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Does Stress Change EEG Measures in Students: A Feasibility Study (EEG_stress)

S

Scotland College of Chiropractic

Status

Enrolling

Conditions

Electroencephalogram
Stress

Study type

Observational

Funder types

Other

Identifiers

Details and patient eligibility

About

Psychological stress is a frequent human affection and has a considerable impact on modern society, and tertiary-level students often report increased stress levels as the semester progresses. While many questionnaires assess psychological stress, they do not capture objective data. Much research has shown that electroencephalography (EEG) can capture objective markers of stress, and recent studies have shown that EEG can even classify stress levels.

This study aims to assess the feasibility of using EEG to objectively assess stress over the course of a semester of work in chiropractic students engaged in a Masters level course in Scotland.

Full description

The study's primary aim is to assess the feasibility of a more extensive future study. The investigators also hypothesise that as the semester progresses, participants will exhibit changes in their EEG outcomes that may be related to longitudinal or direct stressors.

Study design and setting This study will be an observational study with a stress-related questionnaire (Depression, Anxiety, and Stress Scale - 21 (DASS-21)) over three time-points.

Participants The investigators aim to recruit 10 participants and assess them three times over the course of their semester, early, middle, and late semester, with at least a four-week gap between each data collection. The investigators aim to recruit only healthy Scottish chiropractic students with no prior diagnosed mental disorder and who are capable of understanding the study procedure.

Procedure Following screening for eligibility and consent, i.e., visit one (baseline), participants will be asked to answer a questionnaire and undergo EEG measurement and Montreal imaging stress task (MIST). The same EEG and questionnaire procedure will be performed in the remaining two data collection sessions.

Each EEG recording session, with the participant seated, will consist of a two-minute resting state with the eyes closed for a baseline relaxation level among the participants. A following two-minute eyes-open phase will take place. After which, participants will be asked to perform the experimental phase of the MIST task, a following two-minute recording phase will be with the eyes open, and a final two-minute resting phase with eyes closed will conclude the task.

The investigators aim to conclude the data collection around 16 weeks after the initial participant is recruited.

Enrollment

10 estimated patients

Sex

All

Ages

18+ years old

Volunteers

Accepts Healthy Volunteers

Inclusion criteria

Healthy Scottish chiropractic students with no prior diagnosed mental disorder and who are capable of understanding the study procedure.

Exclusion criteria

A pre-diagnosed mental health disorder

Trial design

10 participants in 1 patient group

SCC students
Description:
Healthy adults attending and actively enrolled in the Scotland College of Chiropractic's degree program and who were without health issues or mental disorders.

Trial contacts and locations

1

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Central trial contact

Alice Cade, BSc, BSc(chiro), MHSc, PhD; Ross MacDonald, MChiro

Data sourced from clinicaltrials.gov

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