Canadian Psychiatric Association

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Editorial
Geriatric Psychiatry: Complex Challenges, Promising Treatments
Kenneth I Shulman
(PDF)

In Review
Cognitive Pharmacotherapy of Alzheimer’s Disease and Other Dementias
Nathan Herrmann

(PDF)

Brief Screening Tests for Dementia
Wendy J Lorentz, James M Scanlan, Soo Borson

(PDF)

Effective Use of Electroconvulsive Therapy in Late-Life Depression
Alastair J Flint, Nadine Gagnon

(PDF)

Review Papers
Are Leptin and Cytokines Involved in Body Weight Gain During Treatment With Antipsychotic Drugs?

Trino Baptista, Serge Beaulieu

(PDF)

Original Research
Strategies of Collaboration Between General Practitioners and Psychiatrists: A Survey of Practitioners’ Opinions and Characteristics

Ricardo J M Lucena, Alain Lesage, Robert Élie, Yves Lamontagne, Marc Corbière

(PDF)

A Test of the Phase Model of Psychotherapy Change
Anthony S Joyce, John Ogrodniczuk, William E Piper, Mary McCallum

(PDF)

Brief Communication
Lamotrigine Use in Geriatric Patients With Bipolar Depression

Matthew Robillard, David K Conn

(PDF)

Dissolution Profile, Tolerability, and Acceptability of the Orally Disintegrating Olanzapine Tablet in Patients With Schizophrenia
Pierre Chue, Barry Jones, Cindy C Taylor, Ruth Dickson

(PDF)

Progress Against Major Depression in Canada
Scott B Patten MD

(PDF)


Book Reviews
(PDF)

Obsessive–Compulsive Disorder: A Practical Guide
Reviewed by
Arun V. Ravindran

We Fly, We Cry: Our Lives With Manic Depression
Reviewed by
Paul Grof

Geriatric Consultation Liaison Psychiatry
Reviewed by
Ron Keren

Psychotherapy With Children and Adolescents
Reviewed by
Allan Frankland

The Early Stages of Schizophrenia
Reviewed by
Mary V. Seeman



Letters to the Editor
(PDF)

Re: Atypical Antipsychotic Use in Treating Adolescents and Young Adults With Developmental Disabilities

Reply: Atypical Antipsychotic Use in Treating Adolescents and Young Adults With Developmental Disabilities

Evidence Supports Validity of Seasonal Affective Disorder

Reply: Evidence Supports Validity of Seasonal Affective Disorder

Seasonal Affective Disorder: The Latitude Hypothesis Revisited

Treatment Of Posttraumatic Stress Disorder With Tiagabine

Assessing Pain Tolerance in a Patient With Acute Psychosis

Musical Hallucinations During a Treatment With Benzodiazepine

Bupropion-Methylphenidate Combination and Grand Mal Seizures

The Association of Depressed Affect and Stroke in Institutionalized Canadians

Quetiapine and Neuroleptic Malignant Syndrome

Effective Use of Electroconvulsive Therapy in Late-Life Depression



Determining Seizure Threshold

There is good evidence that the dose of electricity relative to a patient’s seizure threshold affects not only the efficacy of unilateral ECT but also cognitive side effects, regardless of electrode position (14,15,17). Stimulus dosing, whereby electrical stimulations are administered at subconvulsive levels until a generalized tonic-clonic seizure of at least 20 seconds’ duration is induced, is the most precise method for determining a patient’s seizure threshold. (See Frukacz and Mitchell [22] for examples of stimulus dosing protocols.) Stimulus dosing has been criticized as potentially increasing the risk of bradyarrhythmias, on the grounds that repeated subconvulsive electrical stimulations may result in a sustained parasympathetic response (23). These concerns, however, have not been borne out in studies that have routinely used stimulus dosing (24). To attenuate the parasympathetic response, some authors have recommended the use of atropine or glycopyrrolate (which does not cross the blood–brain barrier) prior to stimulus dosing, but it remains to be determined whether this strategy results in a clinically significant benefit.

Critics of stimulus dosing have proposed the "half-age method" for determining the dose of electricity for bilateral ECT (23). According to this method, the amount of energy (joules) is calculated at one-half the patient’s age. This method, however, is limited by the fact that there is tremendous interindividual variability in seizure threshold, with studies reporting anywhere from fourfold to thirty-fivefold variability within samples (15,18,25,26). Further, in a group of mixed-age patients, Boylan and others found that age accounted for only 13% of variance in seizure threshold (18), meaning that many other factors also contribute to the variability of this measure. Thus, the limitation of the half-age method is that it may result in an unnecessarily high dose of electricity in patients undergoing bilateral ECT and an underestimation of electrical dose in patients receiving unilateral ECT (26,27).

