Electro-convulsive therapy Flashcards

1
Q

Sakel

A

Insulin-induced hypoglicemia

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2
Q

Cerletti and Bini

A

Electricity-induced seizures

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3
Q

Modified ECT

A

1950s

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4
Q

Monitored ECT

A

1980s

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5
Q

Bried-pulse waveform

A

1980s

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6
Q

Main indications (when to use ECT)

A
  • major depression (unipolar or bipolar)
    > good prognosis: anorexia, psychomotor retardation, catatonia, mood-congruent
    > poor prognosis: hysterical phenomena, somatization, chronic pain
  • mania
  • catatonic schizphrenia
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7
Q

Use in major dperession

A

First line:

  • urgent need to treat
  • previous good response
  • psychotic or catatonic features
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8
Q

Mechanisms of action

A
  • unclear, but clearly due to the seizure, NOT due to amnesia or “punishment”.
  • seizure increase catecholamine synthesis and turnover, leading to down regulation of beta-adrenergic receptors
  • it can change patterns of blood flow through the brain and change the metabolism of areas of the brain
  • increased dopamine may play some role
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9
Q

Preparations for ECT

A
  • Discontinue all psychotropic drugs, especially benzodiazepines, possibly cholestrerase inhibitors
  • informed consent
  • second opinion
  • anaesthesia work-up
  • neuologic exam, neuroimaging study
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10
Q

Usual course of ECT

A
  • 6-15 treatments, given three times per week (can reduce to twice weekly to decrease confusion)
  • aim for 25 to 60 sec seizures by EEG
  • treat until patient plateaus or is back to baseline, then two or three more treatments
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11
Q

Electrode placement

A

in bilateral ECT, the electrical current is passed across the whole brain

in unilateral ECT, the current is just passed across one side. both of them cause a seizure in the whole of the brain

Less memory deficit with unilateral non-dominant placement, but;

  • many patient don’t respond to unilateral treatment
  • may require more treatments
  • seizures may not generalize
  • stimulus need to be further supra threshold than for BL treatment.
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12
Q

Side effects

A
  • reversible short-term memory deficit
  • confusion
  • headache, muscle soreness
  • broken bones and teeth (extremely rare since advent of modified ECT)
  • anaesthesia risk
  • cardiac risk

OVERALL risk: death/serious injury occurs in about 1 in 80.000 treatment

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