View clinical trials related to Depressive Disorder.
Filter by:In the middle of this century, coronary heart disease (CHD) is the most common cause of death in the United States. Chinese health service survey showed that about 1000,0000 ~ 320,000 people were suffering from CHD in the mainland of China in 2008. The high mortality and morbidity of CHD will aggravate the psychological burden of patients, such as depression. Depression is the most psychological problem in CHD patients. The incidence of depression in Chinese population was in the range of 4%~6%, while it was as high as 14%~17% in patients with CHD. Depression not only affects the patients' illness, but also reducing their quality of life, the compliance of drugs and lifestyle. In addition, depression is a major risk factor for the mortality and morbidity of cardiovascular disease. Therefore, it's urgently needed to screen and treat the depression of patients with CHD. At present, the treatment of depression in patients with CHD mainly includes antidepressant, cognitive behavioral therapy, psychological counseling, knowledge education, relaxation therapy and so on. However, the medicine would yield side - effect. Furthermore, the content of psychological interventions are not systematic and dynamic. Moreover, patients' depressive level varies in different periods, the traditional psychological intervention just focused on the ultimate psychological benefits, and cannot analyze some factors and staged results in the process of psycho-behavioral change. Thus, an dynamic and effective intervention to alleviate depression in patients with CHD is imperative.
Introduction: Major depression is a highly prevalent pathology that is currently the second most common cause of disease-induced disability in our society. The onset and continuation of depression may be related to a wide variety of biological and psychosocial factors, many of which are linked to different lifestyle aspects. Therefore, health systems must design and implement health promotion and lifestyle modification programs, taking into account personal factors and facilitators. The main objective of this work is to analyze the utility and cost-effectiveness of an adjunctive treatment program for subclinical, mild or moderate depression in Primary Care patients, based on healthier lifestyle recommendations. Secondary objectives include the analysis of the effectiveness of the intervention in comorbid chronic pathology and the measurement of the influence of personal factors on lifestyle modification. Methods and analysis: A randomized, multicenter pragmatic clinical trial with 3 parallel groups consisting of primary healthcare patients suffering from subclinical, mild or moderate depression. The following interventions will be used: 1. Usual antidepressant treatment with psychological advice and/or psychotropic drugs prescribed by the General Practitioner (treatment-as-usual, TAU). 2. TAU + Lifestyle Modification Program (LMP). A program to be imparted in 6 weekly 90-minute group sessions, intended to improve the following aspects: behavioral activation + daily physical activity + adherence to the Mediterranean diet pattern + sleep hygiene + careful exposure to sunlight. 3. TAU + LMP + ICTs: healthy lifestyle recommendations (TAU+LMP intervention) + monitoring using ICTs (a wearable smartwatch). The primary outcome will be the depressive symptomatology and the secondary outcomes will be the quality of life, the use of health and social resources, personal variables related to program adherence (patient activation in their own health, self-efficacy, sense of coherence, health literacy and procrastination) and chronic comorbid pathology. Data will be collected before and after the intervention, with 6- and 12-month follow-ups.
Background: Major depression disorder is a common psychological disease. It is the second-ranked cause of disability worldwide. The pathophysiology is not yet understood. The main theory is monoaminergic theory based on the effect of monoaminergic drugs. Current treatment includes psychotherapy, medication and electroconvulsive therapy. The onset of action for antidepressant is often slow, therefore strategies to improve the outcome are important. Bright light therapy has been found to be effective in reducing the severity of depression not only in seasonal affective disorder but also in other affective disorder. Previous meta-analyses of light therapy for non-seasonal major depression, however, has yielded conflicting evidence for efficacy. Purpose: 1. To investigate possible imaging biomarkers of major depression disorder 2. To evaluate the effect of light therapy on depression Materials and Methods: This prospective study will recruit 100 patients, randomized into 2 study groups: (1) antidepressant plus treatment light, and (2) antidepressant plus placebo light. All patients will accept a thorough psychological evaluation (including Hamilton Depression Rating Scale, Montgomery-Asberg Depression Rating Scale, Clinical Global Impression-Severity and Patient Health Questionnaire-9 items) at baseline and at the 1st, 2nd, 4th, 8th week during the 8-week experiment intervention, by a blind assessor. Morningness- Eveningness Questionnaire-Self-Assessment Version (MEQ-SA) was only evaluated at baseline. Adverse events were evaluated at baseline, 2nd,4th,8th weeks. MRI study will be arranged at baseline and in 4-week experiment. Predicted Results and Influence: 1. To evaluate the additional effect of the treatment light on depression disorder 2. To compare the difference of functional magnetic resonance imaging(fMRI), structural MRI among the two groups and between the patients with and without treatment effect in order to detect imaging biomarkers.
