Brainwave Pattern In EEG Helps Track Depression in Healthy Individuals
Electroencephalogram (EEG), a relatively inexpensive, non-invasive method of measuring the electrical activity in the brain, may be used to promote the early detection and treatment of depression ().
EEG - A Potential Diagnostic Tool to Identify Depression in a Healthy Person
Depression is a common but serious mental disorder that requires early diagnosis and treatment; however, it is currently difficult to do so.
The participants of this study were instructed to measure their EEG for 1 minute every day at home across two to four weeks to investigate its relationship to the intensity of their depressed mood.
‘Brainwave activity (EEG) patterns can be an economical and useful tool to detect depression. #eeg #depression #affordabletool’
The results demonstrated that the occurrence of phase resetting for many participants, in which brain waves from different brain regions synchronize, increased with high levels of depressed mood at certain frequencies but decreased at other frequencies.
These results indicate that changes in depressed mood can be objectively measured using EEG for 1 min in a resting state and are expected to facilitate the early detection of depression and the development of novel treatment in the future.
Reference:
- Brainwave activities reflecting depressed mood: a pilot study - (https:www.nature.com/articles/s41598-023-40582-y)