Dose-Response Relationship of Clinical Effi-cacy and Side Effects of Electroconvulsive Therapy

Authors

  • Gh Dehbozorgi
  • Massomeh Jamshidi
Abstract:

Background: The electrical dose selected for electroconvulsive therapy (ECT) must have an acceptable efficacy and no or minimal cognitive side-effects. We evaluated the clinical efficacy and cognitive side-effects of ECT in relation to the stimulus dose administered. Method: This study assessed 71 depressed patients who were treated with bilateral ECT. For evaluation of depressive and cognitive states the mini-mental state examination (MMSE) and Hamilton scale for depression (HAM-D) were used before starting ECT and after the fourth and last sessions. Results: The baseline mean MMSE was significantly (p=0.005) different with that evaluated after the fourth (p=0.005) and the final (p=0.002) sessions among the four groups receiving various doses of ECT. The mean Hamilton score did not change significantly over the study. No decrease in cognition was observed with employing higher doses (224–345.6 mc) of ECT compared to lower doses. The rate of improvement did not change significantly among the studied groups. Conclusion: Cognitive function does not decreased with higher doses of ECT (224–345.6 mc) as compared to the other groups. The rate of improvement does not differ with the stimulus dose administered.

Upgrade to premium to download articles

Sign up to access the full text

Already have an account?login

similar resources

dose-response relationship of clinical effi-cacy and side effects of electroconvulsive therapy

background: the electrical dose selected for electroconvulsive therapy (ect) must have an acceptable efficacy and no or minimal cognitive side-effects. we evaluated the clinical efficacy and cognitive side-effects of ect in relation to the stimulus dose administered.   method: this study assessed 71 depressed patients who were treated with bilateral ect. for evaluation of depressive and cogniti...

full text

Electroconvulsive therapy--efficacy and side-effects.

BACKGROUND Efficacy of electroconvulsive therapy (ECT) and duration of associated side effects is uncertain. We wanted to study indications, efficacy, time to response and side effects. MATERIAL AND METHODS ECT-protocols and medical records (from the period 1960-95) in three psychiatric wards of Dikemark Mental Hospital, Norway were systematically assessed. RESULTS 141 persons underwent 241...

full text

Anti-obesity Drugs: From Animal Models to Clinical Effi cacy

INTRODUCTION 272 CLINICAL ASPECTS OF OBESITY AND CARDIOMETABOLIC DISEASE 273 Background – Do We Need Drugs for Obesity? 273 Current Drugs for Obesity and Their Limitations 274 Other Drugs – Withdrawn or No Longer Recommended for Routine Clinical Use 275 The Need for New Drugs 275 BIOLOGY AND GENETICS OF ENERGY REGULATION AND IMPLICATIONS FOR OBESITY 276 Short-Term (Episodic) Signals 276 Meal On...

full text

Electroconvulsive Therapy Side Effects in Recovery Ward: A Report From the North of Iran

Background: Today, Electroconvulsive Therapy (ECT) is used to manage many psychiatric illnesses. Although this treatment is safe and effective, sometimes it may cause frequent, short-term complications. Objectives: We investigated ECT-related side effects in the recovery ward of an academic hospital in Iran. Materials & Methods: This cross-sectional study was conducted at Shafa Hospital on...

full text

the effects of planning on accuracy and complexity of iranian efl students’ written narrative task performance

this study compared the different effects of form-focused guided planning vs. meaning-focused guided planning on iranian pre-intermediate students’ task performance. the study lasted for three weeks and concentrated on eight english structures. forty five pre-intermediate iranian students were randomly assigned to three groups of guided planning focus-on-form group (gpfg), guided planning focus...

15 صفحه اول

My Resources

Save resource for easier access later

Save to my library Already added to my library

{@ msg_add @}


Journal title

volume 32  issue 2

pages  89- 92

publication date 2007-06-01

By following a journal you will be notified via email when a new issue of this journal is published.

Keywords

Hosted on Doprax cloud platform doprax.com

copyright © 2015-2023