Psycho-Babble Medication Thread 667778

Shown: posts 1 to 25 of 49. This is the beginning of the thread.

 

Anyone had ECT?

Posted by Randy Walker on July 17, 2006, at 14:05:55

I have had 2 ECT treatments, which is not enough to be effective--I am told it takes 3 to 5...but am worried about the effect on memory and just the general weird way was I was feeling afterward.... I am 45, have been on probably 25 different medications over the past 18 years. At the moment I am horrifically depressed and can't decided whether to continue with ECT...seems to be a crap shoot.... My docs took me off meds prior to ECT and hopefully I will feel at least somewhat better after I get back on them...
Any feedback from ECT veterans will be appreciated.
Randy

 

Re: Anyone had ECT?

Posted by Declan on July 17, 2006, at 15:45:08

In reply to Anyone had ECT?, posted by Randy Walker on July 17, 2006, at 14:05:55

I haven't had it myself, but my mother did. It was just assumed it would work and any transitory improvement/fluctuation in her condition was seen as proof of efficacy. It wasn't apparent to me. Patients with mental illness are sometimes treated so casually that sometimes noone has a clue. I think her depression passed as she was able to let go of what was upsetting her so (personal bias?). So I think you are right to seek the opinion of those who have experienced it.
Declan

 

Re: Anyone had ECT?

Posted by fca on July 17, 2006, at 16:07:06

In reply to Re: Anyone had ECT?, posted by Declan on July 17, 2006, at 15:45:08

I have seen it work wonders on patients with 'treatment resisant" depression and I have seen it do nothing--I think you can be reasonable reassured that it willnoy have any long term negative impact. Have you discussed transranial magnetic stimulation or vagal nerve stimulation with your psychiatrist--both are new technologies and reports have been generally psitive--TMS is completely non invasive--usually only available at research centers in the US, but I may be wrong--VNS is generally available My Best wishes fca

 

Re: Anyone had ECT?

Posted by fca on July 17, 2006, at 16:08:11

In reply to Re: Anyone had ECT?, posted by fca on July 17, 2006, at 16:07:06

way to many typos--transcranial not tranranial good luck

 

Re: Anyone had ECT? » Randy Walker

Posted by Crazy Horse on July 17, 2006, at 20:17:24

In reply to Anyone had ECT?, posted by Randy Walker on July 17, 2006, at 14:05:55

> I have had 2 ECT treatments, which is not enough to be effective--I am told it takes 3 to 5...but am worried about the effect on memory and just the general weird way was I was feeling afterward.... I am 45, have been on probably 25 different medications over the past 18 years. At the moment I am horrifically depressed and can't decided whether to continue with ECT...seems to be a crap shoot.... My docs took me off meds prior to ECT and hopefully I will feel at least somewhat better after I get back on them...
> Any feedback from ECT veterans will be appreciated.
> Randy

Hi Randy,

I had 24 ECT treatments in 1997. I have suffered from treatment resistant depression since age 22, i am 48 now. In '97 i got extremely bad..deeply depressed and suicidal. After multiple Medication failures including Marplan, Nardil and Parnate ( the so called Power house AD's) I was hospitalized in Seattle Wa. I ended up staying there for 2 1/2 months and had a total of 24 ECT treatments, and i did recover from that particular horrible deep depression. Thing is i don't no if i recovered from the ECT treatments, the rest(break from the stress of life) of 2 mos. in the hospital ( i was on the psych ward and had my own private room ) or because of the Zoloft they had put me on with many augmentation agents. My guess is it was a combination of all 3. So bottom line, it ( i assume all 3 things ) saved my life because i was seriously planning my suicide. I did have some short term memory loss, but nothing major or permanent. People ( my sisters, brother, wife and friends) are constantly commenting on my GOOD memory..which i really do have especially for age 48.
So my recommendation ( and i know a lot of people have bad feelings about ECT..fact is it's the most successful treatment for Major Depression ) it's most definitely the most controversial treatment in all of Psychiatry. If the patient is properly diagnosed with Major Depressive disorder their is approx. a 90% chance that it will help the patient. I would continue with it Randy..and don't believe every negative thing you hear and read about ECT. I wish you the very best Randy whatever you choose to do. God bless you.