Seizure Duration

Length of seizure—beyond the widely quoted minimum criterion of 20 seconds of motor or 25 seconds of electroencephalographic manifestation—is not related to ECT efficacy (28). Even this minimum criterion is of uncertain scientific standing, since it is not experimentally derived but instead represents a consensus among ECT researchers (22,28). In many patients, especially older ones, seizure duration decreases and seizure threshold increases during the course of ECT (28,29). However, there is no correlation between change in seizure length and change in seizure threshold (30). Further, substantially suprathreshold stimulus intensities are associated with shorter, not longer, seizures (28). Thus, seizure duration alone should not serve as a marker of treatment adequacy (28). In the case of an older patient receiving low-dose bilateral ECT, it is reasonable to increase the dose of electricity (initially, by an increment of 50%) if there is a substantial reduction in seizure length between 2 consecutive treatments (for example, a decline from 50 seconds to 20 seconds) or if seizure duration falls below 15 seconds, assuming that the short seizure is not owing to medication effects or inadequate ventilation (28). Conversely, in the case of a patient receiving high-dose ECT, retitration of the electrical dose is the only accurate way of determining whether shortening of seizure length indicates the need for a higher stimulus intensity.

Managing Medications With Anticonvulsant Effects

Because of their anticonvulsant properties, barbiturates, benzodiazepines, and antiepileptic drugs can potentially interfere with seizure elicitation and expression. The dose of barbiturate anesthetic should be based on the patient’s weight, also taking into account body mass, age, and previous anesthetic experience. Boylan and others  found that methohexital did not affect seizure threshold or seizure duration when limited to a dose of 0.75 to 1.0 mg/kg (18). Frukacz and Mitchell  reported that when thiopentone was given at a dose of 2.5 to 3.0 mg/kg, a significant proportion of patients had either no or very brief seizures (22). However, when a dose of 2.0 mg/kg was used, all patients had adequate seizures. Boylan and others did not find that the lorazepam dosage in the 48 hours prior to the first ECT session affected seizure threshold, but the dosage was limited to a relatively small range (mean dose 0.85 mg daily, SD 1.06) (18). Further, the mean age of patients in this study was under 60 years, and it is possible that an older group of patients would be more sensitive to the benzodiazepines’ anticonvulsant effects. Many clinicians recommend avoiding the use of benzodiazepines in elderly patients during ECT, if possible. If a benzodiazepine is required, lorazepam at a dose of 0.5 to 1.0 mg daily is the most appropriate choice (3). Antipsychotic medications, which can lower seizure threshold, can be an effective alternative to benzodiazepines in the acute management of agitation or severe anxiety associated with late-life depression (3). In patients with seizure disorder, antiepileptic medication should initially be maintained at a therapeutic dosage, because dosage reduction or discontinuation increases the patient’s risk of experiencing seizures between ECT treatments (31). The dosage should be cautiously reduced only if an adequate seizure cannot be elicited (31). In the case of patients taking antiepileptic medications as mood stabilizers, it is preferable to withdraw the medications prior to ECT (28).

Frequency of ECT

Controlled studies have established that bitemporal ECT administered 3 times weekly results in more rapid improvement than treatment twice weekly, but there is no difference between the 2 schedules in the total number of treatments required to achieve response or in the percentage rate of response (32). Conversely, the more frequent schedule is associated with more retrograde amnesia, both immediately after finishing the course of ECT and at 1-month follow-up (32). Thus, twice-weekly administration may be the optimal schedule for bitemporal ECT in the elderly, unless clinical indications or other considerations (for example, length of hospitalization) require the more rapid antidepressant effect of thrice-weekly treatment. Comparable data on the frequency of RUL ECT are not available.

Number of Treatments

There is considerable variability in the number of ECT treatments required for response. As a result, the number of treatments in a course of ECT should be decided on a case-by-case basis. ECT is typically discontinued once symptoms remit or when symptoms reach a plateau of improvement after 2 consecutive treatments. Among elderly patients with major depression, 6 to 12 treatments are often required to achieve maximal benefit, but some patients may need more than 12 treatments. In the case of no response or minimal response, many experts recommend at least 10 to 12 bitemporal treatments before the depressive episode is labelled nonresponsive (11,15).

