View clinical trials related to Depression.
Filter by:The investigators hypothesized that during the 9-week course of Engage & Connect treatment there will be an increase in brain functions of the Positive Valence System which in turn will lead to reduction in suicidality.
The goal of this randomized controlled trial is to address which treatment strategy (continue right unilateral (RUL) ECT or switch to bitemporal (BT) ECT speeds up recovery and has the least impact on memory function, in case of early non-response during an acute course of ECT for difficult-to-treat depression. The main questions it aims to answer are: - Assess the antidepressant efficacy and cognitive impact of the continuation of an ongoing treatment with RUL ECT compared to switching the treatment technique to BT ECT, in patients failing to show an early response to an acute course of ECT for major depression; - Assess group and subject-specific trajectories of depressive symptom severity and neurocognitive performance during the acute ECT course and up to 3 months post-treatment. Participants treated with ECT for depression, showing no 'response' (≥50 percent decrease in depressive symptom severity compared to baseline) after 4 treatment sessions, will be randomized to either switch to BT ECT or continue with RUL ECT. Mood and neurocognitive assessments will be performed at baseline, after 4 ECT sessions (before randomization), after 8 ECT sessions, at the end of the acute course and 3 month after the acute course.
Depression is a major psychiatric illness associated with significant morbidity and mortality. Electroconvulsive therapy (ECT) is the most effective treatment for depression and arguably the safest. However, a sizable proportion of patients (20%-30%) do not get well with ECT. Typically, ECT is given as a course extending over weeks and then discontinued. Approximately 50% of patients become unwell again in one year after the completion of ECT even when they use antidepressant medications. Moreover, ECT brings recovery after a series of treatment sessions, usually with a range of 6-20. Each ECT session poses logistic issues. Lithium has robust antidepressant effect when used with antidepressant medications. A combination of lithium and ECT has been studied previously in mania and found to be safe at a lithium level in the human body below 0.6 mEq/L. There is a gap in the literature about the use of lithium and ECT combination in depression. This pilot study aims to investigate the feasibility and safety of conducting a randomized controlled trial comparing lithium and ECT against placebo and ECT. Participants will have either placebo and ECT or lithium ECT at an equal probability. They will be approached for an expression of interest, invited to take part in a consenting session, screened for the eligibility for the study, and assessed for the severity of depression, and cognitive function and then for the improvement in depression. Lithium blood level will be monitored five days after commencement of lithium and each dose change. Participants will be assessed for adverse reactions after each ECT using a formal adverse monitoring report form. Recruitment numbers, trial retention and completion rates and adverse events will be reported.
The goal of this observational study is to assess the role of narcisistic personality disorder and life stressful events in conversion rate to dementia, using a three tier approach along three research lines employing subjects with dementia in retrospective assessment, and normal subjects no yet developing demetia in prospective follow up. The main question[s] it aims to answer are: - narcisistic personality disorder as risk factor for conversion to dementia - life stressful events as risk factor for conversion to dementia Participants will be assessed with a complete neurocognitive battery, brain images studies, laboratory analysis, and sociodemographic profile, including depression and comorbidities.
This study intends to use a randomized controlled clinical study to clarify the clinical efficacy of cheek acupuncture therapy in patients with moderate depressive disorder. And also to find the antidepressant mechanism of cheek acupuncture therapy on moderate depressive disorder by using resting state functional magnetic resonance imaging. The specific method is to randomly assign 126 patients with moderate depressive disorder to cheek acupuncture group, sham cheek acupuncture group and drug group, evaluate the treatment effect with HAMD-17, PSQI and HAMA, observe the improvement of cheek acupuncture on depression, anxiety and sleep quality of patients with moderate depressive disorder, and observe the changes of functional links in various brain regions of patients in each group before and after treatment through resting state functional magnetic resonance imaging technology.
The purpose of this study is to determine efficacy differences between ALTO-300 and placebo, used adjunctively to an antidepressant, related to patient characteristics.
The goal of this First-In-Human (FIH) trial is to learn about safety and PharmacoKinetics (PK) in healthy adult volunteers. The main questions it aims to answer are: - What is the safety of single ascending doses of the FluoroEthylNorMemantine (FENM)? - What is the PK profile of single ascending doses of the FENM in human? - What is the preliminary exploratory time course of Brain Disease Neurotrophic Factor (BDNF) plasmatic levels of single ascending doses of the FENM? Participants will receive one single oral dose of FENM.
The goal of this clinical trial is to test if a culturally sensitive mobile health application (Relax, Reflect, Empower-RRE) is feasible and effective in promoting psychological wellbeing and reducing depressive symptoms among Chinese American adolescents (CAA). We will conduct a pilot study of a community sample of 110 CAAs, ages 14-18. We will use adaptive randomization to assign 55 participants to the RRE intervention for 5 days/week for 3 months and 55 to the control group who will receive a wellness check-in text message 5 days/week for 3 months. The main aims/research questions are, 1) To evaluate feasibility and acceptability of RRE. Assessments include both subjective (CAAs' perceptions of feasibility and acceptability of RRE through Mobile Application Rating Scale and open-ended questions) and objective (CAAs' frequency and duration of RRE access automatically recorded) measures. Our hypothesis is that participants in the RRE group will find RRE feasible and acceptable. 2) To investigate CAAs' changes in depressive symptoms, coping self-efficacy, and psychological wellbeing. We will compare if these changes differ in the RRE group and control group. Participants in both RRE and control groups will complete measures of outcomes (depression, coping self-efficacy, psychological wellbeing) and influencing factors (acculturative stress, experiences of discrimination, life events) at three time points: baseline, the end of the preventive intervention (the12th week), and one-month after the intervention (the16th week). Our hypothesis is that CAAs in the RRE group will exhibit lower levels of depressive symptoms and higher levels of coping self-efficacy and psychological well-being in Weeks 12 and 16 than the baseline. Additionally, CAAs in the RRE group will exhibit greater improvement than the control group in the outcome measures from baseline to Weeks 12 and 16.
Considering physical and psychological problems that threaten women during the menopausal period, it seems that therapies that can help women cope with these problems, especially psychological ones, will be useful. The community mental health nurse is usually the first health professional whom women rely on to relieve their menopause symptoms. It is essential for the primary health care nurse to know how to properly approach women at this stage of their life and how to provide them the best and safe treatment. Because only limited interventional studies have been done to manage insomnia and depression among menopausal women in Egypt, the present study focused on reducing and insomnia and depression of menopausal women by using group Cognitive behavioral therapy. The current study aimed to examine the efficiency of group Cognitive Behavioral Therapy for insomnia and depression among menopausal women.
The goal of this clinical trial is to evaluate the effectiveness of the online 6-weeks Mindfulness-Based Cognitive Therapy (iMBCT) in depressed sample and compare the guided intervention to an unguided one. The main questions the study aims to answer are: - To what extent completing iMBCT will reduce the severity of depressive symptoms in mild to moderately depressed sample? - What are the differences in participants who completed the program or responded to treatment and those who discontinued it? - What are the differences in treatment effect between two active conditions (guided and unguided iMBCT) and a passive one - waiting-list group? Researchers will compare two iMBCT interventions with a waiting-list group to assess the therapeutic effects of iMBCT on depression, anxiety and other measures related to the mental health.