View clinical trials related to Depressive Disorder.
Filter by:The availability of affordable hardware and rapidly growing content that can be freely accessed in the public domain raises the possibility of VR being used across the world globally and, in a very broad range of settings, including low-income populations and middle-income countries. The goal of this study is implement a randomized control trial using a low-cost VR mindfulness intervention within older adults in Quito, Ecuador compared. The control group will only receive a check-in phone call.
This project is designed to examine the role of the subgenual anterior cingulate cortex (sgACC) in anhedonia and anxiety in humans with depression, as well as the acute and sustained effects of ketamine on agACC activation and depression symptoms.
This study will apply a comprehensive tools that integrates neuroimaging, psychological evaluation, and sleep monitoring through 18F-MPPF PET/MR, neuropsychological tests, and polysomnography (PSG) to explore the neurobiological mechanisms underlying transcranial alternating current stimulation (tACS) for depressive disorders, mainly focusing on the serotonergic system revealed by Serotonin-1A (5-HT1A) receptor.
Major depressive disorder (MDD) is a chronic mental illness, with 60% lifetime risk of recurrence after the first MDD episode. Despite available treatment options for MDD, only about half to two-thirds of patients respond to first-line antidepressant treatment, and only 30% to 45% of patients achieve remission. Scholars assume that this low remission rate and high rate of treatment resistance are due to the polyetiological nature of the disease, the heterogeneity of the clinical picture of depression, and the lack of biomarkers to stratify MDD subtypes. The aetiology of MDD, although researched extensively, remains unclear. None of the known mechanisms alone explains the pathogenesis of depression, meaning that the interplay of several factors contributes to the development of MDD. Accumulated scientific evidence has supported the importance of the immune system in the etiopathogenesis of MDD. Until now, the cause of the low-grade inflammation observed in this subgroup of MDD patients has been unclear. In the proposed study, the investigators will test a new hypothesis of the immune theory of the development of MDD: the endotoxin hypothesis of neurodegeneration. This hypothesis states that endotoxin, causes or contributes to neurodegeneration. Blood plasma levels of LPS are normally low but are elevated during infections, gut inflammation, gum disease, and neurodegenerative diseases. Dysbiosis may promote increased intestinal permeability ("leaky gut"), which leads to bacterial translocation across the intestinal barrier and into the circulation, thus forming of LPS and LPS-binding protein complex, which triggers the secretion of cytokines. Data suggest that LPS-induced peripheral inflammation can activate neuroinflammation. However, it is not known whether a low-level persistent presence of LPS in the circulatory system can cause low-grade chronic neuroinflammation leading to neurodegeneration and/or symptoms of MDD. Based on existing preclinical and clinical research data, the investigators hypothesise that an increase in blood plasma endotoxin and peripheral cytokines induce BBB dysfunction, neuroinflammation and neurodegenerative processes in specific etiologically relevant structures of the brain and cause clinical manifestation of depressive symptoms and cognitive damage. In this study the investigators are also going to investigate the effects of single nucleotide polymorphisms of four genes in relation to blood plasma endotoxin and peripheral cytokines concentrations and clinical manifestation of MDD.
The study aims to examine inter-brain synchrony between patients and therapists over the course of psychotherapy. Twenty patients will undergo a 16-session course of psychotherapy for major depressive disorder. The protocol used will be supportive-expressive psychotherapy (see Luborsky et al., 1995). Participants will also undergo Hamilton depression interviews a week before treatment, before every session and a week after treatment. functional near-infrared spectroscopy (fNIRS) imaging will be used to record brain activity during every other session (sessions 1, 3, 5, 7, 9, 11, 13, 15) as well as during interviews at baseline, on session 8 and at followup. Saliva samples will be collected during the same sessions to measure hormone and cytokine levels during the same sessions. Participants completed questionnaires before and after the study, and before and after each session. The researchers hypothesized that synchrony will gradually increase over the psychotherapy sessions, and that synchrony in the pre-treatment interview will be lower than in the post-treatment interview.
This study was planned as a randomized controlled study to determine the effects of petitgrain and ylang ylang oil applied before clinical practice on stress, anxiety and depression in midwifery students.
US residents who have obesity and sign the informed consent form and are screened and enrolled for this study. Participants who are enrolled complete a survey upon enrollment and are randomized into one of two arms. This study is direct to participant and will not utilize clinical sites.
Several studies have shown that tDCS is valuable and safe options to improve depressive symptoms in adult patients . However, regarding the tDCS to treat depression in elderly population, only few studies have been reported, and there is no consensus among them. To our knowledge, prefrontal cortex tDCS could be reasonably safe and efficient options for the treatment of several psychiatric illnesses in a population presenting resistance to and/or intolerance of pharmacotherapy . Moreover, the safety tolerability profile of tDCS is a strong argument in favour of exploring their use in the depressed population. Therefore, current study will investigate the efficacy and safety of prefrontal tDCS used as additive treatment in patients with LLD.
This study presents the development and validation of a unique Digital Experience Sampling Method (ESM) questionnaire specifically adapted for monitoring changes in the mental state of patients during psychiatric hospitalization. The questionnaire was carefully crafted through focus groups involving patients and clinical staff, ensuring its relevance and applicability to the unique characteristics of mental state changes in a hospitalization setting. To evaluate the validity of the ESM questionnaire, symptom severity trends obtained from the questionnaire will be compared with estimates derived from the Positive and Negative Syndrome Scale (PANSS) assessment. Data will be collected from 100 subjects over a 14-day psychiatric hospitalization period. In addition to the ESM questionnaire, smartwatch sensors will monitor physiological indicators. Feasibility and patient compliance will be assessed by examining patients' willingness to use the digital ESM questionnaires and the smartwatch sensors. The study will also cross-reference self-reported sleep quality and activity levels captured in the ESM questionnaires with objective physiological indicators and nursing staff reports, providing insights into the reliability of the patient-reported data. Furthermore, the study will evaluate the impact of the ESM data on clinical decision-making by physicians throughout the 14-day psychiatric hospitalization period. Patient satisfaction and satisfaction among the multidisciplinary team with the monitoring model will also be assessed. This research underscores the potential of digital technologies to enhance patient-centered care and facilitate informed treatment decisions in psychiatric hospitalization settings.
The purpose of this observational study is discovering potential biomarkers to predict antidepressant treatment response in patients with major depressive disorder (MDD) while comparing the transcriptomic changes between patients with MDD and healthy controls as well as before and after antidepressant treatment. Eligible patients will be assessed at Week 1, Week 2, Week 4 and Week 8 while healthy normal volunteers will only be evaluated at baseline. Assessments will include the following: an interview about mental and physical health, a physical examination including drawing of venous blood samples and several psychiatric rating scales.