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Tundra lists 6 ECT clinical trials. Each listing includes eligibility criteria, study locations, and direct links to research sites in the Tundra directory.
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NCT04291196
Virtual Reality to Reduce Pre-procedure Anxiety Prior ECT
Lack of patient knowledge about ECT (electroconvulsive therapy) is a leading cause of treatment fear with 60% of ECT patients reporting high levels of anxiety. The purpose of this study is to determine if using Virtual Reality (VR) to allow patients' to experience a virtual ECT education session before treatment is useful in lowering treatment anxiety and increasing knowledge about ECT if compared to standard treatment. In addition, measuring heart rate and blood pressure levels before ECT treatment will allow us to assess changes in anxiety levels. Individuals who choose to participate will be placed (participant will have a 50% chance to be placed in either group) to view either a virtual reality video to experience a virtual ECT session, or to receive standard preparation, i.e. a discussion with a psychiatrist. Before and after this session participants will be asked to complete a measurement of their anxiety level and knowledge about ECT (ECT Attitude \& Knowledge Questionnaire). Just before ECT treatment, blood pressure, heart rate and anxiety level will be measured. Participants will also complete cognitive and depression assessments. This study will help to develop a relationship between healthcare providers and patients and their families to help with education before ECT treatment.
Gender: All
Ages: 18 Years - Any
Updated: 2026-03-16
1 state
NCT05699226
Amplitude Titration to Improve ECT Clinical Outcomes
A randomized controlled trial will compare hippocampal neuroplasticity, antidepressant, and cognitive outcomes between individualized amplitude and fixed 800 mA amplitude ECT in older depressed subjects (n = 25 per group, n = 50 total). Relative to fixed 800 mA ECT: H1: Individualized amplitude arm will have improved RUL antidepressant outcome (IDS-C30 response rates and reduced BT electrode placement switch at V2). H2: Individualized amplitude arm will have improved cognitive outcomes (DKEFS-Verbal Fluency
Gender: All
Ages: 50 Years - Any
Updated: 2026-01-26
1 state
NCT07247968
Subanesthetic Esketamine in Modified ECT for Severe Depression in Adolescents: Clinical and Mechanistic Study
The study design was a randomized, double blind, parallel controlled trial.The goal of this clinical trial is to learn if esketamine-assisted modified electroconvulsive therapy (ESK-MECT) works to treat severe depression in adolescents. It will also learn about the safety of ESK-MECT. The sample size was calculated based on the response rate of patients with depression undergoing electroconvulsive therapy(ECT).According to the results of the pilot study,the efficacy rate of subjects receiving adjunctive esketamine was approximately 78%,while the efficacy rate of those receiving only propofol was 63%.The expected superiority difference in remission rates between the two groups was 15%(one-sided)for the power calculation.Assuming a significance level of α=0.05 and a test power of β=0.2,with a 1:1 ratio of sample sizes between the two groups,the total sample size was calculated to be 198 using the PASS software(PASS 2023).Considering a dropout rate of 10%,a total of 220 subjects were required,with 110 subjects in each group. 1. experimental group The patients were given intravenous injection of 0.25 mg / kg esketamine, 1.5 mg / kg propofol and 1 mg / kg succinylcholine in turn. After anesthesia, the patients were given electroconvulsive therapy. 2. In the control group The patients were given normal saline consistent with esketamine injection volume, 1.5mg/kg of propofol and 1mg / kg of succinylcholine. After anesthesia, the patients were given electroconvulsive therapy. Efficacy evaluation 1. Main efficacy indicators Response rate of depressive symptoms after MECT treatment Response is defined as two consecutive HAMD-24 scores ≤ 50% before treatment after receiving MECT treatment. The response rate is calculated as the number of patients who achieved as response divided by the total number of patients receiving MECT.In this study, the 24-item version of HAMD was utilized. Participants will: Be randomly assigned to the esketamine group or the control group, and receive standard MECT treatment. Have seizure parameters, seizure duration, vital signs, and complications recorded. Complete psychiatric scale assessments, including HAMD-24, BSS, PANSS, WMS-RC and MoCA. Be assessed at the following time points: HAMD-24 and BSS after each treatment; PANSS after each treatment course;WMS-RC and MoCA before MECT and after one treatment course. All subjects did not discontinue antidepressants before modified electroconvulsive therapy(MECT),and they were fasting for 8 hours and no fluids for 2 hours.Three minutes before MECT,continuous qCON monitoring(Apollo-9000A,Chongqing Xideer Medical Equipment Co.,Ltd.,China)was initiated,while monitoring blood pressure,heart rate,and peripheral capillary oxygen saturation.Preoxygenation was administered for 3 minutes.The qCON monitor uses three electrodes on the forehead to collect raw electroencephalogram(EEG)signals.The qCON monitoring includes the qCON index,qNOX index,burst suppression(BS),and signal quality index(SQI).