Monte - Plz. feel free to babblemail me if you have any further questions :)

 

bilateral vs unilateral » Randy Walker

Posted by pseudoname on July 18, 2006, at 11:12:10

In reply to Anyone had ECT?, posted by Randy Walker on July 17, 2006, at 14:05:55

I had 18 unilateral ECT treatments over 6 weeks when I was about 25 for treatment-resistant unipolar depression (i.e., without mania). It did me zero benefit, but I also had zero memory loss or other problems.

When I was 39, a psychiatric resident insisted that BI-lateral ECT was what I needed for my still-untreated depression. He repeatedly told me that unilateral held no comparison in effect.

(In bilateral, the current goes straight through your head; in unilateral, it goes through only one side, coming out your forehead. Memory problems are more likely with bilateral.)

But I looked up all the stats I could at the time and was far from persuaded that a second attempt, even if bilateral, would be worth it for me.

I agree with C-Horse: don't believe all the hostile hype about ECT, but I also don't think it's "the gold standard" as so many MDs say.

I'm really surprised your docs took you off your meds beforehand! ECT is supposed to be meds-neutral. Many (most?) patients take meds during and even after *successful* ECT, which is sometimes thought to potentiate their effect.

Good luck, Randy.

 

Re: Anyone had ECT? » Randy Walker

Posted by blueberry on July 18, 2006, at 16:21:05

In reply to Anyone had ECT?, posted by Randy Walker on July 17, 2006, at 14:05:55

I just got out of the hospital a week ago and had two doctors and several nurses tell me that they have seen miraculous results with ECT. They suggested it for me, and I may do it if meds don't work out in a month or so. I've been down the med highway about 10 years already.

I talked with a friend of a friend who has been through it. She spoke very highly of it. Side effects were headaches, confusion, and some memory loss (she didn't remember giving a speech at an event and didn't believe it until she saw photos of it). Mostly she says she just forgot the time leading up to and during ECT, which was fine with her. She is on effexor and geodon maintenance therapy now, and people say she "glows" (no pun intended).

Anyway, the hospital I was at was excellent. Nobody there had anything negative at all to say about ECT. They spoke very highly of it.

It does require follow-up treatment though...either in terms of medication (which often work after ECT when they didn't work before), or followup ECT treatments.

They told me it would be 3 times a week, looking for a response within 12 treatments, with a maximum of 20 before giving up. The girl I spoke to who went through it needed 15.

It gets a bad rap and it sounds scary, but I haven't heard anything bad about it yet from anyone who has done it or from doctors or nurses who took an interest in me during my stay.

 

Re: Anyone had ECT?

Posted by SLS on July 18, 2006, at 18:15:00

In reply to Re: Anyone had ECT? » Randy Walker, posted by blueberry on July 18, 2006, at 16:21:05

Hi Blueberry!

This is a really good summary that sounds about right to me.

What kind of treatments do they give there?

Unilateral
- Right
- Left
Bilateral
Bifrontal
High dose
Low dose

My only complaint with ECT is that it didn't work for me. In 1991, I went through a series of 6 unilateral left followed by 9 bilateral. I experienced an improvement for a fraction of a day after the fifth treatment. That was it. Unilateral treatments are much more forgiving on memory and cognition than bilateral. In a correspondence with Max Fink, MD, he recommended to me that I not judge the treatments of today by the failures of 1991. I would consider high dose unilateral right.


