Research Keyword: double-blind randomized controlled trial

Negative affective bias in depression following treatment with psilocybin or escitalopram – a secondary analysis from a randomized trial

This research compared how psilocybin mushrooms and escitalopram (a common antidepressant) affect the way depressed people perceive emotions. Both treatments helped patients become better at recognizing positive facial expressions and less likely to misinterpret neutral or positive faces as negative. Interestingly, while both treatments improved emotional processing similarly, the improvements were connected to later mood improvement in different ways for each drug, suggesting they may work through somewhat different mechanisms in the brain.

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The safety and efficacy of Houtou Jianweiling tablet in patients with chronic non-atrophic gastritis: a double-blind, non-inferiority, randomized controlled trial

This study tested a traditional Chinese herbal medicine called Houtou Jianweiling Tablet against omeprazole, a common stomach medication, for treating chronic stomach inflammation. The herbal tablet worked just as well as the conventional drug at relieving stomach pain, bloating, and reducing harmful bacteria, while being very safe with almost no side effects. This suggests that people with mild to moderate stomach inflammation could use this natural herbal alternative instead of, or alongside, conventional medications.

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A new highly digestible prescription diet containing Bacillus velezensis DSM 15544, fructo-oligosaccharides, plasma immunoglobulin, yeast and sepiolite for the management of acute diarrhea in dogs—a randomized double-blinded, controlled trial

Dogs with sudden diarrhea often improve on their own, but a new specialized diet was tested to speed up recovery. The diet contained beneficial bacteria (Bacillus velezensis), fiber that feeds good bacteria (fructo-oligosaccharides), protective proteins from pork plasma, yeast, and a mineral that helps firm up stools. Dogs eating this special diet recovered in about 3-4 days compared to 6 days on a regular digestive diet, with 98% improving within a week versus only 66% with the control diet.

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