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Depressive Disorder clinical trials

View clinical trials related to Depressive Disorder.

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NCT ID: NCT06072898 Not yet recruiting - Clinical trials for Major Depressive Disorder

A Randomized Neuroimaging Trial of Psilocybin in Depression

EMBRACE
Start date: August 2024
Phase: Phase 2
Study type: Interventional

The goal of this neuroimaging clinical trial is to test whether psilocybin produces significant immediate changes in functional brain activity in networks associated with mood regulation and depression compared to placebo in patients with depression. The trial aims to determine if psilocybin: 1. Changes connectivity within brain networks associated with mood and depression 2. Changes blood flow in brain regions associated with mood and depression Participants will be attend two treatment sessions where they receive an oral medication and supportive psychotherapy. At each session, participants will undergo an MRI scan after drug administration but prior to psychotherapy. Participants will be randomly to assigned to one of two groups that will receive, 1) microcrystalline cellulose (25mg) at the first visit and psilocybin (25mg) at the second visit, or 2) psilocybin (25mg) at both visits, respectively. Differences between groups will be compared to understand what effects on brain activity are specific to psilocybin.

NCT ID: NCT06072209 Completed - Depression Moderate Clinical Trials

Long-term Effects ReSet Your Mind - Mechanisms

Start date: May 30, 2022
Phase: N/A
Study type: Interventional

See: ClinicalTrials.gov ID: NCT05402150 Relevant for this Paper: This investigation aims to evaluate the stability of the effectiveness of different two-week online interventions in a four months follow-up regarding reward sensitivity, anhedonia and depression. The authors will further investigate factors influencing treatment success regarding reward sensitivity. The investigators assume that the more depressive expectations and stress improve during our online intervention, the more change in reward insensitivity is experienced at follow-up. In addition, it is hypothesized that the more people engaged in physical activities and social encounters during the two-week online intervention, the more change in reward insensitivity is experienced at follow-up.

NCT ID: NCT06070766 Recruiting - Clinical trials for Major Depressive Disorder

RIVER At Home Ketamine Protocols

Start date: October 1, 2023
Phase:
Study type: Observational

Multiple site studies with the recruitment of other sub-investigators and sites. It's sobering to consider how chronic illness makes us more vulnerable to suicidal thoughts and behavior. However, the existence of multiple risk factors also means that there are numerous ways to intervene. Addressing and improving even one risk area will reverberate and improve other areas and the quality of life. RIVER Foundation is completing a 500-participant pilot study researching the safety of oral and nasal ketamine at home with no therapy. The pilot study examined three psychological scales: P.H.Q. 9, G.A.D. 7, and PCL5 scores. The interim report will be available in Nov 2023 with a final report in June 2024. The lack of knowledge for the average medical practitioner makes ketamine a boutique medicine, often costly and unaffordable to those in need. Yet daily medical providers are eliminating ketamine as a choice in the treatment of chronic conditions. The pilot study demonstrated the who, and where. The who, was adults with a chronic condition. The pilot study demonstrated the majority of those who could use ketamine are not receiving it due to cost. According to the 500-participant study, ketamine is safe and effective for at-home use thus demonstrating the where (at home with no supervision).

NCT ID: NCT06070168 Completed - Clinical trials for Depression, Postpartum

Determining the Effect of Telephone Counseling Service Provided to Primiparous Mothers on Postpartum Depression

Start date: October 7, 2023
Phase: N/A
Study type: Interventional

The aim of this study is to determine the effect of telephone counseling services provided to primiparous mothers on postpartum depression. Hypotheses H01; there is no difference between the postpartum depression score of the telephone counseling services group and the postpartum depression score of the control group. The study will be carried out in two different groups. The practice will start with meeting the women who give birth will be visited by the researcher at the postpartum clinic at least 6 hours after normal birth and 12 hours after cesarean births. After the women are evaluated in terms of eligibility criteria for the research, the women who are eligible will be informed about the research and written informed consent will be obtained from the women who accept. The random distribution of women to the study groups will be carried out using the Block Randomization method. The following applications will be made to the groups. The researcher will contact the experimental group by phone. He will introduce herself and 6 weeks (during postpartum). It will provide the mother with the consultancy service she needs about herself and the newborn 24 hours a day. After 6 weeks, the training will end and the third researcher will make post-tests of the depression scale to both groups without knowing the experimental and control groups.

