View clinical trials related to Depressive Disorder.
Filter by:In this study efficacy and safety of deep brain stimulation of the cingulate cortex in 20 patients with treatment resistant major depression will be investigated. In addition, the stress axis, the cortical GABAergic system, neurotrophins and event-related potentials will be assessed.
The main purpose of this study is to evaluate the efficacy of saredutant 100mg once daily in combination with escitalopram 10mg once daily compared to saredutant placebo in combination with escitalopram 10mg once daily in patients with major depressive disorder. This study also includes a double-placebo group (saredutant placebo in combination with escitalopram placebo).
The primary purpose of your participation in this study is to help answer the following research question, and not to provide you treatment for your condition. Whether duloxetine once daily orally is tolerated and safe, in children (aged 7 through 11 years) and adolescents (aged 12 through 17 years) with Major Depressive Disorder.
Since antidepressants and antipsychotics have common receptorial mechanisms of action (H1 antagonism, 5HT2 antagonism), the impact of antidepressants in terms of metabolic syndromes is a matter of concern. The main objective of this study is to assess the differential impact of antidepressants in terms of weight gain and metabolic syndromes.
This study will assess whether varenicline (chantix) has antidepressant properties when used in addition to other psychiatric medication. It will also assess whether varenicline improves the inability to feel pleasure (i.e. anhedonia), and if it is well-tolerated when used with psychiatric medications. Enrolled patients will be assessed for improved mood, improved anhedonia, overall sense of health, side effects as well as tobacco use for 6-8 weeks. Medication will be provided free of charge.
To reassure the clinical study data on Seroquel antidepressant efficacy in patients who are diagnosed as bipolar depression
In this pilot study, the PI proposes to include 20 African American participants with Fibromyalgia to explore the effect of r TMS on pain and depressive symptoms.
STAND is a research study testing a way to help teens between 12-18 years of age who have symptoms of sadness or depression. The study hopes to learn if teens do better if they get five to nine counseling sessions of cognitive behavioral therapy coordinated with the support of their doctor. All teens who join the study will keep seeing their doctor as usual. Teens and a parent are interviewed briefly over the phone to see if they are appropriate for the study. If they qualify for the study, there is an hour-long interview with teen over the telephone and a 30 minute interview with the parent. The interview will include questions about the teen's mood, feelings, behavior, and how they get along with friends and family members. The parent is also asked about his or her own feelings and mood. If the teen and parent join the study, they will be interviewed six more times in the next two years. Half the teens in the study will also meet with a research counselor for five to nine individual, weekly sessions that last about 50 minutes each. Whether a teen attends the weekly counseling sessions is decided by chance, like flipping a coin. If teens are assigned to these sessions, they will learn ways to deal with stress and feel better. If teens take part in the counseling sessions, the study counselor will also talk to the teen's doctor from time to time to help plan for the best possible care.
This study seeks to adapt an existing chronic disease self-management program for people with both chronic medical illness and depression.
This study will evaluate the efficacy of 1-Hz rTMS applied to the right Dorsolateral Prefrontal Cortex (DLPFC) in patients with Panic Disorder (PD) and comorbid Major Depressive Disorder (MDD) who have not fully responded to conventional therapies. The investigators hypothesize that: 1. compared to sham (placebo), active rTMS will improve symptoms of PD and MDD as assessed with the Panic Disorder Severity Scale (PDSS), Hamilton Depression Rating Scale (HDRS), and Clinical Global Impression (CGI); 2. active (but not sham) rTMS will normalize levels of motor cortex excitability relative to pre-treatment baseline.