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Neuro-affective Response to Light in Depressed Adolescents and Young Adults

RECRUITINGN/ASponsored by University of Pittsburgh
Actively Recruiting
PhaseN/A
SponsorUniversity of Pittsburgh
Started2023-06-14
Est. completion2026-07-31
Eligibility
Age12 Years – 30 Years
Healthy vol.Accepted
Locations1 site

Summary

The goal of this neuroimaging pilot study is to understand developmental differences in the impact of therapeutic wavelength light (blue light) versus a non-therapeutic wavelength (red light) on emotional brain function in depression. The main questions this study aims to answer are: * Does acute exposure to blue light (vs red light) stabilize emotional brain function in depressed individuals? * Are stabilizing effects of blue light (vs red light) stronger for blue light in adolescents than young adults? Participants will complete: * A magnetic resonance imaging brain scan, in which we will examine the effect of blue versus red light on emotional brain function at rest and in response to rewards and losses. * A pupillometry test of sensitivity to blue vs red light * Clinical interviews and surveys * Screening measures for drug and alcohol use, MRI safety, and current pregnancy \[if relevant\] * Home sleep tracking with sleep diary and actigraphy for one week

Eligibility

Age: 12 Years – 30 YearsHealthy volunteers accepted
Inclusion Criteria:

* Elevated Depressive Symptoms \[PHQ9≥5 And (Item 1≥1 or Item 2≥1)\]
* (If \<18yr) Parent or guardian can attend the baseline clinical interview

Exclusion Criteria:

* Unable to read and write in English
* Intellectual disability.
* Left or mixed handedness
* Changes to psychotropic medication type or dosage in the past 2 months
* Lifetime bipolar disorder or schizophrenia, or substance/alcohol disorder in the past 3 months.
* Factors influencing light and color sensitivity (i.e., color-blindness, serious ophthalmological conditions, photo-sensitizing medication).
* Factors influencing the ability to maintain a stable sleep schedule (i.e., shift work, severe sleep disorders, extremely late or early sleep schedule).
* Severe medical illness, neurological disorders, or history of head trauma.
* Current pregnancy or nursing
* MRI contraindication (e.g., metals in the body, recent tattoo, claustrophobia)
* Positive alcohol or substance use screen at MRI visit

Conditions3

DepressionDepression in AdolescenceDepression in Adults

Locations1 site

Western Psychiatric Hospital
Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania, 15213
Allison Caswell412-246-6652caswella@upmc.edu

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