Background: Controversy persists about the use of right unilateral (RUL) and bilateral (BL) electroconvulsive therapy (ECT). While RUL ECT results in less severe short-term and long-term cognitive effects, there is concern that it is less efficacious than BL ECT.
Increasing the electrical dosage increases the efficacy of right unilateral electroconvulsive therapy, although not to the level of bilateral therapy. High electrical dosage is associated with a more rapid response, and unilateral treatment is associated with less severe cognitive side effects after treatment.
The use of an ultrabrief stimulus markedly reduces adverse cognitive effects, and when coupled with markedly suprathreshold right unilateral ECT, also preserves efficacy. (ClinicalTrials.gov number, NCT00487500.).
Background:Agitation is common across neuropsychiatric disorders and contributes to disability,
institutionalization, and diminished quality of life for patients and their caregivers.
There is no consensus definition of agitation and no widespread agreement on what
elements should be included in the syndrome. The International Psychogeriatric
Association formed an Agitation Definition Work Group (ADWG) to develop a provisional
consensus definition of agitation in patients with cognitive disorders that can be
applied in epidemiologic, non-interventional clinical, pharmacologic, non-pharmacologic
interventional, and neurobiological studies. A consensus definition will facilitate
communication and cross-study comparison and may have regulatory applications in drug
development programs.Methods:The ADWG developed a transparent process using a combination of electronic,
face-to-face, and survey-based strategies to develop a consensus based on agreement of a
majority of participants. Nine-hundred twenty-eight respondents participated in the
different phases of the process.Results:Agitation was defined broadly as: (1) occurring in patients with a cognitive impairment
or dementia syndrome; (2) exhibiting behavior consistent with emotional distress; (3)
manifesting excessive motor activity, verbal aggression, or physical aggression; and (4)
evidencing behaviors that cause excess disability and are not solely attributable to
another disorder (psychiatric, medical, or substance-related). A majority of the
respondents rated all surveyed elements of the definition as “strongly agree” or
“somewhat agree” (68–88% across elements). A majority of the respondents agreed that the
definition is appropriate for clinical and research applications.Conclusions:A provisional consensus definition of agitation has been developed. This definition can
be used to advance interventional and non-interventional research of agitation in
patients with cognitive impairment.
The amnestic effects of ECT are greatest and most persistent for knowledge about the world (impersonal memory,) compared with knowledge about the self (personal memory), for recent compared with distinctly remote events, and for less salient events. Bilateral ECT produces more profound amnestic effects than RUL ECT, particularly for memory of impersonal events.
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