Release Date: April 20, 2005
ELECTROSHOCK
THERAPY SPEEDS IMPROVEMENT IN SCHIZOPHRENIA PATIENTS
By Lisa Esposito, Editor
Health Behavior News Service
Shock therapy, a controversial practice conjuring frightening images
of behavior control, still has a place in schizophrenia treatment,
a newly updated research review shows.
Although the data confirmed that antipsychotic drugs are still the
first choice for schizophrenia treatment, they also showed that electroconvulsive,
or shock, therapy clearly works, and combining both treatments can
accelerate benefits to some patients, the review finds.
Dr. Prathap Tharyan, head of psychiatry at Christian Medical College
in Tamil Nadu, India, and colleagues analyzed 26 randomized controlled
trials, involving 1,485 adult patients, 798 of whom were treated with
shock therapy. Trials were conducted in India, the United States, Thailand,
Canada, Hungary and Nigeria.
The review appears in the most recent issue of The Cochrane Library,
a publication of The Cochrane Collaboration, an international organization
that evaluates medical research. Systematic reviews draw evidence-based
conclusions about medical practice after considering both the content
and quality of existing medical trials on a topic.
“ The most significant finding is that ECT combined with antipsychotics
is more effective than antipsychotics alone in producing rapid clinical
improvement in people with schizophrenia,” Tharyan said. Rapid
improvement of symptoms is potentially lifesaving, for instance, when
a person with schizophrenia is suicidal.
The review also refutes a public perception that ECT is dangerous
and causes brain damage and suggests that for some patients the side
effects of shock therapy may be more tolerable than those of antipsychotic
drugs.
ECT induces a seizure with electric stimulus shock, given by electrodes
attached to the scalp. Seizures last from 25 to 30 seconds. Patients
are given short-acting anesthetics and muscle relaxants to decrease
anxiety and protect them from injury during muscle contractions. Patients
generally receive ECT two to three times a week, usually for a total
of eight to 12 treatments in a series.
The American Psychiatric Association supports use of ECT only to treat
severe, disabling mental disorders. However, the National Institute
for Clinical Excellence in the United Kingdom does not recommend general
use of ECT for schizophrenia, although it may be indicated for catatonia.
About 2.2 million
American adults, or 1.1 percent of the adult population, have schizophrenia,
according to 2001 figures from the National Institute
of Mental Health. Twenty percent of people with schizophrenia fail
to respond to drug therapy alone.
Researchers used
sophisticated statistical methods to reach conclusions based on data
pooled from individual, randomized studies. Studies used a variety of tests to measure psychiatric symptoms and
psychological, social and occupational functioning.
Ten trials compared shock
therapy directly with drug therapy. “When
ECT given without antipsychotics is directly compared to treatment
with antipsychotics alone … results strongly favor the medication
group,” reviewers found. They also found “very limited
data” suggesting that people treated with ECT are less likely
to relapse.
Further, one trial indicated that the combination of ECT and antipsychotics
offered significant advantages that were maintained beyond the short
term.
Several trials assessed cognitive side effects, such as memory impairment.
Others measured side effects often seen with antipsychotic drugs, such
as tremor, slurred speech, inability to keep still, anxiety and paranoia.
Some data indicated that these side effects were less severe with ECT
than with antipsychotic drugs.
A small trial found more
impairment with ECT and antipsychotics combined than antipsychotics
alone. “However,” authors noted, “when
re-tested nine weeks later, memory function had improved in both groups
and no significant differences were detected.”
A very small trial showed a decline in visual memory after ECT compared
with those who were given anesthesia and nothing else.
Dr. David Spiegel, professor of psychiatry at Stanford University
School of Medicine, has used ECT to treat patients with depression
but views its use in schizophrenia as a last resort.
“I would worry that in some of the studies, patients may not
have been on an aggressive enough drug schedule to treat early symptoms
rapidly,” Spiegel says. “You would have to include only
studies where drug control was optimal.
“Lots of people — especially many with delusions — are
still uncomfortable with ECT, although it’s terrific for depression,” Spiegel
says.
ECT came into use in the late 1930s, but it waned in developed nations
with the introduction of antipsychotics and antidepressants in the
1950s.
Tharyan says that in countries with few state-funded social services,
ECT can be useful as the more rapid treatment because the impact of
long-running schizophrenia can cause both patients and family caregivers
to stop working. ECT is more available and less expensive than antipsychotics
in many developing areas.
Tharyan P, Adams
CE. Electroconvulsive therapy for schizophrenia. The Cochrane Database
of Systematic Reviews 2005, Issue 2
The Cochrane Collaboration
is an international nonprofit, independent organization that produces
and disseminates systematic reviews of health care interventions
and promotes the search for evidence in the form of clinical trials
and other studies of interventions. Visit http://www.cochrane.org for
more information.
FOR MORE INFORMATION:
Health Behavior News Service: (202) 387-2829 or www.hbns.org.
Center for the Advancement of Health
Contact: Ira R. Allen
Vice President of Public Affairs
202.387.2829
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