A Comparative Study to Evaluate the Effectiveness of Resisted Exercises Verses Antidepressant Medication in Young Adult Males Diagnosed with Major Depressive Disorder

Jobby George, vv.mohan chandran, sandesh t.s

Abstract


This study aims to compare the effectiveness of a combination of 12 weeks resisted exercises programme and antidepressant medication with 12 weeks of antidepressant medication alone.100 young adult males between the age range 18-39 years  diagnosed with major depressive disorder using the ICD 10 criteria, were recruited for the study. 50 Subjects each were randomly assigned into either an experimental or a control group after baseline data was obtained, using the 17- item Hamilton depression rating scale (HDRS17). The experimental group underwent 12 weeks of resisted exercises along with their regular antidepressant medication and the control group had only antidepressant medication as intervention. Our objective was to investigate whether the mean change in (HDRS17) scores from baseline was greater after 12 weeks of resisted exercise when compared with antidepressant medication alone. This study concluded that combination of resisted exercise along with antidepressant medication is more effective than antidepressant medication alone in the treatment of major depressive disorders in young adult males.

Key words - major depressive disorder, resisted exercise, antidepressants, 17- item Hamilton depression rating scale


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ISSN (Paper)2224-3208 ISSN (Online)2225-093X

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