View clinical trials related to Depressive Disorder.
Filter by:The primary objective of this study is to determine if online group cognitive behavioral therapy (CBT) for maternal postpartum depression (PPD) added to treatment as usual (TAU) leads to greater improvements in infant emotion regulation (ER) than maternal receipt of TAU alone immediately post-treatment and 6 months later. This study will also aim to determine what mechanisms PPD treatment leads to changes in infant ER.
The purpose of this study is to explore feasibility of combining clinician-directed cognitive behavioral therapy (CBT) supplemented with the Mindset app with esketamine therapy in participants with Treatment-resistant Depression.
This work will extend and apply methods for modeling heterogeneous treatment effects when multiple studies are available, with a particular focus on the complexities in mental health research. The methods will be illustrated in examples estimating the effects of medical treatments for major depressive disorder (duloxetine and vortioxetine) using 4 randomized controlled trials (available in the Vivli trials resource) and non-experimental data from the Duke University Health System electronic health record and the Johns Hopkins Health System electronic health record systems.
The primary objective will be to study changes in putamen connectivity and depression severity in depressed teens with meditation training. H1: Putamen node strength will increase in the training group compared to the active controls. H2: This increase in node strength will correlate with practice amount recorded by participants. H3: There will be a significant reduction in self-rated depression symptoms following the training as measured by the Reynolds Adolescent Depression Scale (RADS-2), compared to controls. H4: This reduction will correlate with the increase in putamen node strength. Design and Outcomes: The current research study design will utilize an individually randomized group treatment, open-label, active-controlled clinical trial to test the efficacy and safety of the investigator's innovative mindfulness meditation intervention (Training for Awareness Resilience and Action [TARA]) on the primary outcome (Putamen structural node strength) and secondary outcome (depression symptoms measured using Reynolds Adolescent Depression Scale [RADS-2]) in depressed adolescents between the ages of 14 to 18 years old.
In this clinical study, propofol was used as the positive control, and a randomized controlled trial design was used to observe the effects of ciprofol anesthesia on learning and memory function and antidepressant efficacy in patients with ECT. A total of 390 depressed patients who were to undergo electroconvulsive therapy were selected and randomly divided into two groups, namely the propofol group (n=195 cases) and the ciprofol group (n=195 cases). The patients in the propofol group were given propofol 1.5mg/kg + succinylcholine 1mg/kg, and the patients in the ciprofol group were given ciprofol 0.4mg/kg and succinylcholine 1mg/kg, and the patients were given electroshock after anesthesia treat.
Irritable bowel syndrome (IBS) is frequently associated with any form of psychiatric comorbidities including subthreshold or subclinical depression. Modification of gut ecology with probiotics has implicitly improved IBS and depressive symptoms. However, the efficacy of probiotics on IBS with existing subthreshold depression remain elusive. Therefore, the aim of this study is to evaluate the effects of lactobacillus-containing cultured milk drink on depression scores in adults diagnosed with IBS.
This cluster-randomized hybrid type-II implementation superiority trial will include 14 rural primary care facilities in Madhya Pradesh, which will implement a collaborative depression care packaged based on the WHO mhGAP program. These 14 facilities will be randomized to receive either 'Enhanced Implementation Support' or the existing 'Routine Implementation Support' control condition to determine if Enhanced Implementation Support is superior to Routine Implementation Support for ensuring successful implementation of the depression care package. Enhanced Implementation Support consists of remote coaching support and technical assistance. The primary implementation outcome is the proportion of outpatients screened on the PHQ-2 by facility staff. Secondary implementation outcomes will also be collected, including the number of depression cases identified, number of patients with depression referred to the medical officer, number of patients referred to an accepted treatment intervention (i.e., either antidepressant medication or brief psychological intervention), and number of patients who successfully complete treatment at follow up. Secondary patient outcomes will also be collected from patients enrolled in each arm. Patient-level outcomes include the proportion of patients who achieve remission (defined as PHQ-9<5) at 3-month follow up. Additional patient-level outcomes include symptoms of anxiety and functioning. This trial will develop and test an Enhanced Implementation Support strategy for integrating evidence-based mental health services into primary care facilities. Findings from the trial will inform the need to have external coaching for primary care facilities to meet their depression screening and treatment goals, or if they can achieve these goals via routine system support. This is crucial to inform policymakers, due to severe constraints on mental health budgets for programs in India. Findings can generate insights to inform the scale-up of depression care across other districts in Madhya Pradesh and in India.
The investigators compare the primary and secondary outcome measures using accelerated intermittent theta burst stimulation (aiTBS, 20 sessions active and 20 sessions sham in a counterbalanced crossover design) to treat depressive symptoms with 2 parallel arms of intervention: personalized (stimulation position based on participants' brain networks) vs conventional (stimulation in F3 position of the 10-20 EEG cap) aiTBS.
This trial aims to examine the safety and efficacy of small (2mg) sub-hallucinogenic doses of psilocybin in people with Major Depressive Disorder.
To evaluate the efficacy of choline alphoscerate on improving symptoms related to depression, anxiety, and subjective memory complaints compared to placebo in patients with Major Depressive Disorder(MDD) accompanied with subjective cognitive decline, who are over the age of 60.