NCT ID: NCT06069843 Recruiting - Depression Clinical Trials

Single-dose Ketamine Treatment to Improve Depression in Mild Cognitive Impairment

Start date: October 18, 2023
Phase: Phase 2
Study type: Interventional

Ketamine is a NMDA-receptor antagonist that promotes synapse formation and has been shown to rapidly improve symptoms in depression. Even a single dose of ketamine has been shown to improve depression and cognition with short-term memory, inhibitory control, cognitive flexibility, and processing speed showing improvements within days of treatment. The mechanism behind ketamine's rapid action is not clear but some groups have speculated it may be related to enhanced neuroplasticity, particularly in the frontal areas and the hippocampus. If this mechanism is accurate, ketamine may be especially effective in treating mild cognitive impairment and depression (MCI-D) where changes in the hippocampus and frontal areas have been implicated. Although few studies have been published on the effects of ketamine in older adults, some small pilot studies suggest that ketamine treatment might be effective in improving depression in older adults and relatively safe. There are no studies looking at the effects of ketamine treatment in patients with MCI-D. The research team hypothesize that IV ketamine treatment will be well-tolerated and will improve depression and cognition in patients with MCI-D. The study team will explore the effects of brain imaging abnormalities and amyloid biomarker status on the responsiveness to ketamine. The study team will conduct an open-label pilot study designed to gather data to support an application for a larger NIH-funded study.

NCT ID: NCT06065787 Recruiting - Depression Clinical Trials

NeuroGlove Anxiety and Depression Study

Start date: September 27, 2023
Phase: N/A
Study type: Interventional

This is a prospective, homebased, interventional clinical study containing 10 subjects who will be enrolled. Approximately 10 (10) subjects with active anxiety and depression symptoms will receive treatment using the NeuroGlove.

NCT ID: NCT06064409 Not yet recruiting - Respiratory Failure Clinical Trials

Optimal Timing and Failure Prediction of High Flow Nasal Cannula Oxygen Therapy in Emergency Department: Prospective Observational Single Center Study

Start date: November 1, 2023
Phase:
Study type: Observational

This study targets adult patients treated with high flow nasal cannula (HFNC) at emergency department (ED) of Severance hospital, Yonsei university. Patients with acute hypoxic respiratory failure presenting to the ED receive conventional oxygen therapy as initial treatment unless immediate endotracheal intubation is required. Partial rebreathing oxygen masks are mainly applied at first. If the patient's condition does not improve despite such treatment, the patient receives HFNC or endotracheal intubation. However, possible treatment range have not been studied, especially in ED. Decisions are made based on the personal experience of the medical staff in charge. Applying HFNC to patients who eventually fail can lead to delayed intubation and increased mortality. Failure prediction models such as ROX index and HACOR score have been developed due to such reasons. However, such models are mostly based on intensive care unit studies and after application of HFNC. Therefore, failure prediction model at the time before application of HFNC and efficacy of existing models in ED are necessary. This study is a prospective observational study and follows the standard treatment guidelines applied to the patient and the judgment of the attending physician during the patient's treatment process. Immediately before applying HFNC, the patient's respiratory rate, pulse rate, blood pressure, SpO₂, PaO₂, PaCO₂, GCS score are determined, and FiO₂ is measured above upper lips using oxygen analyzer(MaxO2+AE, Maxtec, USA). From these data, ROX index (SF ratio/respiratory rate), ROX-HR (ROX index/pulse rate), POX index (PF ratio/respiratory rate), POX-HR (POX index/pulse rate), and HACOR score (Heart Rate, Acidosis, Consciousness, Oxygenation, Respiratory rate) are calculated. The settings (flow rate, FiO₂, temperature) at the time of HFNC application are also measured. The same indices and HFNC settings are checked 30 minutes, 1 hour, 2 hours, 4 hours, 6 hours, and 12 hours after applying HFNC. Modified Borg score and comfort scale using 5-point Likert scale are additionally determined at 30 minutes for patient's comfort. Primary outcome is HFNC failure at 28 days, defined by endotracheal intubation. Other outcomes include intubation in ED and mortality at 28 and 90 days collected through phone interview. The receiver operating curve for ROX index, HACOR score, ROX-HR, and POX-HR at baseline, 30 minutes, 1 hour, 2 hours, 4 hours, 6 hours, and 12 hours are drawn for the outcomes. The area under the curve of the above indices are compared and cutoff values are chosen with maximum value of index J by the Youden's Index. A binary variable is created based on the cutoff values and multivariable logistic regression analyses are performed. Cutoff values for maximum specificity are also invested suggesting the lower limit of the indicator to which HFNC can be applied.

