This document provides clinical guidelines for electroconvulsive therapy (ECT). It discusses obtaining informed consent, pre-treatment evaluation including withdrawing or contraindicating certain medications, anesthesia used during treatment, muscle relaxants, electrode placement, electrical stimulus parameters, inducing and monitoring seizures, procedures for failed or prolonged seizures, number and spacing of treatments, multiple monitored ECT, and maintenance treatment. Guidelines cover physical and neurological exams, imaging, consent discussions, anesthesia safety, and optimizing therapeutic response while minimizing cognitive side effects.
This document provides clinical guidelines for electroconvulsive therapy (ECT). It discusses obtaining informed consent, pre-treatment evaluation including withdrawing or contraindicating certain medications, anesthesia used during treatment, muscle relaxants, electrode placement, electrical stimulus parameters, inducing and monitoring seizures, procedures for failed or prolonged seizures, number and spacing of treatments, multiple monitored ECT, and maintenance treatment. Guidelines cover physical and neurological exams, imaging, consent discussions, anesthesia safety, and optimizing therapeutic response while minimizing cognitive side effects.
This document provides clinical guidelines for electroconvulsive therapy (ECT). It discusses obtaining informed consent, pre-treatment evaluation including withdrawing or contraindicating certain medications, anesthesia used during treatment, muscle relaxants, electrode placement, electrical stimulus parameters, inducing and monitoring seizures, procedures for failed or prolonged seizures, number and spacing of treatments, multiple monitored ECT, and maintenance treatment. Guidelines cover physical and neurological exams, imaging, consent discussions, anesthesia safety, and optimizing therapeutic response while minimizing cognitive side effects.
This document provides clinical guidelines for electroconvulsive therapy (ECT). It discusses obtaining informed consent, pre-treatment evaluation including withdrawing or contraindicating certain medications, anesthesia used during treatment, muscle relaxants, electrode placement, electrical stimulus parameters, inducing and monitoring seizures, procedures for failed or prolonged seizures, number and spacing of treatments, multiple monitored ECT, and maintenance treatment. Guidelines cover physical and neurological exams, imaging, consent discussions, anesthesia safety, and optimizing therapeutic response while minimizing cognitive side effects.
THERAPY TUIZA, Lejanni UY, Rhea Andrea CLINICAL GUIDELINES UY, Rhea Andrea F.
July 28, 2021
INFORMED CONSENT Medical Discuss the Natural records disorder course
Option of no Printed literature Local laws about
treatment and videotapes use of ECT PRETREATMENT EVALUATION • Standard physical, neurologic, and pre- anesthesia examinations and complete medical history • Urine chemistries, a chest x-ray, and an electrocardiogram (ECG) • A dental examination • An x-ray of the spine • CT / MRI PRETREATMENT EVALUATION CONCOMITANT MEDICATIONS: • Most antidepressants except bupropion, monoamine oxidase inhibitors, and antipsychotics are generally acceptable. WITHDRAWN CONTRAINDICATED Benzodiazepines Anticonvulsant activity Lidocaine Increases seizure threshold Lithium Increased post-ictal Theophylline Increases duration of delirium seizures Prolong seizure activity Clozapine Late-appearing seizures Reserpine Compromise respiratory and cardiovascular systems Bupropion Late-appearing seizures Premedications, Anesthetics, and Muscle Relaxants ● Nothing orally for 6 hours before treatment ● Mouth checked for dentures and foreign objects ● Intravenous (IV) line ● A bite block is inserted in the mouth ● 100 percent oxygen at a rate of 5 L a minute during the procedure until spontaneous respiration returns ● Emergency equipment for establishing an airway