2016
DOI: 10.1038/npp.2016.48
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Effect of Electroconvulsive Therapy on Striatal Morphometry in Major Depressive Disorder

Abstract: Patients with major depression show reductions in striatal and paleostriatal volumes. The functional integrity and connectivity of these regions are also shown to change with antidepressant response. Electroconvulsive therapy (ECT) is a robust and rapidly acting treatment for severe depression. However, whether morphological changes in the dorsal and ventral striatum/pallidum relate to or predict therapeutic response to ECT is unknown. Using structural MRI, we assessed cross-sectional effects of diagnosis and … Show more

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Cited by 84 publications
(65 citation statements)
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“…In general, an overall increase in HV was seen in our sample following ECT, which was over an average period of 54 days. This is in line with other studies reporting an ECT‐induced increase in HV in depressed patients compared to depressed patients without ECT and healthy controls , during the same time window. The increase must be interpreted with caution since random variation and measurement errors could be a cause of the change in HV over time.…”
Section: Discussionsupporting
confidence: 93%
“…In general, an overall increase in HV was seen in our sample following ECT, which was over an average period of 54 days. This is in line with other studies reporting an ECT‐induced increase in HV in depressed patients compared to depressed patients without ECT and healthy controls , during the same time window. The increase must be interpreted with caution since random variation and measurement errors could be a cause of the change in HV over time.…”
Section: Discussionsupporting
confidence: 93%
“…Previous machine-learning ECT studies have investigated imaging predictors of response (Redlich et al, 2016;van Waarde et al, 2015;Wade et al, 2016). These investigations have used resting state fMRI or structural measures from one single data set.…”
Section: Discussionmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…The lack of longitudinal change in predictive ROIs is consistent with a previous datadriven ECT investigation. Wade et al (2016) used baseline GM volume and surface-based shape metrics of the caudate, putamen, pallidum, and nucleus accumbens to predict overall MDD response to ECT with up to 89% accuracy, whereas only the left putamen volume showed significant increase after ECT.…”
Section: Discussionmentioning
confidence: 99%
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“…Even though the cognitive sequelae are transient and ECT does not increase the risk of dementia (Chu et al, 2018), the possibility of cognitive impairment can be dissuasive to an individual with a depressive episode even if they have found no benefit with other antidepressant modalities, particularly for independent-living outpatients. Specific brain regions including the hippocampus (Oltedal et al, 2018), amygdala , striatum (Wade et al, 2016), and cerebellum (Depping et al, 2017), as well as the whole-brain structural changes Ousdal et al, 2019) were investigated following ECT. In addition, single imaging modality (Abbott et al, 2013;Jiang et al, 2018;Leaver et al, 2019;Redlich et al, 2016;Sun et al, 2019;van Waarde et al, 2015) and multimodal analysis (Cano et al, 2017;Jorgensen et al, 2016;Nickl-Jockschat et al, 2016) but with a small sample size (n < 25 patients) have been assessed with treatment response.…”
mentioning
confidence: 99%