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June 8, 1998
Study Explores Alternative To Electric Shock
Therapy
Transcranial Magnetic Stimulation Offers
Promising Alternative to Electroconvulsive
Therapy
A
study under way at the University of Pennsylvania
Medical Center compares the effectiveness of
transcranial magnetic stimulation to
electroconvulsive therapy -- or electric "shock"
therapy -- in treating severe depression.
Transcranial magnetic stimulation, or TMS, delivers
a mild, magnetic pulse which jump starts the part
of the brain that is functioning poorly, therefore
causing severe depression.
Severe, long-term depression affects 35 million
Americans, many of whom do not respond to
treatment, such as medication and psychotherapy.
With TMS, patients are given a much less
physiologically challenging option than
electroconvulsive therapy (ECT).
"Being only one of a few sites nationwide
approved to acquire the equipment and conduct this
study, we've discovered that TMS appears to be an
incredibly uncomplicated treatment," says Marty
Szuba, M.D., an assistant professor in the
Department of Psychiatry who directs the ECT
Program and the Laboratory for Transcranial
Stimulation at the University of Pennsylvania
Medical Center. Patients are treated in an
outpatient exam room while sitting in a comfortable
recliner. The patient is awake and alert and no
medication is given at all.
"Before I begin, I take what's called a
'figure-of-eight' magnetic coil and demonstrate on
my own forearm just how mild the magnetic pulse
is," says Szuba. "Patients appreciate that they can
see how mild and painless this treatment is. The
pulse causes my hand to only twitch a bit, which is
much more of a reaction than will occur on the
scalp."
To locate the right spot of the brain to be
stimulated by the magnetic coil, the physician must
find the part of the brain where depression occurs,
called the dorsal lateral pre-frontal cortex. This
area is slightly above the temple and behind the
forehead.
"So far, patients have responded well to
five-to-ten TMS treatments over a one-to-two week
period," explains Szuba. "Afterwards, there is no
fatigue and no memory loss, which usually occurs
with ECT. If anything, we've seen an increase in
memory for some patients. The only complaint we've
had is of a mild headache which can easily be
treated with acetophetamen or ibuprofen."
The differences between TMS and ECT are apparent
immediately. "ECT is still the most effective
treatment for severe depression that is
unresponsive to anything else," says Szuba. "ECT is
now an extremely safe treatment, as opposed to as
recently as 20-30 years ago. However, it requires a
tremendous amount of preparation to make it that
way."
Traditional ECT must be conducted in a
specialty-care unit setting with a psychiatrist,
anesthesiologist and nursing staff. Since ECT
induces a seizure which causes convulsions, the
patient is put under general anesthesia, and given
a short-term paralyzing drug to prevent muscle
strains and broken bones. Once the treatments are
completed, the patient has to recover from general
anesthesia. Sedation, vomiting and memory loss are
common aftereffects.
"Many patients do not want to be on
anti-depressants indefinitely, and TMS looks
promising as an effective therapeutic alternative
for those individuals," notes Szuba. "While its
permanent niche remains to be defined, TMS
definitely will have a place in the treatment of
severe depression. With this study, we are not
looking to completely replace ECT, but to find
another treatment option. For now, TMS could be the
answer for patients with a long course of
depression who simply cannot tolerate anything
else."
The University of Pennsylvania Medical
Center's sponsored research and training ranks
third in the United States based on grant support
from the National Institutes of Health, the primary
funder of biomedical research and training in the
nation -- $175 million in federal fiscal year 1997.
In addition, for the third consecutive year, the
institution posted the highest annual growth in
these areas -- 17.6 percent -- of the top ten U.S.
academic medical centers. News releases from the
University of Pennsylvania Medical Center are
available to reporters by direct e-mail, fax, or
U.S. mail, upon request. They are also posted
electronically to the medical center's home page
(http://www.uphs.upenn.edu),
to EurekAlert! (http://www.eurekalert.org),
an Internet resource sponsored by the American
Association for the Advancement of Science, and to
the electronic news services SciNews-MedNews and
Quadnet.
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