Safety and Medical Issues

The mortality rate associated with ECT is only 0.2 to 0.4 per 10 000 treatments, no higher than that expected with general anesthesia alone (33). Cardiovascular complications constitute the principal cause of ECT-related morbidity (1). Delivery of the ECT stimulus induces a brief parasympathetic response that can result in sinus bradycardia and hypotension (31). Not infrequently, transient asystole occurs (34). As the patient starts to seize, a discharge in catecholamines from the adrenal medulla results in increased heart rate and blood pressure (31). In patients with ischemic heart disease, this period of increased myocardial oxygen demand may increase the risk of cardiac ischemia. In turn, ischemia is the main cause of arrhythmias. The primary preventive measure for these complications is adequate ventilation and oxygenation (31). In addition, in selected high-risk patients, beta blockers, calcium channel antagonists, or nitrates are often used to manage the effects of the sympathetic response to ECT (35,36). However, there has not yet been a controlled trial to determine whether this strategy has a clinically significant impact on ECT-related morbidity. Not surprisingly, cardiac complications of ECT are more likely to occur in elderly patients, particularly those with preexisting cardiovascular conditions. Nevertheless, several studies have shown that most complications are transitory and usually do not prevent the completion of the course of ECT (37–39).

ECT use in medically ill patients has been extensively reviewed elsewhere, and a detailed discussion is beyond the scope of this article. (For recent reviews, see Rabheru [40] and Tew and others [31].) There are no absolute contraindications to ECT, just relative ones (41). ECT has been safely and effectively performed in the presence of a wide range of serious medical conditions, including severe ischemic heart disease, aortic stenosis, chronic airways disease, and osteoporosis; aortic and cerebral aneurysms; brain tumours; epilepsy; and recent stroke (31,40). Patients with pacemakers and patients taking anticoagulants can safely undergo ECT (31,40). As with any treatment, the risks of ECT must be balanced against its potential benefit and the risks and benefits of alternative treatments or no treatment. It is worth emphasizing that untreated depression can have severe medical consequences in older people, including dehydration, malnutrition, skin breakdown or deep venous thrombosis secondary to prolonged immobility, and an increased risk of mortality (42). Further, untreated depression can adversely affect recovery from various medical and neurological conditions (42).

Cognitive Effects

Impaired cognitive function is the most frequent adverse effect of ECT and arguably the main factor that has limited use of this treatment (1). As already noted, several technical factors, including dose of electricity relative to seizure threshold, electrode position, and frequency of treatment, can affect cognitive function and need to be kept in mind when balancing efficacy (rate and speed of response) against potential side effects.

It is unclear whether aging per se increases the severity and persistence of ECT-related cognitive effects. In a group of patients aged 20 to 65 years, moderately suprathreshold bitemporal ECT resulted in more severe impairment of verbal and visuospatial anterograde memory in older individuals tested 24 to 72 hours after the last ECT treatment (43). However, these deficits were marginal at 1-month follow-up and had disappeared by 6-month follow-up.Conversely, Tew and others (12) and Wilkinson and others (10) did not find that older patients fared any worse than their younger counterparts in terms of change in Mini-Mental State Examination (MMSE) scores between baseline and the week after finishing ECT. Indeed, Wilkinson and others found that, when the MMSE was administered between 72 hours and 1 week after the last ECT treatment, MMSE scores improved above baseline in all age groups, but the magnitude of improvement was greatest in older patients. This paradoxical finding of improved cognition following ECT underscores the complicated interaction between cognitive impairment due to depression and cognitive impairment induced by ECT. Thus, while ECT can cause circumscribed anterograde and retrograde amnesia during and following the course of treatment, it can also result in improved global cognitive function as a result of improvement in depression.

Reports on ECT in patients with dementia, cerebrovascular disease, or Parkinson’s disease suggest that these patients have increased risk of interictal confusion, compared with elderly patients without neurologic impairment (39,44–46). However, the confusion is usually transient. In fact, in several of these reports, patients’ performance on the MMSE was again, on average, better at the end of ECT than before ECT (39,44,45). In these studies, ECT was usually administered 3 times weekly—the incidence of acute confusion may possibly have been less if patients had received ECT twice weekly.

