Shock Therapy
-
For years, electroconvulsive therapy (ECT) has been a lifesaving treatment for patients with treatment-resistant depression (TRD), yet exactly how it works has largely remained a mystery. Now researchers believe they have uncovered the underlying mechanisms behind its therapeutic effects — a discovery that may help clinicians better predict treatment response in individual patients and quell much of the fear and stigma associated with one of psychiatry’s most effective, yet misunderstood, treatments.
Two recent papers published in Translational Psychiatry have highlighted the significance of aperiodic neural activity. The first study showed this activity increased following ECT treatment. The second study expanded on these data by demonstrating a significant increase in aperiodic activity after patients received either ECT or magnetic seizure therapy (MST), which has a better side-effect profile than ECT but lower efficacy.
Aperiodic activity is “like the brain’s background noise, and for years scientists treated it that way and didn’t pay much attention to it,” first author Sydney E. Smith, a PhD candidate at the Voytek Lab in the Neuroscience Graduate Program at the University of California San Diego (UCSD), said in a press release.
However, aperiodic activity boosts inhibitory activity in the brain, effectively slowing it down,” the investigators noted.
ECT is primarily used for TRD and is effective in up to 80% of patients, yet it remains one of the least prescribed treatments.
Although it’s been around for almost 90 years, fear and concern about its potential cognitive side effects have contributed to its poor uptake. It is estimated that less than 1% of patients with TRD receive ECT.
Smith noted that the 1970s movie One Flew Over the Cuckoo’s Nest still contributes to ECT’s stigma. In the film, actor Jack Nicholson’s character is forced to undergo ECT as a punishment.
It’s important for clinicians to acknowledge the stigma while advising patients that “the actual treatment doesn’t look anything like what’s in the movies,” noted Ms. Smith. Patients must give informed consent for the procedure, and it’s delivered with the lowest level of effective stimulation.
“So many steps are taken to consider comfort and efficacy for patients and to minimize how scary it can be,” she said.
ECT uses an electrical current to induce a seizure that spreads to deep subcortical structures. MST, which was developed as an alternative to ECT, uses a magnetic field to induce a more focal seizure primarily confined to the cortex.
We used to do them at the university. The anesthesia department was involved. We would do up to 10 on a Wednesday morning, iirc.