MUSCARINIC ANTICHOLINERGIC DRUGS ● Administered before ECT ATROPINE GLYCOPYRROLATE ○ minimize oral and 0.3 to 0.6 mg IM or SC 30 to 60 0.2 to 0.4 mg IM, IV, or SC respiratory secretions minutes before the anesthetic ● To block bradycardias and OR 0.4 to 1.0 mg IV 2 or 3 minutes before asystoles the anesthetic ● Indicated for patients: MOST COMMONLY USED • Less likely to cross the blood– ○ Taking β-adrenergic receptor brain barrier antagonists • Less likely to cause cognitive dysfunction and nausea ○ With ventricular ectopic • Less cardiovascular protective beats activity ANESTHESIA METHOHEXITAL ETOMIDATE KETAMINE ALFENTANIL PROPOFOL 0.75 to 1.0 mg/kg IV 0.15 to 0.3 mg/kg IV 6 to 10 mg/kg IM 2 to 9 mg/kg IV 0.5 to 3.5 mg/kg bolus coadministered IV with barbiturates MOST COMMONLY does not increase does not increase reduce the anticonvulsant USED the seizure the seizure seizure threshold properties threshold threshold • shorter duration of useful for elderly association of associated with action patients • lower association psychotic an increased with postictal symptoms with incidence of arrhythmias emergence from nausea anesthesia • thiopental (usual dose 2 to 3 mg/kg IV) MUSCLE RELAXANTS ● Produce profound relaxation of the muscles ● Minimize the risk of bone fractures and other injuries
SUCCINYLCHOLINE TUBOCURARINE ATRACURIUM / CURARE
0.5 to 1 mg/kg as an IV 3mg IV 0.5 to 1 mg/kg IV bolus or drip muscle fasciculations: prevent myoclonus and known history of rostrocaudal progression increases in potassium pseudocholinesterase and deficiency muscle enzymes problem in patients with musculoskeletal or cardiac disease ELECTRODE PLACEMENT BIFRONTOTEMPORAL ELECTRODE PLACEMENT ● more short- and long-term adverse cognitive effects ● more likely to produce delirium ● restricting the dose to a moderately suprathreshold level BIFRONTAL CONFIGURATION ● more likely to manifest EEG seizure without a motor seizure BIFRONTAL & ASYMMETRICAL PLACEMENTS ● high impedance of the skull and scalp ○ restricts possibilities for localization of the stimulus D’ELIA PLACEMENT ● right unilateral ECT ● relatively better cognitive side effect profile ELECTRICAL STIMULUS ● seizure threshold (the level of intensity needed to produce a seizure) ● given in cycles, and each cycle contains a positive and a negative wave ○ SINE WAVE – OBSOLETE ○ BRIEF PULSE WAVEFORM ■ administers the electrical stimulus, usually in 1 to 2 ■ milliseconds, at a rate of 30 to 100 pulses a second o ULTRABRIEF PULSE ▪ 0.5 milliseconds ▪ Not as effective as brief pulse SEIZURE THRESHOLD • 40 times variability in seizure thresholds • Seizure threshold may increase 25 to 200 percent • Higher in men than in women • Higher in older than in younger adults ● Initiate treatment at an electrical stimulus that is thought to be below the seizure threshold for a particular patient and then to increase this intensity by 100 percent for unilateral placement and by 50 percent for bilateral placement until the seizure threshold is reached. INDUCED SEIZURES ● A brief muscular contractions -> strongest in a patient’s jaw and facial muscles ● FIRST BEHAVIORAL SIGN of the seizure: PLANTAR EXTENSION ○ lasts 10 to 20 seconds ○ marks the tonic phase ● Followed by rhythmic contractions ○ decrease in frequency and finally disappear ● The tonic phase is marked by high-frequency, sharp EEG activity ● During the clonic phase, bursts of polyspike activity coincide with the muscular contractions MONITORING SEIZURES ● Tonic–clonic movements ● Electrophysiologic evidence of seizure activity from the EEG or electromyogram (EMG) ● Seizures with unilateral ECT are asymmetrical, with higher ictal EEG amplitudes over the stimulated hemisphere ● For a seizure to be effective in the course of ECT, it should last at least 25 seconds. FAILURE TO INDUCE SEIZURES ● up to 4 attempts at seizure induction can be tried during a course of treatment ● onset of seizure activity is sometimes delayed as long as 20 