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Home » Electroconvulsive Therapy

Psychiatric Times. Vol. 29 No. 8
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ELECTROCONVULSIVE THERAPY 

Anesthesia Advances Add to Patient Comfort in ECT

by Charles H. Kellner, MD and Ethan O. Bryson, MD | August 3, 2012
Dr Kellner is Professor in the department of psychiatry at the Mount Sinai Medical Center in New York. Dr Bryson is Associate Professor in the departments of anesthesiology and psychiatry at the Mount Sinai Medical Center.

anesthesia and electroconvulsive therapyElectroconvulsive therapy (ECT) has been a safe and effective treatment for severe depression and other psychiatric illnesses since its introduction into clinical practice in 1938.

In a previous column (“Anesthesia Advances Add to the Safety of ECT”1), we described how modern anesthesia techniques make ECT safe. Here we discuss how advancements in anesthesia techniques and ECT procedures make ECT more comfortable and tolerable for patients.

(MORE: ECT for Treatment-Resistant Depression: The State of the Art)

Over the past 75 years, a large number of patients have been treated successfully with ECT, but until recently, many who received ECT could expect post-treatment nausea or headache.2 Although these unpleasant effects are generally mild, for some the nausea and headache can be severe enough to cause them to avoid needed treatment. Now, even these previously common aftereffects can be prevented with medications originally developed to prevent postoperative pain and nausea. In addition to these specific anesthesia interventions, other periprocedural advancements, including liberalization of concomitant and pre-treatment medications, add to the comfort and tolerability of ECT.

Headache

Headache is the most commonly reported complaint after ECT; it may occur in about half of patients. It is typically mild and transient and usually responds to simple, over-the-counter analgesics, such as acetaminophen and ibuprofen(Drug information on ibuprofen). In some patients, however, it may be more severe, making prophylactic intervention with an intravenous agent, such as ketorolac(Drug information on ketorolac), appropriate.

Post-ECT headache develops immediately or shortly after the patient regains consciousness following ECT.3 The headache may be associated occasionally with nausea and rarely with photophobia. It is usually bilateral and constant but may be unilateral or pulsatile.

The NSAID ketorolac can be given intravenously.4 Ketorolac is indicated for the short-term management of moderately severe acute pain that requires analgesia at the opioid lev-el, and it is frequently given to patients after they have had surgery. Although the pain-relieving properties of ketorolac are similar to those of morphine(Drug information on morphine), the drug does not cause respiratory depression or cloud the sensorium.

Because ketorolac is an NSAID, it is contraindicated in anyone with sensitivity to this class of drugs or with a bleeding tendency. Because it can be administered intravenously, ketorolac can be given immediately before treatment and is very effective in significantly reducing the incidence of post-ECT headache. Generally, no prophylactic analgesic is given before the first treatment; rather, if the patient awakens with headache, he or she is offered ibuprofen or acetaminophen by mouth. If the headache turns out to be of moder-ate or severe intensity, the patient is offered prophylaxis with intravenous ketorolac at subsequent ECT sessions.

For patients with a history of migraine or other, more severe headache, the likelihood that they will experience a post-treatment headache is higher than in patients who do not have this history. For those patients, treatment of post-ECT headache may require antimigraine medications.5

Nausea

Nausea following ECT is less common than headache but still occurs in up to 25% of patients. Nausea may be related to the anesthetic, to the ECT treatment itself, or to air in the stomach from assisted ventilation. It may occur in conjunction with, or independently from, headache. Post-ECT nausea can prevent otherwise well patients from leaving the treatment recovery area in a timely manner and going about the rest of their day.

When nausea occurs without headache, the primary treatment is with the serotonin 5-HT3 receptor antagonist ondansetron(Drug information on ondansetron). Since the untoward effects of prophylaxis with this medication are few, most patients at increased risk for post-ECT nausea are given ondansetron intravenously before treatment. Older antinausea medications such as the dopamine-blocking agents, including phenothiazine derivatives (eg, prochlorperazine(Drug information on prochlorperazine)), butyrophenones (haloperidol, droperidol), trimethabenzamide, and metoclopramide(Drug information on metoclopramide), are associated with more adverse effects (eg, sedation). These older antinausea medications are reserved for the extremely rare case in which ondansetron is not effective.

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More on ECT

Anesthesia Advances Add to Safety of ECT

Anesthesia Advances Add to Patient Comfort in ECT

Speed of Response to ECT

ECT for Treatment-Resistant Depression: The State of the Art






 
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