| Literature DB >> 34062721 |
Joanna Szczepańska-Gieracha1, Błażej Cieślik2, Anna Serweta3, Krzysztof Klajs4.
Abstract
The multifactorial genesis of old-age depression requires multi-professional therapy combining physical activity and psychosocial interventions; however, there is still a percentage of older people who do not exhibit satisfactory improvements. The aim of this study was to evaluate the effectiveness of virtual therapy in the elderly for whom the previous multimodal, biopsychosocial therapeutic programme had not brought the expected results. Twenty-five elderly women with depressive symptoms were randomly divided into a virtual reality group (VR, n = 13) and a control group (Control, n = 12). The average age was 70.73 and the average intensity of depression symptoms amounted to 12.26 in the Geriatric Depression Scale (GDS-30). As a virtual reality source, the VRTierOne (Stolgraf®) device was used. The therapeutic cycle consisted of eight virtual therapy sessions, twice a week for four weeks. As primary and secondary outcome measures, the GDS-30 was performed at three time points. In the VR group, the GDS-30 score was reduced by 36%, and the result persisted in the follow-up tests. Immersive virtual therapy significantly lowered the intensity of depressive symptoms, as well as stress and anxiety levels in older women taking part in the group-based multimodal therapeutic programme, whose earlier therapy had not brought the expected results.Entities:
Keywords: Ericksonian psychotherapy; depression; elderly; head-mounted display; mental health; stress; total immersion; virtual reality
Year: 2021 PMID: 34062721 PMCID: PMC8125254 DOI: 10.3390/jcm10091942
Source DB: PubMed Journal: J Clin Med ISSN: 2077-0383 Impact factor: 4.241
Figure 1Study flow diagram.
Figure 2Garden of Revival screen captures: (A) initial stage of the therapy; (B) final stage of the therapy; (C) mandala colouring task; (D) gate leading to the Garden of Revival.
Participants baseline characteristic, mean (SD).
| Variable | Overall ( | VR ( | Control ( | |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Age, years | 70.73 (4.56) | 70.18 (4.87) | 71.25 (4.41) | 0.59 a |
| Body mass, kg | 73.14 (13.68) | 74.11 (10.46) | 72.25 (16.53) | 0.75 a |
| Height, cm | 160.04 (6.95) | 160.91 (8.44) | 159.25 (5.51) | 0.58 a |
| BMI, kg/cm2 | 28.47 (4.50) | 28.67 (3.74) | 28.29 (5.26) | 0.59 a |
| Normal (BMI 18.5–24.9), n (%) | 6 (26.09) | 2 (18.18) | 4 (33.33) | 0.41 b |
| Overweight (BMI 25–29.9), n (%) | 9 (39.13) | 5 (45.45) | 4 (33.33) | 0.55 b |
| Obese (BMI > 30), n (%) | 8 (34.78) | 4 (36.36) | 4 (33.33) | 0.88 b |
| Total cholesterol, mg/dL | 196.91 (42.78) | 201.18 (46.71) | 193.00 (40.52) | 0.66 a |
| HDL-C, mg/dL | 68.82 (16.85) | 67.27 (19.02) | 70.25 (15.30) | 0.68 a |
| LDL-C, mg/dL | 118.78 (33.46) | 125.90 (35.56) | 112.25 (31.50) | 0.34 a |
| Triglycerides, mg/dL | 116.00 (48.18) | 114.90 (36.46) | 117.00 (58.59) | 0.92 a |
| Fasting glucose, mg/dL | 103.61 (13.12) | 105.36 (16.56) | 102.01 (9.44) | 0.55 a |
| Resting SBP, mm Hg | 131.82 (13.87) | 133.27 (14.99) | 130.50 (13.28) | 0.64 a |
| Resting DBP, mm Hg | 74.86 (8.20) | 74.45 (8.10) | 75.25 (8.63) | 0.82 a |
| GDS | 12.26 (4.39) | 12.27 (4.45) | 12.25 (4.53) | 0.99 a |
| Current smoking, | 2 (8.69) | 1 (9.09) | 1 (8.33) | 0.95 b |
| Back pain, | 18 (78.26) | 8 (72.72) | 10 (83.33) | 0.54 b |
| Joints pain, | 21 (91.30) | 10 (90.90) | 11 (91.66) | 0.95 b |
| Other pain, | 13 (56.52) | 6 (54.54) | 7 (58.33) | 0.85 b |
| Marital status, married/single/widow (%) | 11/3/9 | 5/2/4 | 6/1/5 | 0.78 b |
| Education, low/medium/high (%) | 5/10/8 | 3/4/4 | 2/6/4 | 0.76 b |
BMI: body mass index; HDL-C: high-density lipoprotein cholesterol; LDL-C: low-density lipoprotein cholesterol; a t test; b Chi-square test.
