Electroconvulsive therapy improves mood and level of function for patients with major depression
Electroconvulsive therapy (ECT) improves
mood, quality of life, and level of function for activities of daily
living in patients with major depression, according to an article
in the November issue of the British Journal of Psychiatry.
“Quality of life and function are improved
in ECT patients as early as two weeks after the conclusion of ECT,”
said Vaughn McCall, MD, lead author of the American study.
“ECT produces a net improvement in health
for most patients, and should help fill the knowledge gap that recently
led to more restrictive guidance on the use of ECT in the United
Kingdom,” said McCall. “A restrictive attitude toward ECT is not
warranted.”
Britain’s National Institute of Clinical
Excellence last year recommended sharp restrictions on the use of
electroconvulsive therapy “until more information is available about
ECT’s effect on memory, quality of life, and other pertinent health
outcomes.”
The Institute of Clinical Excellence, an
arm of Britain’s National Health Service, said in 2003 that ECT
should be used “only to achieve rapid and short-term improvements
of severe symptoms after other treatment options have failed and/or
when the condition is considered to be potentially life threatening
in individuals with severe depressive illness, catatonia or a prolonged
or severe manic episode.”
The current study included 77 patients with
major depression, and the effects of depression were confirmed by
use of several psychiatric measuring scales, some answered by the
patients and some by clinicians. These tests were completed before
and immediately after ECT and again at two and four weeks after
ECT.
McCall said that 66 percent of the patients
showed improvement after ECT: “The sample showed improvement in
most measures of mood, cognition, quality of life and function”
at both two weeks and four weeks after ECT. The only decline was
on an autobiographical memory test, but that test is designed to
measure only memory loss, not improvement.
When he compared test results on 9 of 10
psychological scales before ECT with the same tests repeated at
both two and four weeks after ECT, the differences were statistically
significant.
McCall said the new study confirmed earlier
results obtained by the same group that function and quality of
life improve after ECT “to a greater extent than medication-treated
patients,” but, he added, the prior study’s first measurement was
not made until four weeks after ECT.
McCall said the change in quality of life
was largely related to changes in mood.
But there also was improvement on various measurements of cognition
and especially of memory. “Although the improvement on neurological
tests could be attributed to a practice effect [taking the same
test several times], it is equally likely that they represent true
improvements in cognitive efficiency,” he said.
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