When to consider electroconvulsive therapy (ECT) Kellner CH, Obbels J, Sienaert P. When to consider electroconvulsive therapy (ECT).Objective: To familiarize the reader with the role of electroconvulsive therapy (ECT) in current psychiatric medicine. Method: We review clinical indications for ECT, patient selection, contemporary ECT practice, maintenance treatment and ECT in major treatment guidelines. Results: ECT is underutilized largely due to persisting stigma and lack of knowledge about modern ECT technique. Conclusion: ECT remains a vital treatment for patients with severe mood disorders, psychotic illness and catatonia. Clinical recommendations for ECT• ECT should be prescribed earlier in the course of a severe depressive episode, not necessarily withheld until after numerous medication trials • ECT may be considered a first-line (primary) treatment for certain urgently ill patients, including those who are very suicidal, psychotic, or physically debilitated from depression Diagnostic indications for ECT • In many Western countries, severe and treatment-resistant depression is the main indication for ECT • Schizophrenia is the number one indication for ECT worldwide, but is little used for this indication in Western countries • ECT is an effective treatment for treatment-resistant mania • Delirious mania is an urgent indication for ECT • ECT is effective for treatment-resistant schizophrenia, including clozapine-resistant illness • Catatonia is very responsive to ECT • Both the motor and behavioural symptoms of Parkinson's disease respond to ECT Predictors of ECT response • Older age, psychotic symptoms, and shorter episode duration are predictors of better ECT response • Melancholic features and greater baseline depressive symptom severity are likely associated with better ECT response 304 ECT technique • Bilateral, bifrontal, and right unilateral electrode placement are all effective ECT techniques • Less urgently ill patients are often treated initially with right unilateral electrode placement • Brief and ultrabrief pulse width stimuli, now commonly used, are associated with a more benign cognitive effect profile • There is no a priori fixed number of ECT in an acute course: patients should continue treatment with ECT until they remit or a plateau has been reached, or tolerability issues require interruption of the course • Tapering of acute courses of ECT should be considered for most patients (e.g., approximately weekly treatments for several weeks past remission) • Continuation/Maintenance (C/M) ECT should be considered for patients with a history of severe, recurrent episodes who have failed to remain well on medications Additional comments • ECT is underutilized because of stigma, lack of knowledge about it, and bureaucratic restrictions • ECT is among the safest procedures performed under general anesthesia • Cognitive adverse effects are markedly decreased with modern ECT techniques, largely transient, and should not deter seriously ill patients from considering ECT.
Lower hippocampal volume was not related to amyloid pathology in this sample of patients with late-life depression. These data counter the common belief that changes in hippocampal volume in late-life depression are due to prodromal Alzheimer's disease.
BackgroundMajor Depressive Disorder (MDD) is the leading cause of disability worldwide. The cardinal features of MDD are depressed mood and anhedonia. Anhedonia is defined as a “markedly diminished interest or pleasure in all, or almost all, activities of the day”, and has generally been investigated on group-level using retrospective data (e.g. via questionnaire/interview). However, inferences based on group-level findings not necessarily generalize to daily life experiences within individuals.MethodsWe repeatedly sampled pleasurable experiences within individuals’ daily lives by means of Experience Sampling Methods, and compared how positive affect unfolded in the daily life of healthy controls versus patients diagnosed with MDD and anhedonia. We sampled Positive Affect (PA) and reward experiences on 10 semi-random time points a day, for seven days in the daily lives of 47 MDD patients with anhedonia, and 40 controls.ResultsMultilevel models showed that anhedonia was associated with low PA, but not to differences in PA dynamics, nor reward frequency in daily life. In reaction to rewards, MDD patients with anhedonia showed no difference in their increase in PA (i.e., PA reactivity), and showed no signs of a faster return to baseline thereafter (i.e., PA recovery).ConclusionsOur results suggest that the dynamical signature of anhedonia in MDD can be described best as a lower average level of PA, and “normal” in terms of PA dynamics, daily reward reactivity and reward recovery. Preregistration: https://osf.io/gmfsc/register/565fb3678c5e4a66b5582f67. Preprint: https://osf.io/cfktsElectronic supplementary materialThe online version of this article (10.1186/s12888-018-1983-5) contains supplementary material, which is available to authorized users.
Patients with late-life depression do not show deleterious cognitive effects 6 months following an ECT index course, although there are considerable differences at an individual level. Clinicians should not hesitate to prescribe ECT in older patients, as most of these patients will tolerate the treatment course and a small group will even experience a cognitive enhancement. However, clinicians should be aware that a small group of patients can experience cognitive side-effects. Further study is needed to predict which patients have a higher risk of developing cognitive side-effects.
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