Relapse Prevention

Relapse of depression following response to ECT is a significant problem. Several studies have found that the relapse rate during the 6 to 12 months following acute ECT exceeds 50%, despite continued antidepressant medication (14,15,47–49). Relapse prevention remains a major challenge for the field. Inadequate response to antidepressant pharmacotherapy is a primary indication for ECT, yet antidepressant medication is usually prescribed as continuation treatment following ECT. Thus, after responding to ECT, patients are typically switched back to a treatment modality that had previously proven ineffective. It is not surprising, therefore, that resistance to antidepressant medication has been found to predict post-ECT relapse (15,50). One logical solution to this problem is to continue ECT after response. Currently available, albeit limited, data suggest that continuation ECT (C-ECT) is a safe, efficacious, and cost-effective way to prevent relapse (51). In a prospective study that assigned treatment based on clinical grounds, elderly patients assigned to C-ECT had a 6-month relapse rate for major depression of 11% (n = 1/9). This rate was accounted for by 1 patient who stopped ECT and then relapsed. In comparison, the relapse rate in the continuation medication group was 67% (n = 4/6) (52). A retrospective case-controlled study of 58 patients with a mean age of 65 years (SD 19) found that the cumulative probability of relapse or recurrence within 2 years of an acute course of ECT was 7% for C-ECT and 52% for continuation pharmacotherapy (53). Nevertheless, despite the apparent benefits of C-ECT, there are barriers to its routine use. These include issues of patient acceptance and adherence, the need for sufficient resources to operate a sizable outpatient ECT program, intercurrent events that interfere with treatment continuity (for example, medical illness, transportation problems, or inability of caregivers to accompany the patient to treatment), and, in some countries, financial cost to the patient. Further, some departments of psychiatry do not provide ECT on an outpatient basis, meaning that some patients may have to travel a long distance to an outpatient ECT program. Thus, geography may also hinder patients receiving C-ECT.

Because of the barriers to routinely using C-ECT, investigators have examined whether other treatment approaches can lessen the risk of relapse. In a double-blind placebo-controlled study, Sackeim and others compared combined nortriptyline and lithium with nortriptyline monotherapy in preventing post-ECT relapse (50). Over the 24-week trial, relapse rates for placebo, nortriptyline monotherapy, and nortriptyline plus lithium were 84%, 60%, and 39%, respectively. Thus, even though the combination of nortriptyline and lithium was more effective than antidepressant monotherapy, the relapse rate associated with this treatment was still high.

Other strategies that have been proposed to reduce relapse rates include tapering ECT over a few weeks, rather than stopping it abruptly at the time of response, and starting the continuation antidepressant medication during ECT, rather than waiting until ECT is finished (50). Studies undertaken in the 1960s, in which patients took antidepressant medication in conjunction with ECT, found that continuation of the antidepressant after ECT was associated with a 6-month relapse rate of approximately 20%, compared with 50% to 70% in the control groups (54–56). However, at that time ECT was frequently used as a first-line treatment, and it is possible that some patients in these studies would have responded to the antidepressant medication and remained well on it, even if they had not received ECT. The relevance of these findings to current ECT practice is questionable, because many patients now referred to ECT have medication resistance. Indeed, the only study to have examined this issue in recent times reported a relapse rate that was considerably higher than that of earlier studies (57). In that study, 85% of the patients had received treatment for the index episode of depression prior to receiving ECT. The 6-month relapse rate among patients randomized to paroxetine from the start of ECT was 47%, compared with a rate of 65% among patients randomized to placebo. Mayer and others compared patients who started antidepressant medication in conjunction with ECT with patients who started antidepressant medication after the last ECT treatment (58). Although these authors did not specifically examine relapse rates, they found no difference between the groups in mean Hamilton Depression Rating Scale (HDRS) scores 6 weeks post-ECT. Further, consistent with previous studies (54–56), starting antidepressant medication during ECT conveyed no benefit in terms of speed or eventual rate of response (58). Thus, the benefit of simultaneously treating patients with antidepressant medication and ECT to prevent relapse has yet to be proven.

Studies of patients with psychotic depression also reveal a high post-ECT relapse rate. Flint and Rifat reported that 53% of elderly patients with psychotic depression suffered a relapse or recurrence within 2 years of response to ECT, despite continuation treatment with an adequate dose of nortriptyline (49). In this study, ECT was given as a first-line treatment, and the high rate of relapse and recurrence could not be attributed to prior treatment resistance. Prompted by the observation that psychotic depression has a better rate of response to combined antidepressant and antipsychotic medications than to antidepressant monotherapy, Meyers and others investigated whether combination therapy improved post-ECT outcome in older patients with psychotic depression (59). These investigators, however, found that a combination of nortriptyline and perphenazine was no more effective than nortriptyline alone in preventing relapse of psychotic depression following response to ECT.


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