Alexithymia Intervention for Suicide
SuicideSchizophrenia3 moreSuicide rates among Veterans with Serious Mental Illness (SMI) are intractably high, representing a serious public health concern and a critical target for interventions. Yet, at present available treatments offer modest benefits. Thus, there remains an urgent need to identify novel approaches to address suicide risk in this population. Previous reports have linked suicide risk with poor social functioning. Emerging evidence from basic affective neuroscience research has indicated that effective social functioning is contingent on intact emotion awareness. Consistent with these findings, individuals with SMI at risk of suicide display social functioning difficulties along with poor emotion awareness (i.e., alexithymia). Employing a proof-of-concept design, the aim of the present study is to test the feasibility and acceptability of a novel, blended psychoeducation and digital mHealth (mobile health) intervention with smartphones designed to target alexithymia and poor social functioning to reduce suicide risk in Veterans with SMI.
iTBS in Bipolar I Depression
Bipolar DepressionBipolar I DisorderA multisite, open label pilot study to investigate the efficacy and safety of a novel accelerated intermittent theta-burst stimulation (iTBS) protocol while assessing for changes in neuroimaging biomarkers associated with treatment response.
Study of the Effectiveness of Vestibular Stimulation Treatment in the Depressive Phase of Bipolar...
Bipolar DisorderDepression1 moreVestibular stimulation has been shown to be a very effective noninvasive treatment for major depression. Bipolar disorder is a mental illness that presents cyclic sequences of depressive and euphoric states. Depressive phases of bipolar disorder are difficult to treat and usually are resistant to actual available treatments. This study investigates the effectiveness of a particular technique of vestibular stimulation in a group of 120 bipolar type I and II patients. After randomization 60 of them will receive specific vestibular stimulation (experimental group) and 60 will receive a sham vestibular stimulation.The study will conducted in Vest Brain, Centro de Estudios Neurovestibulares, in Chile.
Integrated Care in Psychotic Disorders With Severe Mental Illness
SchizophreniaSchizophreniform Disorder5 moreThe study examine the effectiveness of an integrated care program including therapeutic assertive community treatment (ACT) for people with psychotic disorders fulfilling severe and persistent mental illness (SPMI, ACCESS-II study).
Effects of Smartphone-based Treatment for Bipolar Disorder - the Smart Bipolar
Bipolar DisorderThe Smart Bipolar RCT is a pragmatic RCT aiming to investigate effects of smartphone-based add on treatment in large scale clinical practice (N= 200 patients).
Effects of an Integrative Psychological Program in Bipolar Disorder
Bipolar DisorderBipolar disorder is related to a high level of personal, familial, social and economic burden. There is a need for feasible adjunctive psychological interventions to use in clinical practice as a complement of pharmacotherapy to enhance aspects that medication cannot reach. This project aims at develop and evaluate the impact of an adjunctive brief integrative program for bipolar patients (euthymic or with subthreshold symptoms). The patients (N=124) will be randomly assigned to two different groups. The experimental group (62 patients) will take part on a group integrative program consisting of 12-sessions of 90 minutes (based on psychoeducation, mindfulness and functional remediation) whilst the control group (62 patients) will not receive any sort of add-on psychotherapy. All patients will mantain standard psychiatric treatment. Together with the baseline assessment, the whole sample will be assessed after the intervention and at 12 months from the baseline evaluation, regarding sociodemographic, clinical and neuropsychological variables. If the intervention is effective it will improve psychosocial functioning (main variable), wellbeing and quality of life, as well as improve clinical outcomes and neurocognitive functioning of those affected by the illness.
Optimal Electrical Stimulus During Electroconvulsive Therapy
Depressive DisorderMajor2 moreSynopsis Aim: The purpose of the study is to determine the stimulus of electrical current during electroconvulsive therapy (ECT) that produces the optimal balance between antidepressant effect and memory disturbance. Specifically, this study aims to compare the 0.5 ms and 1.0 ms pulse width stimuli. Design: National, register-based randomized trial, unmasked with two treatment arms. Primary objective: To test the hypothesis that a 1.0 ms pulse width stimulus produces a higher remission rate (< 11 on the MADRS-S) than a 0.5ms pulse width stimulus. Secondary objectives include testing for differences in: self-rated global health measured with the EQ5D-VAS subjective memory worsening (increase of 2 on the memory item of the CPRS) antidepressive response (decrease of 50% on the MADRS-S) number of ECTs in the treatment series readmission and suicide rate within 6 months Study population: patients with unipolar or bipolar depression. Sample size: 800 patients, 400 patients in each arm. Inclusion criteria: At least 18 years of age at the time of inclusion Diagnostic criteria fulfilled for unipolar, or bipolar depressive episode according to ICD-10. An indication for and accepting ECT A Swedish personal identity number. Capable of giving informed consent. Exclusion criteria: If the investigator judges a certain pulse width to be inappropriate for the patient. Inclusion time 2019-05-01-2022-11-15. Abbreviations CGI: Clinical Global Impression Scale CPRS: The Comprehensive Psychopathological Rating Scale ECT: Electroconvulsive therapy EQ5D: EuroQual-group 5 Dimensions Scale ICD-10: International Statistical Classification of Diseases and Related Health Problems. - 10th revision, MADRS-S: Montgomery-Åsberg Depression Rating Scale, self assessed version. Q-ECT: Swedish national quality register for ECT VAS: Visual analogue scale
Lithium Versus Cariprazine in the Acute Phase Treatment of Bipolar Depression (DUAG9)
DepressionBipolarThe goal is to study the effect of lithium compared to cariprazine in patients with depression in a bipolar disease. The main question it aims to answer is: Difference in change between the two groups from baseline to after 8 weeks treatment on Hamilton Ratings Scale for Depression, 6-item version (HDS-6) Participants will be randomized to treatment with either lithium or cariprazin. Will meet for interview and ratings 4 times during study period. In two meetings, there will be made blood samples and ECG. At one meeting also a Urine sample. Will be contacted for telephone interviews at 6 occasions.
Neural Correlates of Ketamine's Anti-suicidal Effects in Bipolar Depression
Bipolar Disorder (BD)SuicidalityBipolar disorder is characterized by manic episodes and episodes of extreme depressive feelings, also known as bipolar depression (BD). Although clinical data does not suggest significant differences in the severity of depressive symptoms between bipolar and unipolar depression, patients with BD are found to be more likely to experience suicidal ideation and suicide attempts. Innovative treatments for suicidality in patients with BD are needed to address tolerability and slow effect limitations of current interventions. Using an open label pilot study, this trial aims to examine the effect of Intravenous (IV) ketamine treatment on acute suicidality in patients with BD. Moreover, the study aims to explore the neurophysiological mechanisms of ketamine's action directly from the cortex in patients with BD, in order to understand the biological mechanism underlying ketamine's therapeutic action.
Dialectical Behavior Therapy for Youth With and/or at Familial Risk for Bipolar Disorder
Bipolar DisorderDialectical behavior therapy (DBT) will be conducted over 1 year in youth with and/or at familial risk for bipolar disorder (BD). DBT will be divided into two modalities: 1) DBT skills training; and 2) DBT individual therapy sessions. Skills training sessions will incorporate the 5 standard adolescent DBT modules: mindfulness skills, emotion regulation skills, distress tolerance skills, interpersonal skills, and walking the middle path skills and an additional module on psychoeducation about DBT and BD. This study seeks to build upon the knowledge base in this area by offering DBT to youth with and/or at familial risk for BD with an emphasis on predictors and mediators of treatment outcomes.