The primary aims of this study are to investigate the efficacy of L DLPFC accelerated TMS (aTMS) in patients with depression in Singapore and to assess the whether a 1-week course of treatment is as effective as a 4-week course of non-accelerated treatment and if additional aTMS or different aTMS treatments will be more efficacious in non-responders to initial aTMS treatment.
Completing evidence-based treatments for depression has been shown to be particularly problematic for Black adolescents. If Black adolescents' depression treatment needs are to be met, the engagement challenges and the factors that lessen the success of treatment in the "real world" must be addressed. The investigators will examine the effectiveness of the Making Connections Intervention (MCI) and investigate key mediators of both engagement and response to treatment for depression. The MCI is a 1-2 session, evidence-based intervention designed to improve engagement, perceived relevance, and treatment satisfaction among depressed, Black adolescents. The study also uses tailored outreach strategies for adolescents and parents by including innovative digital content such as a web page/app along with other digital products. This study will address an important public health issue: How best to connect Black adolescents with depression to treatment in clinically meaningful ways, and how best to deliver evidence-based treatment to them through school-based services.
Specific Aims/Study Objectives: 1. Evaluate acceptability and implementation of the "Oh Happy Day: Still I Rise Class," which comprise a one-time 4-hour class in which participants will learn about depression with the goal of increasing knowledge of depression and self-management of depression with use of a guided class and self-help workbook. Measures of acceptability will include class attendance, completion of workbook activities and satisfaction. Measures of implementation will include satisfaction, class enrollment, fidelity in delivery of class content, and cost analysis. 2) Evaluate participants' knowledge of depression pre-and immediate post-class, and 3-months post class. Measure: depression quiz. The investigators hypothesize participants will show increased knowledge of depression pre -and post-class. 3) Examine effectiveness of the Oh Happy Day Class- Still I Rise (OHDC-SIR) in prevention of depression and 3- months' post- class. Measure, Patient Health Questionnaire - ( PHQ-9) 4) Examine effectiveness of OHDC-SIR in reducing symptoms of depression 3- months' post- class. Measure, PHQ-9. The investigators hypothesize the OHDC-SIR will result in reduction in depressive symptoms 3- months' post-class.
Transcranial magnetic stimulation (rTMS) is an approved treatment for depression. The purpose of this study is to test an adjunctive medication, D-cycloserine, in rTMS for depression using a placebo-controlled design. D-Cycloserine is a partial N-Methyl-D-Aspartate receptor (NMDAr) agonist, and therefore may enhance the effects of rTMS, however there is data to support and refute this hypothesis. Using a double-blind design, the investigators will randomize patients with Major Depressive Disorder to receive either daily low dose D-cycloserine or placebo in conjunction with rTMS to the left dorsolateral prefrontal cortex. After 10 treatments (2 weeks), this double-blind period will conclude and all participants will receive an additional 10 treatments (2 weeks) of rTMS without any adjuncts. The primary outcome will be improvement in clinician rated depressive symptoms at the conclusion of the study.
This study aims at investigating the persistence of antidepressant effect of Nitrous Oxide (N2O) for Treatment-Resistant Depression(TRD). The investigators also aim to assess the effect of N2O on the electroencephalograph, multimodal magnetic resonance imaging(MRI), blood cytokines, feces bacteria flora and neuropsychological performance in patients with TRD. The investigators further aim to identify the predictors of N2O's antidepressant effeect using the above techniques.
Patients and providers need effective tools to help promote adherence to newly prescribed medications for depression and to determine if this medication is improving depressed mood. This study will test an intervention that uses 1) VA's text messaging program called Annie to help patient's engage in self-management when starting a new medication for depression and 2) My HealtheVet, VA's patient portal, for education and communication with their VA health care team. The goals of this intervention are to improve adherence to depression medication and depressive symptoms in Veterans.
Prenatal depression is an important risk factor of postpartum depression. Low-dose ketamine has been used for depression treatment. As a stereoisomer of ketamine, s-ketamine has similar effects to ketamine in anti-depression. We speculate that, for pregnant women with prenatal depression, low-dose s-ketamine infusion after childbirth may reduce the incidence of postpartum depression.