ECT Presentation
ECT Presentation
ECT Presentation
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AUDIENCE PARTICIPATION
2013
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ECT
• Advantages
– Effective when other treatments don’t work
– Most effective with most severe illness
• Disadvantages
– Multiple brief anaesthetics
– Acute confusional states
– Memory impairment
• anterograde and retrograde
• not with new memories after ECT
MULTIPLE TYPES OF ECT
• Stimulus
– sine wave; brief pulse square wave,1-2.5 ms; ultrabrief pulse 0.25ms,
0.3ms, 0.5ms; intermittent pulses
• Repetition frequency (100pps, 25pps),
• Train Duration (typically 1-20secs)
• Electrode placement
– Bilateral (bitemporal), bifrontal, right unilateral, left unilateral
• Monitoring
– fronto-mastoid with acromioclavicular ground, or none
• Dosing
– titration, age based, maximal for all
• Dose range
– 10 - 504mC, 10 – 1008 mC, 25 – 504mC, 25 – 1008mC
• Options
– 40,000+
MAJOR CHANGES WITH ECT ANAESTHETICS
• Adequate oxygenation
• Hyperventilation to increase neuromuscular excitability
• Consistent quality anaesthetics (recovery best with propofol)
– Extremely low mortality <1:100,000?
• Adequate muscle relaxant
– Suxamethonium, or
– Rocuronium/sugammadex
• Avoid opiates as not anaesthetics, risk of awareness
• Figure one: Bitemporal electrode placement
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The images for this section of the presentation are available in:
The images for this section of the presentation are available in:
The images for this section of the presentation are available in:
Unidirectional
Bidirectional
brief pulse
brief pulse
• Figure 7: Bidirectional square wave stimulus 0.3ms pulse width
(ultrabrief pulse)
The images for this section of the presentation are available in:
2013
www.heal.edu.au/bookshop
ECT- Potential topics for Exams or
Assessments
Dr Raju Lakshmana
Consultant Psychiatrist at Goulburn Valley Health
Senior Lecturer in Psychiatry with Rural Health Academic Centre
POLL QUESTION
• Consent
• Explaining the technique
• Interpreting EEG and making further decisions
• Assessment of cognitive functions in patients
receiving ECT
• Management of ECT related side effects
• Explaining ECT to carer/ family member
• ECT as a treatment option
• ECT governance
WORK PLACE BASED ASSESSMENT
• Informed Consent
• Physical Examination
• Investigations: FBE, U/E, ECG, CXR
• Physician review of comorbid medical conditions
• Anaesthetic review if poor anaesthetic history
• Second opinion
• Optimization of medication
HIGH RISK OR SPECIAL POPULATIONS*
• Anterograde Amnesia
• Patchy autobiographical retrograde amnesia
• Be upfront and advise making note of important
information
• Monitor regularly: MMSE, MOCA*, VF, Time to
orientation (Please do baseline to compare)
• Post-ECT confusion
• UB<UL<BF<BL, frequency of ECT, dosing and
EEG quality, concomitant medication
CHOOSING BILATERAL AS FIRST LINE
Upcoming events:
The next webinar in this series will be First Episode Psychosis
webinar on Tuesday 7th of July this will be chaired by Dr Greg Young
with speakers Prof David Castle and Dr Dominiek Baetens. To register
for this webinar click here
CLOSING COMMENTS