HealthLinks is your destination for reliable, understandable, and credible health information and expert advice that always keeps why you came to us in mind.

Study: Shock Treatment Benefits Outweigh Risks

109 70
Study: Shock Treatment Benefits Outweigh Risks

Study: Shock Treatment Benefits Outweigh Risks


Electroconvulsive Therapy Improves Mood, Quality of Life Common in People With Major Depression

Nov. 1, 2004 -- Controversy continues to surround a treatment for major depression known as electroconvulsive therapy.

Last year, the U.K.'s top health policy organization recommended sharp restrictions on its use in people with severe depression, citing concerns about a lack of clinical data regarding long-term effects on memory and quality of life. Now, new research has addressed these concerns, finding that for most patients with major depression, the therapy's benefits far outweigh its risks.

The Hollywood image of shock treatment notwithstanding, electroconvulsive therapy remains an accepted form of treatment for severe depression. Its supporters say it is the only treatment that works for many severely depressed patients, but detractors counter that a large percentage of electroconvulsive therapy patients experience troubling memory loss.

In a survey of British electroconvulsive therapy patients, published last year, one in three reported persistent memory problems following the treatment. Many patients also reported feeling conflicted about the experience.

Memory 'Not a Big Issue'


The newly reported study by researchers at North Carolina's Wake Forest University included 77 patients with major depression who had electroconvulsive therapy. The patients underwent a battery of psychiatric tests measuring quality of life and ability to function immediately before and after electroconvulsive therapy treatment, and again two and four weeks later. Close family members were also interviewed to provide independent assessments of patient progress.

Researchers found that 66% of the patients with major depression experienced significant improvements in mood, thinking, quality of life, and ability to function during the four-week study period. Memory loss did occur in many patients, but lead researcher Vaughn McCall, MD, tells WebMD that it was not a major concern for most of them.

"There are a very small number of patients who experience substantial and disturbing memory loss with this treatment, but for the vast majority of our patients it was not a big issue," he says. "The improvement in mood seemed to drive the patients' perceptions of their own quality of life, and the memory effect didn't seem to enter into it."

McCall is with the department of psychiatry and behavioral medicine at Wake Forest University Baptist Medical Center in Winston-Salem, N.C. He is also president of the Association for Convulsive Therapy. His findings are published in the November issue of the British Journal of Psychiatry.
Source...

Leave A Reply

Your email address will not be published.