ect treatment course

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ECT Workshop - 1st day Dr Amr Kamal - Dr Shimaa Wagih17-3-2012

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TREATMENT COURSE

ADVERSE EFFECTS

ECT procedures carry some risk

• Risks are associated with the induction of general anesthesia, the seizure and convulsion, the interaction between concomitant medications and ECT, and other aspects of the ECT procedure

• The most common side effects involve cognitive changes, transient cardiovascular alterations, and general somatic complaints.

Contraindications

• According to the American Psychiatric Association (2001), ECT has no absolute contraindications. However, some conditions pose a relatively high risk.

Medical conditions associated with increased risk from ECT

• Space-occupying intracerebral lesion (tumor, hematoma, etc.)

• Other condition causing increased intracranial pressure• Recent myocardial infarction• Recent intracerebral hemorrhage• Unstable vascular aneurysm or malformation• Pheochromocytoma• High anesthesia risk (American Society of

Anesthesiologists [ASA] class 4 or 5)Source. American Psychiatric Association 2001.

Mortality Rate

• Despite what can be perceived as the invasive nature of ECT, the overall mortality rate from ECT in a general population of patients is extremely low, estimated at 2–10 per 100,000 patients (0.0001%) (Shiwach et al. 2001). This is roughly the same ratio as for the induction of brief general anesthesia itself.

• Some data suggest that patients who receive ECT have a lower mortality rate due to nonpsychiatric causes of death than do patients with psychiatric illness who do not receive ECT (Munk-Olsen et al. 2007).

Cognitive Changes

The clinician should keep in mind a couple of facts about cognitive changes:

• First, depressive episodes themselves are often accompanied by profound cognitive changes, which are sometimes severe enough to present as dementia (pseudodementia). In such cases, a successful response to ECT may actually be associated with at least a subjective improvement in cognitive status.

• Second, cognitive change is not equivalent to structural brain damage.

Three types of cognitive impairment may be observed with ECT

• Postictal disorientation• Interictal confusion• Amnesia (anterograde and retrograde

memory disturbances).

Cardiovascular Complications

• Cardiovascular complications are the main cause of mortality and serious morbidity with ECT, although most such complications are minor (Weiner and Coffey 1993; Zielinski

et al. 1996)• During the seizure and acute postictal period, both the

sympathetic and parasympathetic autonomic systems are sequentially stimulated.

• Activation of the sympathetic system increases heart rate, blood pressure, and myocardial oxygen consumption, placing an increased demand on the cardiovascular system

Other Adverse Effects

• Headaches, generalized muscle soreness, and jaw pain are the most common side effects, usually lasting up to several hours, but occasionally longer

Managing the ECT Seizure

• Missed Seizureswhen no motor and ictal evidence of

seizure activity is seen following the electrical stimulus

CausesInsufficient stimulus intensityPremature termination of stimulusPoor electrode contact with the skinPatient’s high intrinsic seizure thresholdHypercarbia due to hypoventilation

Inadequate Seizures

• Seizures of “inadequate” duration

Seizure Augmentation

• Evidence suggests that missed or inadequate seizures occurring at maximum stimulus intensity decrease the likelihood that the patient will respond to treatment.

• When these phenomena occur, efforts should be directed at: Decreasing the seizure threshold Increasing the seizure duration or both

(Krystal et al. 2000).

Seizure Augmentation

Presently, four methods of seizure enhancement are commonly used:

• Decreasing the anesthetic dosage (if possible and if the agent used has anticonvulsant properties)

• Hyperventilation (inducing hypocarbia)• Caffeine (and other adenosine receptor

antagonists)• Ketamin anesthesia

(Weiner et al. 1991).

Prolonged seizure

Seizure activity lasting longer than 3 minutes(American Psychiatric Association 2001).

Causes:1) At the first treatment2) During benzodiazepine withdrawal3) In patients in whom proconvulsant

medications (e.g., caffeine, theophylline) and lithium

4) In patients who have epilepsy or preexisting paroxysmal EEG activity

Index ECT

• In addition to making the decisions of ECT, the practitioner must also make a determination of:How frequently the seizures should be induced

(i.e., the interval between treatments) How many treatments should be administered in

the treatment course.

Frequency of Treatments Most ECT treatments are given three

times a week whereas in other countries they may be administered twice weekly.

Increased frequency is associated with a more rapid response, it may also be associated with increased cognitive side effects

A three-times-weekly schedule appears to be an acceptable

Number of Treatments

• A total number of treatments averaging between six and twelve but no exact number

• The number of treatments will vary according to the individual and severity of medical condition.

Maintenance ECT

After the conclusion of a course of ECT, three options are available for continued treatment:

1. Administration of applicable psychotropic medications (e.g., antidepressant, antimanic, and/or antipsychotic agent)

2. Administration of continuation ECT3. Psychotherapy combined with either

medication or continuation ECT.

• A fourth option, involving the use of both continuation medication and ECT, may be necessary for patients with a history of failure of prophylaxis with either treatment alone.

Maintenance ECT

Multiple psychiatric disorders respond to maintenance ECT including:

major depressive disorder psychotic depression bipolar disorder and schizoaffective disorder

(Birkenhager et al. 2005).

• Use of maintenance ECT in the geriatric population is also well documented

(Thienhaus et al. 1990).

• Particular forms of schizophrenia (catatonia, refractory positive symptoms) may also be responsive to the combination of ECT and antipsychotic medication

(Shimizu et al. 2007; Suzuki et al. 2006)

• A typical arrangement would involve weekly ECT for 4 weeks, then incremental increases in the interval between ECT treatments to once a month over the next few months

(Clarke et al. 1989).

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