Primary and secondary outcome measures results, mean (SD).
| VR | Control | |||||||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Pre-Intervention | Post-Intervention | After 2 Weeks | Pre-Intervention | Post-Intervention | After 2-Weeks | |||
| GDS | 12.27 (4.45) | 8.27 * (3.60) | 7.27 * (2.57) | <0.001 | 12.25 (4.53) | 12.75 (4.82) | 11.83 (2.62) | 0.61 |
| Stress level | 61.45 (8.94) | 52.27 * (9.08) | 46.27 * (10.62) | <0.001 | 62.50 (9.53) | 63.50 (10.37) | 64.75 (11.46) | 0.38 |
| Emotional tension | 21.90 (4.67) | 20.09 (5.52) | 17.45 * (5.75) | 0.006 | 20.75 (2.70) | 21.25 (3.91) | 21.91 (4.27) | 0.36 |
| External stress | 19.36 (4.90) | 14.09 * (5.35 | 13.18 * (5.99) | <0.001 | 20.66 (4.29) | 20.91 (3.72) | 21.16 (4.74) | 0.74 |
| Intrapsychic stress | 20.18 (3.81) | 18.09 (2.11) | 15.63 * (3.23) | 0.003 | 21.08 (5.50) | 21.33 (4.18) | 21.66 (4.35) | 0.77 |
| HADS | 17.27 (5.36) | 13.00 * (3.25) | 11.27 * (3.13) | <0.001 | 17.66 (4.83) | 18.16 (4.52) | 18.00 (3.74) | 0.82 |
| HADS-Anxiety | 10.18 (3.78) | 7.36 * (2.33) | 5.81 * (2.60) | <0.001 | 9.83 (2.97) | 10.00 (2.69) | 10.41 (2.84) | 0.48 |
| HADS-Depression | 7.09 (2.02) | 5.63 (2.29) | 5.45 (2.33) | 0.07 | 7.83 (2.32) | 8.16 (2.51) | 7.58 (2.06) | 0.55 |
GDS: Geriatric Depression Scale; HADS: Hospital Anxiety and Depression Scale; p-value as a result of Repeated Measures ANOVA; * statistically significant compared to the pre-intervention test according to Bonferroni post-hoc test.
VR therapy effects, mean differences (95% CI).
| VR ( | Control ( | MS | F |
| ƞp2 | |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| GDS | ||||||
| Pre vs. post | 4.00 (1.11–6.89); | −0.50 (−3.27–2.27); | ||||
| Pre vs. follow-up | 5.00 (2.11–7.89); | 0.42 (−2.35–3.19); | ||||
| Time * group | 39.47 | 8.31 | <0.001 | 0.28 | ||
| Stress level | ||||||
| Pre vs. post | 9.18 (2.65–15.71); | −1.00 (−7.25–5.25); | ||||
| Pre vs. follow-up | 15.18 (8.65–21.71); | −2.25 (−8.50–4.00); | ||||
| Time * group | 440.10 | 18.18 | <0.001 | 0.46 | ||
| Emotional tension | ||||||
| Pre vs. post | 1.82 (−1.42–5.06); | −0.50 (−3.60–2.60); | ||||
| Pre vs. follow-up | 4.45 (1.21–7.70); | −1.17 (−4.27–1.94); | ||||
| Time * group | 45.80 | 7.67 | 0.001 | 0.27 | ||
| External stress | ||||||
| Pre vs. post | 5.27 (2.16–8.39); | −0.25 (−3.23–2.73); | ||||
| Pre vs. follow-up | 6.18 (3.07–9.30); | −0.50 (−3.48–2.48); | ||||
| Time * group | 73.17 | 13.28 | <0.001 | 0.39 | ||
| Intrapsychic stress | ||||||
| Pre vs. post | 2.09 (−0.98–5.17); | −0.25 (−3.19–2.69); | ||||
| Pre vs. follow-up | 4.55 (1.47–7.62); | −0.58 (−3.53–2.36); | ||||
| Time * group | 37.84 | 7.05 | 0.002 | 0.25 | ||
| HADS | ||||||
| Pre vs. post | 4.27 (1.16–7.39); | −0.50 (−3.48–2.48); | ||||
| Pre vs. follow-up | 6.00 (2.89–9.11); | −0.33 (−3.31–2.65); | ||||
| Time * group | 62.49 | 11.35 | <0.001 | 0.35 | ||
| HADS-Anxiety | ||||||
| Pre vs. post | 2.82 (0.64–5.00); | −0.17 (−2.26–1.92); | ||||
| Pre vs. follow-up | 4.36 (2.18–6.55); | −0.58 (−2.67–1.51); | ||||
| Time * group | 35.61 | 13.18 | <0.001 | 0.39 | ||
| HADS-Depression | ||||||
| Pre vs. post | 1.45 (−0.32–3.23); | −0.33 (−2.03–1.36); | ||||
| Pre vs. follow-up | 1.64 (−0.18–3.41); | 0.25 (−1.45–1.95); | ||||
| Time * group | 5.05 | 2.83 | 0.070 | 0.12 |
GDS: Geriatric Depression Scale; HADS: Hospital Anxiety and Depression Scale; p-value as a result of Repeated Measures ANOVA; MS: mean square; *: It is a sign of the interaction of time and group. This is the standard way of reporting the results of statistical analysis