
Music Therapy and Dialysis: A Pilot Investigation Into the Effectiveness of Patient-Selected Music...
End Stage Renal DiseaseDepression13 moreThe objective of this study is to determine the effect of music therapy during dialysis on: depression, anxiety, quality of life, blood pressure, heart rate, medication compliance, compliance with dialysis treatment, number of hospitalizations, pain level, and energy level.

Light Therapy on Major Depression Disorder
Depressive DisorderBackground: Major depression disorder is a common psychological disease. It is the second-ranked cause of disability worldwide. The pathophysiology is not yet understood. The main theory is monoaminergic theory based on the effect of monoaminergic drugs. Current treatment includes psychotherapy, medication and electroconvulsive therapy. The onset of action for antidepressant is often slow, therefore strategies to improve the outcome are important. Bright light therapy has been found to be effective in reducing the severity of depression not only in seasonal affective disorder but also in other affective disorder. Previous meta-analyses of light therapy for non-seasonal major depression, however, has yielded conflicting evidence for efficacy. Purpose: To investigate possible imaging biomarkers of major depression disorder To evaluate the effect of light therapy on depression Materials and Methods: This prospective study will recruit 100 patients, randomized into 2 study groups: (1) antidepressant plus treatment light, and (2) antidepressant plus placebo light. All patients will accept a thorough psychological evaluation (including Hamilton Depression Rating Scale, Montgomery-Asberg Depression Rating Scale, Clinical Global Impression-Severity and Patient Health Questionnaire-9 items) at baseline and at the 1st, 2nd, 4th, 8th week during the 8-week experiment intervention, by a blind assessor. Morningness- Eveningness Questionnaire-Self-Assessment Version (MEQ-SA) was only evaluated at baseline. Adverse events were evaluated at baseline, 2nd,4th,8th weeks. MRI study will be arranged at baseline and in 4-week experiment. Predicted Results and Influence: To evaluate the additional effect of the treatment light on depression disorder To compare the difference of functional magnetic resonance imaging(fMRI), structural MRI among the two groups and between the patients with and without treatment effect in order to detect imaging biomarkers.

Citalopram Titration in Early Non-responder Patients With Major Depressive Disorders
Major Depressive DisorderMajor depressive disorder is a common mental disorder and the leading cause of disability worldwide. According to the Canadian Network for Mood and Anxiety Treatment, early improvement following an antidepressant treatment is correlated with response and remission. Escalation of an antidepressant dose after 2 weeks, as opposed to 4 to 8 weeks, is proposed to favor early improvement. However, this has never been tested systematically in a controlled study involving major depressive disorder patients that are non-responders to their antidepressant treatment.

Study in Major Depressive Disorder With BTRX-335140 (NMRA-335140) vs Placebo
Major Depressive DisorderA proof of concept (POC) study evaluating the impact of BTRX-335140 (NMRA-335140) relative to placebo on symptoms of major depressive disorder (MDD) in adult participants with MDD and symptoms of anhedonia and anxiety following 8 weeks of double-blind treatment as assessed by the HAMD-17 Scale.

Impact of Intensive Social Interaction on Post-Stroke Depression in Individuals With Aphasia
Post-stroke DepressionPost-stroke AphasiaThe present parallel-group, single-center, blinded-assessment controlled trial seeks to explore the feasibility - in terms of high completion rates - and potential efficacy of intensive communicative-pragmatic social interaction for treatment of post stroke depression in subacute aphasia. Apart from evidence of treatment feasibility, the primary hypothesis predicts significantly greater progress on self-report and clinician-rated measures of depression severity after (i) intensive communicative-pragmatic social interaction combined with standard care, compared to (ii) standard care alone.

A Study of Psilocybin for Major Depressive Disorder (MDD)
Depressive DisorderMajorOne hundred participants, ages 21 to 65, who meet Diagnostic and Statistical Manual of Mental Disorders (DSM-5) criteria for major depressive disorder (MDD) will be stratified by study site and randomized with a 1-to-1 allocation under double-blind conditions to receive a single 25 mg oral dose of psilocybin or a single 100 mg oral dose of niacin. Niacin will serve as an active placebo. The purpose of this study is to evaluate the potential efficacy of a single 25 mg oral dose of psilocybin for MDD compared to the active placebo in otherwise medically-healthy participants, assessed as the difference between groups in changes in depressive symptoms from Baseline to Day 43 post-dose.

A Study in People With Depression to Test the Effects of BI 1358894 on Parts of the Brain That Are...
Depressive DisorderMajorTo assess the effect of a single dose of BI 1358894 compared to placebo on BOLD responses in modulating brain processing of emotional and cognitive stimuli on the amygdala and related brain structure using fMRI in in unmedicated patients with depression.

Study With Vortioxetine on Emotional Functioning in Patients With Depression
Major Depressive DisorderThe study will evaluate effectiveness of flexible dose vortioxetine 10-20 mg/day on emotional functioning in patients with MDD with an inadequate response to SSRIs/SNRIs.

Vortioxetine in the Elderly vs. Selective Serotonin Reuptake Inhibitors (SSRIs): a Pragmatic Assessment...
Major Depressive DisorderBackground. Depression is a highly frequent condition in the elderly, with a huge impact on quality of life, life expectancy, and medical outcomes. SSRIs are commonly prescribed in elderly depressed patients and, although generally safe, they may be associated with tolerability issues. Based on available studies, vortioxetine is likely to have a promising tolerability profile in the elderly, as it does not adversely affect psychomotor or cognitive performance, wakefulness, body weight, and electrocardiogram parameters. Objectives. Assessing the comparative tolerability, safety and efficacy of vortioxetine compared with the SSRIs as a group (including sertraline, citalopram, escitalopram, paroxetine, fluoxetine, fluvoxamine) in elderly patients affected by major depression. The primary outcome will be the withdrawal rate due to adverse events. Methods. This is a pragmatic, multicenter, open-label, parallel-group, superiority, randomized trial. Twelve Italian Community Psychiatric Services will consecutively enrol elderly patients suffering from an episode of major depression who get in contact over a period of 12 months. By employing the web-based application RedCap, doctors will be able to randomize patients to vortioxetine or one of the SSRIs, chosen on the basis of clinical judgment, and to collect basic socio-demographic and clinical data. Trained and blinded assessors will administer five validated rating scales: Montgomery-Åsberg Depression Rating Scale (MADRS), Antidepressant Side-Effect Checklist (ASEC), EuroQual 5 Dimensions (EQ-5D), Charlson Age-Comorbidity Index (CACI), and Short Blessed Test (SBT). Patients will be assessed after 1, 3 and 6 months. Expected results. On the basis of current literature, the investigators hypothesize vortioxetine to be superior to SSRIs as a group in terms of tolerability. As vortioxetine is expected to reduce the withdrawal rates due to adverse events of about 12% compared to SSRIs, and assuming that about 23% of the participants could be lost within 6 months, the investigators aim to enrol 358 patients (179 in each group).

The Safety and Efficacy of Psilocybin in Participants With Treatment Resistant Depression
Treatment Resistant DepressionThe Safety and Efficacy of Psilocybin in Participants with Treatment Resistant Depression