We have studied the effects of methohexitone and propofol with and without alfentanil on seizure duration and recovery in this observer-blinded, prospective, randomized, crossover study involving 24 patients undergoing electroconvulsive therapy (ECT). Each patient had four treatment sessions, and received the following four i.v. regimens in random order: methohexitone 0.75 mg kg-1, methohexitone 0.50 mg kg-1 and alfentanil 10 micrograms kg-1, propofol 0.75 mg kg-1, propofol 0.50 mg kg-1 and alfentanil 10 micrograms kg-1. Additional methohexitone or propofol was given as needed in 10-20-mg increments until loss of consciousness. Suxamethonium 1.0 mg kg-1 i.v. was given for muscular paralysis. Mean motor and EEG seizure durations were longer with methohexitone-alfentanil (44.7 (SD 15.0) and 70.5 (29.7) s) than with methohexitone (37.6 (12.6) and 52.6 (15.3) s) and similarly, seizures were longer with propofol-alfentanil (36.8 (15.2) and 54.5 (20.9) s) than with propofol alone (27.2 (11.9) and 39.2 (3.9) s). Seizures were longest with methohexitone-alfentanil and shortest with propofol. Recovery time was statistically shorter in patients receiving propofol compared with methohexitone-alfentanil and methohexitone alone. Alfentanil with a reduced dose of methohexitone or propofol provided unconsciousness and increased seizure duration in patients undergoing ECT. We conclude that the combination of methohexitone with alfentanil is a good regimen for ECT, especially for patients with short seizure duration.
In a double-blind crossover study, single doses of d-amphetamine and placebo were administered to 12 patients with severe chronic obsessive-compulsive disorder (OCD). Improvement of obsessional symptoms was significant on clinical ratings and was correlated with improved performance on an attention task. Changes were also significant for self-rated measures of activation and altered reality. The behavior response to amphetamine was not statistically correlated with subsequent improvement during a 6-week clomipramine trial, although the direction of change was the same during both treatments for every patient studied.
scite is a Brooklyn-based organization that helps researchers better discover and understand research articles through Smart Citations–citations that display the context of the citation and describe whether the article provides supporting or contrasting evidence. scite is used by students and researchers from around the world and is funded in part by the National Science Foundation and the National Institute on Drug Abuse of the National Institutes of Health.