Gender: All
Ages: 13 Years - 17 Years
Updated: 2026-01-07
NCT04451135
CET- REM (Correlating ECT Response to EEG Markers)
Single-center study to determine the relationship between changes in depression symptoms and electroencephalographic (EEG) patterns induced by electroconvulsive therapy (ECT)
Gender: All
Ages: 18 Years - Any
Updated: 2025-12-31
1 state
NCT05973643
Metabolomics During ElectroConvulsivoTherapy
Investigators will measure the variation of blood Metabolome through 1H NMR at several time points during the course of electroconvulsivetherapy in patients with a major depressive episode. Patients with a major depressive disorder or a bipolar disorder and a current major depressive episode will be included in this study. Investigators hypothesized that Metabolome could be a source to predict response during ECT and to help understanding underlying biological mechanisms.
Gender: All
Ages: 18 Years - Any
Updated: 2025-07-24
NCT05655754
Comparison of Esketamine/Propofol and Methohexital Anesthesia for ECT
The current anesthetic drug used as standard for ECT procedure at the Department of Psychiatry and Psychotherapy, Medical University of Vienna, is the barbiturate methohexital (Brevital®). As far as we know, methohexital is the most common anesthetic in the procedure of ECT. Only few heterogeneous randomized controlled trials to directly compare the use of (sole) ketamine and methohexital in ECT with relatively small sample sizes have been conducted so far, showing inconclusive findings: a retrospective comparison of methohexital and switch to ketamine anesthesia in 36 patients showed that ketamine prolonged seizure duration and accelerated posttreatment orientation. Others compared both drugs in terms of recovery and reorientation time showing that reorientation time was faster in the methohexital group (total N=9). Another study showed no difference in any outcome measure (depressive symptom improvement, cognition, adverse events) between both groups (total N=16, N=9 per group). Finally, a comparative investigation (total N=37, N=20 vs. N=17) detected no differences between both anesthetics but a higher systolic blood pressure posttreatment and longer motor seizure duration in the ketamine group. A favorable profile of ketamine in regards to seizure quality has been reported, however in terms of outcome measures methohexital and ketamine were similar (total N=50, N=23 vs. N=27). The present study is designed as a prospective randomized non-inferiority trial comparing esketamine plus propofol (ratio 1:1, for better readability from now on referred to as "ketofol") to methohexital, the latter being the current standard anesthetic applied for ECT procedure at our department. Patients eligible for ECT will be randomly assigned to receive anesthesia with either ketofol or methohexital for the whole course of the individual ECT series. Group differences will be investigated both in regards to outcomes related to anesthesia, treatment-outcome and seizure quality. Further, changes in cardiac enzyme levels before and after ECT-treatment and during the entire ECT series will be evaluated and possible group differences will be explored. As stated above the sole/adjunct administration of ketamine as anesthetic agent for ECT has been associated with better seizure quality, similar antidepressant outcomes and anesthesia-associated events, while there is some evidence suggesting that the use of ketamine might present some advantages to other anesthetics in terms of cognitive side-effects accompanying ECT. Therefore, the aim of the present study will be to establish ketofol as a new standard for anesthesia at our Department.
Gender: All
Ages: 18 Years - Any
Updated: 2025-05-08