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Active clinical trials for "Depressive Disorder"

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Phase II Trial of Nu-V3 Non-Invasive Nerve Stimulation Device for Chronic Pain, Anxiety, Depression,...

Chronic PainAnxiety2 more

This Nu-V3 clinical study is a randomized, phase II, open-label study evaluating the Nu-V3 cranial nerve stimulation treatment device in patients with chronic pain, anxiety, depression, and/or sleeplessness.

Suspended23 enrollment criteria

Effect of Esketamine on Reducing Postoperative Anxiety and Depression in Adolescent Patients

Anxiety-depression

This study intends to conduct a prospective, double-blind, randomized, controlled trial. Adolescents aged 8-17 years old are selected as subjects. Esketamine is used as intervention before surgery, vital signs data, serum IL-6, CRP and other inflammatory indicators are collected during surgery, and the incidence and degree of anxiety and depression are evaluated after surgery. To determine the effect of esketamine on reducing anxiety and depression in adolescents after surgery, and to provide an effective clinical basis for accelerating the rehabilitation of adolescents after surgery.

Not yet recruiting10 enrollment criteria

In Vitro Modeling of Drug-resistant Psychiatric Disorders Using Induced Pluripotent Cells

Depressive DisorderTreatment-Resistant

Major depressive disorder (MDD), is a major medical and economic burden for today's society. About 30% of MDD patients develop treatment-resistant depression - TRD with the related sequelae in terms of worse prognosis. If several risk factors can be assessed readily on presentation, it can guide treatment planning and ultimately improve clinical outcomes. Currently, unlike other areas of medicine, poly-risk tools to facilitate this stratification in practice among patients with MDD are lacking but demanded in the era of personalised/precision medicine - a challenge that the project takes up. Ketamine - a glutamate N-methyl-d-aspartate (NMDA) receptor antagonist, is the first exemplary agent with rapid (within hours) antidepressant effects, even in TRD patients.Its mechanisms of actions (MoA) are still unclear but greatly demanded. So far, insights about ketamine's MoA come from preclinical animal studies but it's known that animal models have limited ability/effectiveness in mimicking the clinical complexity and were not subjected to sequential application of different treatments - a key requisite in humans to be defined as TRD. This ambitious inter/multidisciplinary project, has 3 goals: To develop a clinical risk stratification tool for predicting TRD development. To unravel ketamine's fast-acting antidepressant mechanisms of action (MoA) on mature neurons obtained from human induced pluripotent stem cells (iPSCs) obtained from (ketamine-responsive & non-responsive) patients with TRD. To give maximum visibility to the project and spreading its contents & findings to and in a way understood by all target groups variously implicated/interested in project research & innovation.

Enrolling by invitation13 enrollment criteria

Preventing Postpartum Depression in Immigrant Latinas

Postpartum Depression

Postpartum depression (PPD) affects 10-20% of women, with immigrant Latinas disproportionately affected. PPD prevention and treatment is limited among immigrant Latinas due to an array of structural and cultural factors, suggesting the need to deliver interventions outside of traditional healthcare settings. Virtual interventions have the potential to reduce barriers to mental health services for immigrant Latinas, but there is little research on the effectiveness of virtual interventions to reduce PPD symptoms. Mothers and Babies is an evidence-based group intervention based on principles of cognitive-behavioral therapy and attachment theory aimed at PPD prevention. Mothers and Babies was adapted for delivery via a virtual group format (Mothers and Babies Virtual Group; MB-VG), with a pilot study suggesting good feasibility and acceptability as well as improved mental health outcomes for immigrant Latinas. The proposed project is a Type 1 Effectiveness-Implementation randomized controlled trial among pregnant individuals and new mothers at risk for PPD based on elevated depressive symptoms and/or other established risk factors who are enrolled in early childhood programs across Maryland. A total of 300 women will be enrolled; 150 will receive MB-VG while 150 will receive usual family support services. The project aims to evaluate: 1) the effectiveness of MB-VG to reduce depressive symptoms, prevent onset of PPD, and improve parenting self-efficacy and responsiveness; 2) implementation of MB-VG; and 3) contextual factors influencing MB-VG effectiveness and implementation. Trained early childhood center staff will deliver MB-VG sessions, with intervention participants receiving virtual group sessions via Zoom using any electronic device (smartphone, tablet, laptop). Maternal self-report surveys are conducted at baseline, 1 week, 3 months, and 6 months post-intervention, with structured clinical interviews also conducted at 3- and 6-months post-intervention. Our study is the first to deliver a virtual PPD preventive intervention to immigrant Latinas and to evaluate its impact. Given its virtual delivery modality, MB-VG can be easily replicated and scaled to other family support programs and settings serving immigrant Latinas. If effective and implemented broadly, more immigrant Latinas will receive mental health services and fewer will suffer the negative consequences associated with PPD.

Not yet recruiting8 enrollment criteria

Adolescent Depression Screening and Treatment in Mozambican Primary Care

DepressionAdolescent Behavior

This is a cluster-randomized pilot trial of depression screening and treatment implementation at four Youth-friendly Health Services (YFHS) in primary care clinics, two in Maputo City and two in Maputo Province. YFHS will be stratified by urbanicity, such that one YFHS in Maputo City and one YFHS in Maputo Province will be randomized to interpersonal psychotherapy (IPT)-A and the other YFHS in each location with be randomized to treatment as usual (TAU).

