Published: May 12, 2016
Christopher Lowry

Raising the body temperature of depressed volunteers to the equivalent of a mild fever improved their symptoms of major depression for as long as six weeks after a single treatment, results from a new study show.

Researchers led by Charles Raison, professor of human ecology and psychiatry at the University of Wisconsin, conducted a small, double-blind trial to test whole-body hyperthermia as a novel treatment for major depression.

The research team, which included Christopher Lowry, associate professor of integrative physiology at 抖阴旅行射-Boulder, evaluated the depressed volunteers on the Hamilton Depression Rating Scale (HDRS) and found that 60 percent of them had a response and 40 percent met the criteria for remission of depression during at least one assessment after having received the treatment.

鈥淥ur hope is to find better and faster-acting treatments for depression than the antidepressants currently in use,鈥 Raison said.听

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