There's been a resurgence of interest in ECT because it has evolved into a
safe option, one that works. But for a public influenced by Ken Kesey's One Flew
Over the Cuckoo's Nest, whose associations with ECT start with the electric
chair and move onto lightning bolts, electric eels and third rails, it makes for
queasy conversation. For all of us. Let's replace a few of the myths with facts.
ECT has a higher success rate or severe depression than
any other form of
treatment. It can be life-saving and produce dramatic results. It is particularly
useful for people who suffer from psychotic depressions or intractable mania,
people who cannot take antidepressants due to problems of health or lack of
response & pregnant women who suffer from depression or mania. A patient who is
very intent on suicide, & who would not wait 3 weeks for an
antidepressant to
work, would be a good candidate for ECT because it works more rapidly. In fact,
suicide attempts are relatively rare after ECT.
ECT is usually given 3 times a week. A patient may require as few as 3 or 4
treatments or as many as 12 to 15. Once the family & patient consider that the
patient is more or less back to his normal level of functioning, it is usual for
the patient to have 1 or 2 additional treatments in order to prevent relapse.
Today the method is painless, & with modifications in technique it bears little
relationship to the unmodified treatments of the 1940s.
The patient is put to sleep with a very short-acting barbiturate, & then the
drug succinycholine is administered to temporarily paralyze the muscles so they
do not contract during the treatment & cause fractures. An electrode is placed
above the temple of the nondominant side of the brain, & a second in the middle
of the forehead (this is called unilateral ECT); or one electrode is placed
above each temple (this is called bilateral ECT). A very small current is passed
through the brain, activating it & producing a seizure. Because the patient is
anesthetized & his body is totally relaxed by the succinycholine, he sleeps
peacefully while an electroencephalogram (EEG) monitors the seizure activity &
an electrocardiogram (EKG) monitors the heart rhythm. The current is applied for
one second or less, & the patient breathes pure oxygen through a mask. The
duration of a clinically effective seizure ranges from 30 seconds to sometimes
longer than a minute, & the patient wakes up 10 to 15 minutes later. Upon
awakening, a patient may experience a brief period of confusion, headache or
muscle stiffness, but these symptoms typically ease in a matter of 20 to 60
minutes. During the few seconds following the ECT stimulus there may be
temporary drop in blood pressure. This may be followed by a marked increase in
heart rate, which may then lead to a rise in blood pressure. Heart rhythm
disturbances, not unusual during the period of time, generally subside without
complications. A patient with a history of high blood pressure or other
cardiovascular problems should have a cardiology consultation first.
Because as many as 20 to 50 percent of the people who respond well to a
course of ECT relapse within 6 months, a maintenance treatment of
antidepressants, lithium or ECT at monthly or 6 week intervals might be
advisable. Short-term memory loss has always been a concern to patients who
receive ECT, but several studies conclude that patients who received unilateral
ECT performed better on attention/memory tests than those who received bilateral
ECT. However, there is a question as to whether unilateral is as effective.
Experts agree that changes in memory function do occur & persist for a few days
following treatment, but that patients return to normal within a month. A 1985
NIMH Consensus Conference concluded that while some memory loss is frequent
after ECT, it is estimated that one-half of 1 percent of ECT patients suffer
severe loss. Memory problems usually clear within 7 months of treatment,
although there may be a persistent memory deficit for the period immediately
surrounding the treatment.