Depression
Study links children’s eye-tracking patterns to depression symptoms, with differences tied to maternal depression history
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A Binghamton University-led study suggests that changes in how children look at happy and sad faces over time track with depressive symptoms—and that the pattern differs depending on whether their mothers have a history of major depressive disorder.
Fathers in Sweden were less likely to receive new psychiatric diagnoses during their partner’s pregnancy and in the first months after birth, but diagnoses of depression and stress-related disorders rose by more than 30% toward the end of the child’s first year, according to a large national register study published in JAMA Network Open.
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A new review of clinical trials suggests that psychedelics like psilocybin are effective for treating depression but offer no advantage over traditional antidepressants. Researchers accounted for the challenge of blinding in psychedelic studies, where participants can often tell if they received the drug. The findings indicate similar outcomes when compared to unblinded antidepressant trials.
Researchers at the University of Victoria have discovered that the protein Reelin could help repair leaky gut caused by chronic stress and alleviate depression symptoms. A single injection restored Reelin levels in preclinical models, showing antidepressant effects. The findings highlight the gut-brain connection in mental health.
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An implanted device that stimulates the vagus nerve was associated with sustained improvements in symptoms, functioning and quality of life among adults with long-standing, treatment-resistant major depression, according to researchers reporting two-year follow-up data from the ongoing RECOVER study led by Washington University School of Medicine in St. Louis.
A study of more than 200,000 UK adults reports that chronic pain—especially when widespread—is associated with a greater risk of developing high blood pressure. The link appears to be partly mediated by depression and inflammation, underscoring the value of pain management and blood-pressure monitoring.
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Neuroscientists from Columbia University and McGill University have discovered that high levels of the stress-related protein SGK1 are associated with depression and suicidal behavior in people who experienced childhood adversity. This finding suggests potential for new antidepressants targeting SGK1, particularly for those resistant to current treatments. The research highlights how early trauma alters brain chemistry differently from other forms of depression.
Study links major depression in young adults to altered cellular energy patterns in brain and blood
søndag, 8. mars 2026, 06:38PET brain scans link ketamine’s rapid antidepressant effect to shifts in AMPA receptor availability
torsdag, 5. mars 2026, 11:40Hong Kong survey reveals record-high depression rates tied to screen time
mandag, 2. mars 2026, 09:45Ice Spice says depression caused her weight loss, not Ozempic
onsdag, 25. februar 2026, 03:13UCLA study finds five-day accelerated TMS schedule performed similarly to conventional six-week course for treatment-resistant depression
lørdag, 10. januar 2026, 19:32Study concludes emotional support prevents depression in elderly
torsdag, 8. januar 2026, 15:37Exercise matches antidepressants for depression relief, review shows
onsdag, 7. januar 2026, 12:25Study links weekend catch-up sleep to fewer daily depressive symptoms in 16- to 24-year-olds
mandag, 5. januar 2026, 05:46MRI-derived brain network patterns linked to short-term response to Yueju Pill in depression pilot trial
onsdag, 26. november 2025, 13:36Study links disrupted brain energy signaling to depression- and anxiety-like behaviors in mice