Enrolling by invitation11 enrollment criteria

Parent-Child Single-Session Growth Mindset Intervention on Adolescent Depression and Anxiety Problems...

DepressionAnxiety

Depression and anxiety are common mental health problems among adolescents worldwide. In Hong Kong, one in every four secondary school students reports clinical-level depression or anxiety symptoms. Extant research has found that a fixed mindset on intelligence and emotions and failure-is-debilitating belief are closely related to more depression and anxiety symptoms, hopelessness and suicidality. At the same time, recent research also points to the importance of parental mindset. Parents are the primary social support of adolescents; parental belief systems can strongly influence children's affect, behaviour and mental health. However, the effects of parent-child mindset interventions on a child's internalising problems have not yet been empirically examined. As emerging evidence has shown the promise of single-session interventions on reducing and preventing youth internalising problems, this project develops and examines a parent and child single-session intervention on mindsets of intelligence, failure and emotion (PC-SMILE) - to tackle depression and anxiety in young people and promote parental well-being. Using a two-arm randomised controlled trial, the proposed study will examine the effectiveness of PC-SMILE on reducing depression and anxiety symptoms among children, reducing parental anxiety, enhancing perceived control and parent-child relationships. A total of 366 parent-child dyads will be recruited from eight secondary schools and randomly assigned to either the PC-SMILE intervention group or the no-intervention waitlist control group. The PC-SMILE is approximately 45 minutes in length. Parent and child mental health and family relationship will be assessed at three time points: baseline before intervention (T1), within two weeks post-intervention (T2) and three months post-intervention (T3). A pilot test (n = 9) has supported the feasibility and acceptability of the PC-SMILE intervention. We hypothesise that the PC-SMILE intervention will significantly improve child depression and anxiety and parent anxiety (primary outcome) and significantly improve secondary outcomes, including child perceived control over emotion, children's and parents' hopelessness, psychological wellbeing, and parent-child relationships. The intention-to-treat principle and linear-regression-based maximum likelihood multi-level models will be used for data analysis. The project brings together experts in mindset research, family therapy, statistics, youth depression, and psychiatry. The Principal Investigator's strong connection with schools ensures the feasibility of the study. This study will not only provide evidence on parent-child growth mindset intervention for adolescent internalising problems but can also serve as a scalable and accessible intervention for improving the well-being of young people and their parents.

Not yet recruiting16 enrollment criteria

Determination of Chronic Pain, Anxiety, Depression and Perceived Stress in Adults With Temporomandibular...

Temporomandibular DisorderDepression3 more

The aim of the study was to asses levels and relationship of chronic pain, anxiety, depression and perceived stress in TMD patients .

Enrolling by invitation1 enrollment criteria

Effects of Ciprofol Anesthesia on Learning and Memory Function and Antidepressant Effects of ECT...

Depressive Disorder

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.

Not yet recruiting18 enrollment criteria

Prenatal Yoga to Prevent Postpartum Depression

Postpartum Depression

Although psychological interventions exist for the prevention of PPD, a yoga-based intervention to prevent PPD among at-risk women utilizes a similar theoretical foundation (i.e., mindfulness), may be more acceptable to women of minority status, and may confer additional physical activity benefits. The purpose of this pilot study is to determine the effectiveness of using a virtually delivered prenatal yoga intervention for the prevention of PPD among at-risk women in a diverse health care system and explore preliminary factors which influence implementation of the intervention. This study has 2 phases: Phase 1 will evaluate facilitators and barriers to intervention implementation among patient, clinician, and health system stakeholders, followed by an open trial, and Phase 2 will include conducting an 8-session pilot randomized controlled trial to assess the feasibility and acceptability of the proposed prenatal yoga intervention among women with a history of depression, as well as the onset and course of PPD and mediating factors. The specific aims are to: 1) Optimize delivery of a yoga intervention within a healthcare system to prevent PPD through examining facilitators and barriers of implementation, 2) Examine feasibility, acceptability and satisfaction of the intervention within a health care system, and 3) Evaluate preliminary effectiveness of the intervention on PPD and proposed mechanisms. For Phase 1, separate focus groups with patient stakeholders and clinician and administrative stakeholders will inform intervention implementation, and an open trial to refine and optimize the intervention. For Phase 2, women with a history of depression who are 8-28 weeks pregnant will be randomized to the intervention group (n=24) or treatment-as-usual (n=24) and will complete survey measures at baseline, post-intervention, and 1 and 3 months postpartum. It is hypothesized that the intervention will be feasible and acceptable, engage women of racial/ethnic minority status, and contribute to lower rates of PPD onset. Embodiment and mindfulness are the proposed mediators. Knowledge gained from this study can support prevention efforts for PPD and improve the adverse public health impact of this disorder.

Not yet recruiting7 enrollment criteria

Mobile Screening for Major Depressive Disorder in Adults From an Ethnically and Socioeconomically...

Major Depressive Disorder

Major depressive disorder (MDD) is a mental disorder leading to a variety of emotional and physical problems affecting almost 300 million people worldwide. Long-term treatments for MDD, including medication and therapy, imposes a significant financial burden on society. Mobile-based screening interventions might be a promising approach for effectively reducing MDD symptoms. The investigators hypothesize that the mobile-based screening strategy evaluated in this proposal will substantially reduce the burden of MDD over time, increase participants' quality of life, and decrease MDD-related disparities

Not yet recruiting4 enrollment criteria
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