomic variable is reduced in LLD and this might have implications for cardiovascular events including death. Methods to improve HRV in LLD have not been adequately assessed. Automatic Self-Transcending Meditation (ASTM) is a simple yet powerful technique that allows the mind to become calm and peaceful. HRV biofeedback is a method of teaching individuals to voluntarily improve HRV and other physiological functions to a prescribed range.This pilot study attempts to investigate feasibility of these interventions and provide preliminary data regarding the effectiveness of these techniques. Hypothesis: ASTM and HRV biofeedback are feasible and their effectiveness for improving HRV in patients with LLD can be assessed. Methods: Participants with LLD between the ages of 66 and 80 will be randomized to either ASTM or HRV biofeedback after optimizing them on antidepressant therapy. Participants will receive training and continue practice in either of these techniques over a period of twelve weeks. HRV and secondary measures will be assessed pre and post at the end of study period. Expected Results and Significance: The investigators expect to find both techniques to be feasible treatments for those with LLD. Results from this pilot study will help to assess the potential for successful implementation of a future larger study which will evaluate the efficacy of these treatments for improving HRV.
Electroconvulsive therapy (ECT) is the most powerful antidepressant treatment available and is often life-saving. There are concerns, however, that standard bitemporal ECT (the most commonly used form of ECT worldwide) causes persisting retrograde amnesia. However, clinical trials have indicated that high-dose unilateral ECT may be as effective as bitemporal ECT but have much less cognitive side-effects. The trial aims to test the primary experimental hypothesis: High-dose (6 x ST) right unilateral ECT is as effective as (i.e. not inferior to) standard (1.5 x ST) bitemporal ECT for severe depression in terms of Hamilton Depression Rating Score (HDRS) at the end of the treatment course.
This is a randomized, controlled trial comparing telephone-cognitive behavior therapy (T-CBT) with a therapist to a "Stepped Care" intervention for depression treatment (iCBT with support from a telephone coach with the possibility of being stepped up to receiving T-CBT with a therapist).
The Pediatric Mood Disorders Program at the University of Illinois at Chicago is conducting a research study examining how mindfulness can help teenagers stay healthy and prevent depression relapse.
Internalizing psychopathologies (IPs) involving depression and anxiety are among the most prevalent, costly and disabling illnesses. Treatments for IPs are available but the extent to which individual patients respond is quite heterogeneous. Little information exists, particularly in the biological domain, which helps to explain individual differences in treatment response. IPs share similar patterns of dysfunction within the Fronto-Limbic Affect Regulation and Emotional Salience (FLARES) brain circuit, and two commonly used, 'gold standard' treatments - selective serotonin reuptake inhibitors (SSRIs) and cognitive behavioral therapies (CBTs) - are equally effective for both anxiety and depressive disorders, and appear to change brain activity in the same areas within the FLARES circuit. The overarching goal of the project is delineate what are common versus specific FLARE brain targets for SSRI and CBT and identify specific aspects of FLARE dysfunction that might better predict response to both and to a specific modality of treatment. This experiment integrates emotion and its interaction with cognition across several stages of emotional experience, encompassing studies that probe sensitivity to acute and potential threat and automatic and volitional forms of affect regulation in relation to the FLARES brain network. We will enroll 200 patients presenting to our Mood and Anxiety Disorders Program seeking treatment for disabling 'anxiety, worry, depressed mood' (IPs, including those characterized as Not Otherwise Specified) and randomize them to a 12-week course of SSRI or CBT. Dimensional, transdiagnostic negative valence systems (NVS) constructs, including FLARES function, will be measured before and after each treatment. Specifically, the project will examine 2 Specific Aims: 1) Where and how do SSRI and CBT treatments exert their effects on NVS constructs?; and 2) Which NVS construct can predict the likelihood of success from SSRI and CBT treatment? Such findings can be used to guide the right patients to the right treatments with the highest likelihood of success. They also elucidate a pathophysiologically-driven mechanistic model of where and how treatments work in the brain and thus hasten the development of new treatments that target the underlying pathophysiology across internalizing conditions.
The objective of the study was to evaluate the safety and plasma concentration changes of quetiapine after multiple oral administration of FK949E (extended-release formulation of quetiapine) in elderly patients with major depressive disorder (MDD).