A/Prof Glenn Melvin, Ms Chris Pavlou, A/Prof Michael Gordon |
A collaborative project between Monash Health and Monash
University to improve outcomes for
adolescents with depression won the
‘Excellence in Supporting the Mental health and Well-Being of Victorians’
Monash Health Award last week.
The pilot project involved Monash University’s Associate
Professor Glenn Melvin, Centre for Developmental Psychiatry and Psychology,
Associate Professor Michael Gordon, Unit Head, ELMHS and Chris Pavlou,
discipline senior, ELMHS.
The study aimed to determine if transcranial
magnetic stimulation (TMS) is an effective treatment for adolescent
depression.
“TMS is a non-invasive means of stimulating nerve cells in
superficial areas of the brain by lightly applying a magnetic coil to the side
of the head in an awake patient,” Associate Professor Melvin said.
“Patients receive a high intensity magnetic field over the
left or right dorsolateral frontal area, a part of the brain that has been
implicated in the aetiology of depression.”
Associate Professor Melvin said five per cent
of Australian teenagers experience major depressive disorder (MDD), however,
only about half respond to an evidence-based treatment.”
“Of those who go into remission, 50 per cent
will relapse in the following five years—hence, novel treatments
are required to address this unmet need,” he said.
The Monash pilot
study offered 14 adolescents (13 to 18 years) a 20 treatment program of TMS
randomised to either the right or left side of the head to
determine if, treatment was effective in reducing depressive symptoms.
There was a statistically significant improvement in the
adolescent’s depression score on the clinician-rated Children’s Depression
Rating Scale (CDRS-R) across all time points compared to baseline, meaning that
adolescents reported substantial improvements in their depressive symptoms,”
Associate Professor Melvin said.
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