- Scott


> I just got out of the hospital a week ago and had two doctors and several nurses tell me that they have seen miraculous results with ECT. They suggested it for me, and I may do it if meds don't work out in a month or so. I've been down the med highway about 10 years already.
>
> I talked with a friend of a friend who has been through it. She spoke very highly of it. Side effects were headaches, confusion, and some memory loss (she didn't remember giving a speech at an event and didn't believe it until she saw photos of it). Mostly she says she just forgot the time leading up to and during ECT, which was fine with her. She is on effexor and geodon maintenance therapy now, and people say she "glows" (no pun intended).
>
> Anyway, the hospital I was at was excellent. Nobody there had anything negative at all to say about ECT. They spoke very highly of it.
>
> It does require follow-up treatment though...either in terms of medication (which often work after ECT when they didn't work before), or followup ECT treatments.
>
> They told me it would be 3 times a week, looking for a response within 12 treatments, with a maximum of 20 before giving up. The girl I spoke to who went through it needed 15.
>
> It gets a bad rap and it sounds scary, but I haven't heard anything bad about it yet from anyone who has done it or from doctors or nurses who took an interest in me during my stay.

 

Re: Anyone had ECT?

Posted by linkadge on July 18, 2006, at 19:49:45

In reply to Re: Anyone had ECT?, posted by SLS on July 18, 2006, at 18:15:00

Well to play the devils advocate, I'd have to say that ECT is not a good idea.

To say that something like 80% of people get better with ECT is misleading. For starters, ECT has an extrordinarily high relapse rate. So whatever sucess you get, for whatever dammage it causes, the results aren't going to last.

The problem with trying to quantify its sucess rate is that many people who have the procedure suffer significant memory problems and so how are we to trust their accounts of how they feel in comparison to how they felt?

If you go to a hospital which offers ECT, do you think they are going to not recomend it? If a nurse or doctor said, its going to fry your brain, like perhaps some of them may believe, they'd get fired on the spot.

Many of the so called "theraputic" effects of ECT are consistant with a severe and traumatic brain injury. The induction of BDNF, is also consistant with a brain injury. BDNF, for instance, is one of the brains major neuroprotective proteins. If the brain feels that it is being insulted or dammaged in any way, it will release BDNF to try and protect itself from dammage. BDNF expression is high after traumatic brain injury. GFAP, is another protein that is markedly increased after ECT. This protein is also increased after traumatic brain injury.

I had it pointed out (and its often true) that if you go to the section of the hospital that deals with traumatic brain injury, they can often be the most chipper section of the hospital.

Not everbody gets better from ECT, infact some get profoundly worse. If you don't improve, then you also have to deal with the possability that your brain will be altered in an irreversable way. Sometimes too, a patient will improve for a while, but then relapse is more profound accounting to the fact that they feel they have lost many of their faculties.

There is one doctor out there who claims he can tell how many ECT procedures an animal has had just by looking at the post mortem brain.

I knew a few people who had the procedure, and at firt they felt better, but a little later they said it was the biggest mistake of their life.

There is **not** an overwhealming conscensious within the medical comunity that ECT is a safe procedure. I spoke to a biology professer from the University of Torotono, who essentially said that we don't have the evidence to suggest that ECT is without long term consequence to neural functioning.

When most doctors agree that we don't really have any idea how ECT works, how can you believe them when they say that it is completely safe. In my opinion, one would need to know how it works before knowing for sure that it is safe.

There is memory loss which may be permanant and can sometimes lead to greater future impairment and depression. There are complaints of significant lasting cognitive impairment too. Though, doctors can pawn off a lot of side effects as being a result of the "underlying depression"

I understand the suffering of an individual who is prepared to try ECT, but I would urge them to keep trying other things, for the sake of your long term mental health.

Linkadge

 

Re: Anyone had ECT?