NCT ID: NCT06063369 Recruiting - Clinical trials for Major Depressive Disorder

PEA vs. Placebo for Major Depression

PEA-01
Start date: December 21, 2022
Phase: Phase 2
Study type: Interventional

Major Depression is often resistant to treatment, and all of the currently marketed anti-depressants can cause significant side effects and may precipitate mania. The aim of this proposal is to perform a proof-of-concept RCT testing Palmitoylethanolamide (PEA) as a treatment for unipolar or bipolar depression, randomizing 100 patients to 6-week treatment with PEA 1200 mg/d or matching placebo. There are several rationales for this study: (A) PEA acts at the peroxisome proliferator-activated receptor-alpha (PPAR-α), stimulating Allo biosynthesis. Allo is an endogenous, positive allosteric modulator of GABA-A receptors in glutamatergic neurons, including cortical and hippocampal pyramidal glutamatergic neurons and may be one of the endogenous regulators of depression and anxiety. (B) Sage Therapeutics has developed Allo which is FDA approved to treat post-partum depression, and is testing a molecular modification which can be administered orally for post-partum depression and unipolar depression, with mixed efficacy results. Pregnenolone, a precursor of neurosteroids, has also been reported to improve bipolar depression. Based on animal models, PEA increases Allo synthesis in areas of the brain thought to be involved in anxiety and depression. It may also favor the biosynthesis of sulfated forms of Allo and congeners that inhibit tonic rather than phasic NMDA-mediated excitatory neurotransmission. Showing that PEA-induced selective inhibition of tonic NMDA neurotransmission improves depression might enable development of steroid-based NMDA-inhibitor therapeutics. In addition, PEA-induced Allo upregulation potentiates GABA-A receptor-mediated inhibition. The NMDA and the GABAergic mechanisms may act in concert to improve behavioral outcomes. Since PEA increases Allo in the brain where it is endogenously formed, it might be more effective compared with exogenous administration, which is not site specific. There is evidence of a role of inflammation in depression; PEA has potent immunoregulatory and anti-inflammatory effects by directly activating PPAR-α, which has a protective role against neuroinflammation by inhibiting the signaling mediated by toll-like receptor 4.There is one published study which shows that PEA has an antidepressant effect in unipolar depression, 58 patients were randomized to receive 1200 mg/d of PEA or placebo added-on to citalopram, showing clinical improvements in patients receiving PEA.

NCT ID: NCT06061653 Recruiting - Depressive Disorder Clinical Trials

Augmentation of Interpersonal Psychotherapy With High-Definition Transcranial Direct Current Stimulation for Adolescent Depression

Start date: October 1, 2023
Phase: N/A
Study type: Interventional

Depression is among the most prevalent psychiatric disorders, with an upward trend in its manifestation in younger individuals. In contrast to adult depression, adolescent depression often presents with longer attack durations, higher recurrence rates, chronicity, and elevated disability rates. At present, treatment options for adolescent depression encompass pharmacological, physical, and psychological therapies. However, current evidence suggests that no antidepressant medication is entirely safe for youths, with only fluoxetine and escitalopram being FDA-approved for treating adolescent depression. Given the weight of interpersonal stressors faced by teenagers, the NICE guidelines recommend interpersonal therapy(IPT) as a first-line treatment. A 2020 meta-analysis in the Journal of the American Academy of Child and Adolescent Psychiatry reported that interpersonal therapy exhibited significantly greater improvements in depression symptoms than cognitive behavioral therapy(CBT), although psychotherapeutic effects were modest, achieving a remission rate of 60%. These results underscore the need for further research to enhance interpersonal therapy's effectiveness in treating adolescent depression. High-Definition Transcranial Direct Current Stimulation (HD-tDCS)is a highly secure non-invasive brain stimulation technique that produces sustained effects even after stimulation has discontinued, rendering it particularly valuable for therapeutic interventions. The proposed study aims to augment a single IPT treatment with HD-tDCS stimulation for adolescent depression. By enhancing the excitability of the cerebral cortex, HD-tDCS could potentially enhance IPT's therapeutic efficacy in treating adolescent depression while facilitating further investigation of its underlying neural circuit mechanisms.

NCT ID: NCT06058039 Recruiting - Clinical trials for Major Depressive Disorder

Study to Assess the Effects of Oral NMRA-335140 in Participants With Major Depressive Disorder

Start date: December 21, 2023
Phase: Phase 3
Study type: Interventional

This randomized, double-blind, placebo-controlled, multicenter study will evaluate the effects of NMRA-335140 (formerly BTRX-335140) on symptoms of depression in participants with Major Depressive Disorder (MDD). The study design consists of a Screening Period (up to 35 days), and a 6-week Treatment Period (during which participants will receive either NMRA-335140 or placebo). At the completion of the 6-week Treatment Period, participants who complete the study, provide informed consent, and meet the eligibility criteria may enter an open-label extension study (NMRA-335140-501).