Depression Clinical Trial
Official title:
The Effect of Acute Citalopram on Self-referential Emotional Processing and Social Cognition in Healthy Volunteers
This study is investigating the effect of an acute dose of citalopram on emotional processing
about the self. Using a parallel-group double-blind design, participants will be randomised
to receive either an acute dose of citalopram or placebo. Participants will then complete a
number of widely used computer-based cognitive tasks measuring emotional processing biases
towards the self.
This study has also been registered on OSF:
https://osf.io/nhjvs/?view_only=b39c49bddfd543b99b627dc992e49b45
Antidepressants are thought to operate by changing the way patients process emotional
information. After a single dose of citalopram or fluoxetine healthy volunteers have been
found to display an increased recognition of happy facial expressions and a reduced
recognition of sad faces, in the absence of changes in mood. Studies using depressed
participants have produced similar results. However, there has been comparatively little
research on changes in emotional processing biases about the self following antidepressant
administration. Sense of self has been proposed as fundamental for mental health, with
self-schemas acting as a focus through which valence and reward influenced perception, memory
and decision-making. Antidepressants may increase learning of positive information about the
self, potentially remediating negative self-schema and subsequently reducing depression
symptoms.
In this study, the investigators aim to examine whether acute administration of citalopram is
associated with an increase in positive emotional learning biases about the self. Using a
parallel-group double-blind design, participants will be randomised to receive either an
acute dose of citalopram or placebo. Participants will then complete a number of widely used
computer-based cognitive tasks measuring emotional processing biases. Identifying early
changes in cognition and behaviour following antidepressant treatment will increase our
knowledge of how antidepressants operate, and provide putative targets to identify early
response to antidepressants.
This study has also been registered on OSF:
https://osf.io/nhjvs/?view_only=b39c49bddfd543b99b627dc992e49b45
Starting from the 8th November 2019 an additional task (the Oxford Cognition Stress Task
(OCST)) was included in the test battery. This task has been developed by the
Psychopharmacology and Emotion Research Laboratory (PERL), Department of Psychiatry,
University of Oxford. This is an acute psychosocial stress induction paradigm, comprised of
computerised cognitive tasks with an induced failure component. An algorithm varies task
timing/difficulty to be just beyond participants' ability, accompanied by aversive feedback.
The OCST induces mild, transient increases in stress and arousal, as indexed by heart rate,
skin conductance, salivary cortisol and self-reported subjective state measures. Data for
this task will be collected, analysed and published by PERL and will not be included in any
publications relating to the previous registration for this study. The OCST task has been
included at the end of the test battery and is therefore not expected to influence data
relating to any self-report measures or tasks outlined in the previous registration
This section of the study has been registered separately on ClinicalTrials.gov (titled
'Citalopram and Stress Reactivity') to reflect the separate research questions and study team
involvement.
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