Menstrual Cycle Clinical Trial
Official title:
Positive and Negative Effects of Social Media Usage in Adolescent Girls
The study aims to explore the effects of hormonal fluctuations throughout the menstrual cycle on social media use, brain architecture, neural reward processing and reward behavior, and affective status in adolescent girls. Additionally, it strives to compare the effects of exogenous and endogenous hormones on the above-mentioned aspects. For this purpose, the investigators will compare two main groups in the study: 1. Naturally cycling adolescent girls, 2. Adolescent girls using combined oral contraceptives. This study will combine self-report data via questionnaires, ecological data via Ecological Momentary Assessment (EMA), endocrine data via blood collection, and neural data via fMRI assessment to enhance the understanding of the neurobiological mechanisms underlying social media use in adolescent girls. Furthermore, it seeks to elucidate whether there are vulnerable periods throughout the menstrual cycle when adolescent girls are especially prone to dysfunctional social media use and help to design more specific interventions as well as therapy.
Status | Not yet recruiting |
Enrollment | 70 |
Est. completion date | March 1, 2026 |
Est. primary completion date | December 1, 2025 |
Accepts healthy volunteers | Accepts Healthy Volunteers |
Gender | Female |
Age group | 15 Years to 18 Years |
Eligibility | Inclusion Criteria: - Between 15 and 18 years old adolescent girls - Body mass index(18-25kg/m2) - Natural menstrual cycle (between 25 to 31 days) OR use of combined oral contraceptives for at least 4 months - Social media use (e.g., Instagram, TikTok, Snapchat, Facebook, X, BeReal) - Non-smoking - German language fluency - Attending age-appropriate school Exclusion Criteria: - Any neurological or psychiatric disease based on the standardized diagnostic interview (Kinder-DIPS) - Medical problems such as hormonal, metabolic, developmental or chronic diseases (e.g., congenital disorders, diabetes, dysfunctions of the thyroid, or congestive heart failure) - Pregnancy - Females who gave birth or were breastfeeding within the last year - Use of any other kind of steroid hormonal treatment (except combined oral contraceptives) or psychotropic treatment in the last three months - Females with premenstrual dysphoric disorder(PMDD) - Not willing to be informed about incidental fMRI findings Additional exclusion criteria for fMRI: - Individuals with non-removable metal objects on or in the body such as cardiac pacemaker, artificial heart valve, metal prostheses, metal implants, metal splinters, etc. - Tattoos (if fMRI-incompatible according to expert guidelines) - Claustrophobia - Surgery less than three months ago - Pathological hearing or increased sensitivity to loud noises - Neurological disease or injury - Moderate or severe head injury - Restricted (corrected) vision |
Country | Name | City | State |
---|---|---|---|
Germany | University Clinic Tuebingen, Department of Psychiatry & Psychotherapy | Tuebingen | Baden-Wuerttemberg |
Lead Sponsor | Collaborator |
---|---|
International Research Training Group 2804 | German Research Foundation, University Hospital Tuebingen, Uppsala University |
Germany,
Type | Measure | Description | Time frame | Safety issue |
---|---|---|---|---|
Primary | Brain disparities: Contrasting naturally cycling adolescent girls with those using combined oral contraceptives | Possible differences between naturally cycling adolescent girls and those taking combined oral contraceptives in brain structure | Measured twice appr. 2-3 weeks apart; approximately 45 minutes each time | |
Primary | Brain disparities: Contrasting naturally cycling adolescent girls with those using combined oral contraceptives | Possible differences between naturally cycling adolescent girls and those taking combined oral contraceptives in brain function (functional activation based on BOLD effect) | Measured twice appr. 2-3 weeks apart; approximately 45 minutes each time] | |
Primary | Reward-processing disparities: Contrasting naturally cycling adolescent girls with those using combined oral contraceptives | Possible differences between naturally cycling adolescent girls and those taking combined oral contraceptives on reward processing | Measured twice appr. 2-3 weeks apart; approx. 17 minutes each time | |
Primary | Social media use disparities: Contrasting naturally cycling adolescent girls and those using combined oral contraceptives | Possible differences in social media use between the two groups | Measured through ecological momentary assessment every day throughout one month | |
Secondary | Social media use disparities: Contrasting follicular and luteal phase in naturally cycling adolescent girls | Possible differences between the two phases of the menstrual cycle in social media use | Measured through ecological momentary assessment every day throughout one month | |
Secondary | Brain Disparities: Contrasting follicular and luteal phase in naturally cycling adolescent girls | Possible differences in brain function and structure in naturally cycling girls in follicular vs. luteal phase | Measured twice appr. 2-3 weeks apart; circa 45 minutes each time | |
Secondary | Reward-processing disparities: Contrasting follicular and luteal phase in naturally cycling adolescent girls | Possible differences in reward processing and reward behavior between the two menstrual cycle phases | Measured twice appr. 2-3 weeks apart; circa 45 minutes each time | |
Secondary | Associations between personality and brain function & structure | Possible effects of personality type on brain structure and brain function for both groups. Personality measured by the NEO-Five-Factor-Inventory. | Measured twice appr. 2-3 weeks apart; circa 45 minutes each time | |
Secondary | Associations between personality and reward processing & behavior | Possible effects of personality type on reward processing for both groups. Personality measured by the NEO-Five-Factor-Inventory. | Measured twice appr. 2-3 weeks apart; circa 17 minutes each time | |
Secondary | Self-esteem differences: Contrasting follicular and luteal phase in naturally cycling adolescent girls | Possible differences in self-esteem between the two phases of the menstrual cycle | Measured through ecological momentary assessment every day throughout one month |
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