Drugs, ‘Shock Therapy’ Beat Depression

Study Shows ECT and Antidepressants Are Effective Therapies

Some of the most maligned therapies for depression are also the most useful, say researchers whose review of depression treatments appears in the latest issue of The Lancet.

The researchers concluded that electroconvulsive therapy, once known as “shock treatment,” and antidepressant drugs are the most effective treatments for moderate to severe depression.

Psychiatry professor Klaus P. Ebmeier, of the University of Edinburgh and colleagues reviewed developments in depression research within the last five years, focusing on recent advances and controversies.

They found that most patients improve with current treatments, although depression remains a widely undertreated condition.

The Drug Debate

A spate of recent news reports has questioned both the usefulness and safety of drug treatments for depression.

One of the most widely reported was the public spat between actor Tom Cruise and actress Brooke Shields last summer. Cruise publicly criticized Shields for taking selective serotonin reuptake inhibitor (SSRI) antidepressants to treat her postpartum depression after the birth of her first child.

Cruise called antidepressants “very dangerous” and claimed that there was no proof that chemical imbalances in the brain drive depression. Shields responded in a newspaper column, calling Cruise’s assertions a “ridiculous rant.”

Antidepressants and Suicide

Questions about whether SSRI use is associated with an increased risk of suicidal behavior in adults and children have also been much in the news.

Studies suggesting a link, especially in young people, prompted officials in the U.K. to conclude that antidepressants should not be used for the initial treatment of mild depression, and most SSRIs have been banned in Great Britain for use by children and teens.

In the U.S., the FDA ruled in 2004 that packaging for SSRI drugs must include a warning that patients taking them should be closely monitored for suicidal behavior.

Ebmeier and colleagues conclude that there is little unbiased scientific evidence to back up claims that the new-generation antidepressants are linked to suicides, adding that the moves by the regulatory agencies in the U.K. and U.S. are not justified.

“Recent moral panics about suicidal effects and dependence-inducing potential of antidepressants have tilted the balance of publicly perceived risk against them, but both their effectiveness and their ready availability make them the likely choice for most patients,” they write.

Shock Therapy Revisited

The reviewers call electroconvulsive therapy (ECT) “the most effective treatment for depression, especially if patients present with psychotic symptoms, such as delusions and hallucinations.”

Max Fink, who is widely known as “the grandfather of American ECT,” tells Todo en Medicamentos that studies continue to show that the treatment is highly effective in depressed patients with psychosis.

He says ECT was all but abandoned in the 1960s when antidepressant drugs became available, but they found a following once again in the 1980s as a treatment for severely depressed patients who did not respond to drugs.

According to the American Psychiatric Association, there is no evidence that ECT causes brain damage. Anesthesia and muscle relaxants are given during the procedure. Also, ECT cannot be administered without consent.

The most common side effects of ECT are headache, muscle soreness, and confusion shortly after the procedure. Patients may also experience some short-term memory loss, which usually improves over time (days to months).

The American Psychiatric Association says:

“Some people who advocate legislative bans against ECT are former psychiatric patients who have undergone the procedure and believe they have been harmed by it and that the treatment is used to punish patients’ misbehavior and make them more docile. This is untrue. It is true that many years ago, when psychiatric knowledge was less advanced, ECT was used for a wide range of psychiatric problems, sometimes even to control troublesome patients. The procedure was frightening for patients because it was then administered without anesthesia or muscle relaxants, and the uncontrolled seizures sometimes broke bones.”

Vagus Nerve Stimulation

An epilepsy treatment that was just approved for the treatment of depression works in a similar way to ECT, but its effects may last longer.

Like ECT, vagus nerve stimulation (VNS) uses electrical charges to relieve the symptoms of depression. But unlike the older treatment, the charges are delivered by a surgically implanted device that works much like a pacemaker.

The silver-dollar-sized device sends out pulses of electricity to the vagus nerve, which transmits them to the brain.

The reviewers noted that VNS has been proposed as a treatment in drug-resistant and ECT-resistant depressed patients, but they concluded that the “evidence for its effectiveness is as yet inconclusive.”

They write that another experimental treatment, known as deep brain stimulation, has shown promise in several studies. Already in clinical use for the treatment of Parkinson’s disease, deep brain stimulation involves the surgical implantation of electrodes in specific regions of the brain.

“Of the physical treatments only ECT is in regular clinical use,” Ebmeier and colleagues wrote. The newer therapies “offer hope of treatment that is potentially less invasive or less liable to generate memory impairment.”

More information at TEM Todo en Medicamentos.

Whiplash!

It’s amazing how a seemingly normal day can turn awry so quickly. While traveling to a meeting earlier this week, while sitting at a stop light in traffic BANG! I am jerked backward in my seat unexpectedly. The lady behind me comes running to my door asking me if I am alright…All I can say is "I don’t know"…

She phones the police and shortly after arrival we all move to the side of the road and exchange information. My bumper is shoved down and up under the rear of my SUV and the sun roof shade is shoved open a bit from the impact. Her SUV has a cracked license plate holder. After the police are finished, we go our separate ways.

During the day my neck and shoulders are tender and I attribute it to the unexpected tensing of the muscles in the area. I attend my meeting and return to my home after seeing my doctor. He prescribes muscle relaxants, pain meds as needed and suggests I get an x-ray of the area. If I have increased symptoms, go to the ER and be evaluated.

The next morning, I get up and head to work. I teach an early morning class fully aware that the more I am in an upright position, the more I hurt. Moving my arms and head become more difficult. I feel pain radiating up my neck and pressure building in my head. Certain movements make me a bit dizzy and I feel a little nauseated. The pressure in my head becomes a headache. I realize then I have to be seen and evaluated. Thank goodness I work in a hospital so to get to an express-care/ER was a matter of going down in an elevator and going to another part of the facility.

This is horrible. I have had difficulties with my back before but that has been the lower part of the spine. Up until now the upper spine and neck have been doing fine. This is not right…I was sitting in traffic at a red light waiting for it to change. My tires were not even turning when I was hit.

Testing is performed, meds are given and I am diagnosed with what is known as Whiplash. Well I have heard many folks talk about it but had yet to know the experience until now. It is incredible and very limiting. Treatment consists of large amounts of muscle relaxants, anti-inflammatories, ice and pain meds. After 24-48 hours I switch to heat and continue the regimen.

I have so much work to do. I don’t have time for this. I have classes to teach, work to catch up on, much too much. But I go home and obey the doctor’s orders and I quickly see why he says I have to rest for a few days. The medications I have to take make me sleepy and there is no way I can drive or work that way so I give in and accept the fact that I am going to have to deal with things when I return to work.

It is important to follow the doctor’s orders when it comes to something like this. I hope and pray I can function well and be back to my old self. I have to sit for long periods of time at computers and use my arms alot for teaching and typing. I am mindful about posture and hope I feel more comfortable soon because right now, even good posture hurts.

I have a better appreciation for those folks who have shared their experiences in the past. Having whiplash is painful and limits function. I am hoping for a complete recovery.

More information at TEM Todo en Medicamentos.