to 40 seconds after the stimulus administration ● If a stimulus fails to result in a seizure, the contact between the electrodes and the skin should be checked, and the intensity of the stimulus should be increased by 25 to 100 percent. ● Additional procedures to lower the seizure threshold include hyperventilation and administration of 500 to 2,000 mg IV of caffeine sodium benzoate 5 to 10 minutes before the stimulus. PROLONGED & TARDIVE SEIZURES ● Prolonged seizures (seizures lasting more than 180 seconds) ● Prolonged seizures and status epilepticus can be terminated either with additional doses of the barbiturate anesthetic agent or with IV diazepam (5 to 10 mg), accompanied by intubation ● Tardive seizures—that is, additional seizures appearing sometime after the ECT treatment ○ develop in patients with preexisting seizure disorders NUMBER & SPACING OF TREATMENTS ● Two to three times a week; ○ twice-weekly treatments are associated with less memory impairment than thrice-weekly treatments ● Major depressive disorder: 6 to 12 treatments (up to 20 sessions possible); ● Manic episodes: 8 to 20 treatments; ● Schizophrenia: more than 15 treatments ● Catatonia and delirium: as few as 1 to 4 treatments ● Should continue until maximal therapeutic response ● Point of maximal improvement : patient fails to continue to improve after two consecutive treatments. ● If a patient is not improving after 6 to 10 sessions, bilateral placement and high-density treatment (three times the seizure threshold) should be attempted before ECT is abandoned MULTIPLE MONITORED ECT ● Multiple ECT stimuli during a single session, most commonly two bilateral stimuli within 2 minutes ● Severely ill patients and those at exceptionally high risk from the anesthetic procedures ● Most frequent occurrences of serious cognitive adverse effects MAINTENANCE TREATMENT ● Short-term course of ECT induces remission in symptoms ● Effective relapse prevention treatments ● INDICATIONS FOR MAINTENANCE ECT: ○ Rapid relapse after initial ECT ○ Severe symptoms ○ Psychotic symptoms ○ Inability to tolerate medications ADVERSE EFFECTS ● no absolute contraindications ● PREGNANCY: fetal monitoring is generally considered unnecessary unless the pregnancy is high risk ● Patients with space-occupying central nervous system lesions are at increased risk for edema and brain herniation after ECT ○ Small: pretreatment with dexamethasone ○ Hypertension is controlled during the seizure ● Patients who have increased intracerebral pressure or are at risk for cerebral bleeding ○ lessened by control of the patient’s blood pressure • Patients with recent myocardial infarctions: HIGH RISK GROUP ○ risk is greatly diminished 2 weeks after the myocardial infarction ○ further reduced 3 months after the infarction. • Patients with HTN should be stabilized on their antihypertensive medications before ECT is administered ○ Propranolol and sublingual nitroglycerin during treatment MORTALITY • 0.002 percent per treatment and 0.01 percent for each patient • ECT death is usually from cardiovascular complications CNS EFFECTS ● Headache, confusion, and delirium ● Marked confusion within 30 minutes of the seizure ○ Can be treated with barbiturates and benzodiazepines ● Delirium: most pronounced after the first few treatments and in patients who receive bilateral ECT ○ Clears within days or a few weeks MEMORY • most significant concern: ECT and memory loss • almost all patients are back to their cognitive baselines after 6 months • The degree of cognitive impairment during treatment and the time it takes to return to baseline • amount of electrical stimulation used during treatment • Neurologists and epileptologists generally agree that seizures that last less than 30 minutes do not cause permanent neuronal damage OTHER ADVERSE EFFECTS ● Fractures ● Broken teeth ● Back pain ● Muscle soreness ● Nausea, vomiting, headaches THANK YOU
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