Posted by mayzee on July 18, 2006, at 21:28:07

In reply to Re: Anyone had ECT?, posted by SLS on July 18, 2006, at 18:15:00

Scott, Do you know what's different about ECT treatments today compared with 1991. Have there been improvements in the procedure? Thanks, Mayzee

>
> In a correspondence with Max Fink, MD, he recommended to me that I not judge the treatments of today by the failures of 1991. I would consider high dose unilateral right.
>
>
> - Scott

 

Re: Anyone had ECT? » linkadge

Posted by Crazy Horse on July 18, 2006, at 21:44:25

In reply to Re: Anyone had ECT?, posted by linkadge on July 18, 2006, at 19:49:45

> Well to play the devils advocate, I'd have to say that ECT is not a good idea.
>
> To say that something like 80% of people get better with ECT is misleading. For starters, ECT has an extrordinarily high relapse rate. So whatever sucess you get, for whatever dammage it causes, the results aren't going to last.
>
> The problem with trying to quantify its sucess rate is that many people who have the procedure suffer significant memory problems and so how are we to trust their accounts of how they feel in comparison to how they felt?
>
> If you go to a hospital which offers ECT, do you think they are going to not recomend it? If a nurse or doctor said, its going to fry your brain, like perhaps some of them may believe, they'd get fired on the spot.
>
> Many of the so called "theraputic" effects of ECT are consistant with a severe and traumatic brain injury. The induction of BDNF, is also consistant with a brain injury. BDNF, for instance, is one of the brains major neuroprotective proteins. If the brain feels that it is being insulted or dammaged in any way, it will release BDNF to try and protect itself from dammage. BDNF expression is high after traumatic brain injury. GFAP, is another protein that is markedly increased after ECT. This protein is also increased after traumatic brain injury.
>
> I had it pointed out (and its often true) that if you go to the section of the hospital that deals with traumatic brain injury, they can often be the most chipper section of the hospital.
>
> Not everbody gets better from ECT, infact some get profoundly worse. If you don't improve, then you also have to deal with the possability that your brain will be altered in an irreversable way. Sometimes too, a patient will improve for a while, but then relapse is more profound accounting to the fact that they feel they have lost many of their faculties.
>
> There is one doctor out there who claims he can tell how many ECT procedures an animal has had just by looking at the post mortem brain.
>
> I knew a few people who had the procedure, and at firt they felt better, but a little later they said it was the biggest mistake of their life.
>
> There is **not** an overwhealming conscensious within the medical comunity that ECT is a safe procedure. I spoke to a biology professer from the University of Torotono, who essentially said that we don't have the evidence to suggest that ECT is without long term consequence to neural functioning.
>
> When most doctors agree that we don't really have any idea how ECT works, how can you believe them when they say that it is completely safe. In my opinion, one would need to know how it works before knowing for sure that it is safe.
>
> There is memory loss which may be permanant and can sometimes lead to greater future impairment and depression. There are complaints of significant lasting cognitive impairment too. Though, doctors can pawn off a lot of side effects as being a result of the "underlying depression"
>
> I understand the suffering of an individual who is prepared to try ECT, but I would urge them to keep trying other things, for the sake of your long term mental health.
>
>
>
> Linkadge
>
>
>
>
> Your post is hilarious..did you get your info from the Enquirer Magazine? What a CROCK OF SH*T!! Although, i'm not surprized that you would as usual reply with a negative post..kind of your preference don't you think? LOL..unbelievable!! "Devils Advocate" is a huge understatement!

Monte -(sorry if i was a little harsh..forgive me as i have severe brain damage from ECT).
>

 

Re: Chill out Crazy Horse

Posted by UgottaHaveHope on July 19, 2006, at 0:49:07

In reply to Re: Anyone had ECT? » linkadge, posted by Crazy Horse on July 18, 2006, at 21:44:25

Linkadge has just as must rights to express his opinions, along with share his experiences and stories as you do on this board. This place is to help and encourage others, or just share your own personal journey, and NOT to take personal shots at someone else.

From everything I've read from your other posts in the past, you've always been great at helping people and I hope that continues.

 

Re: Anyone had ECT? » mayzee

Posted by SLS on July 19, 2006, at 6:32:34

In reply to Re: Anyone had ECT?, posted by mayzee on July 18, 2006, at 21:28:07

> Scott, Do you know what's different about ECT treatments today compared with 1991. Have there been improvements in the procedure? Thanks, Mayzee
>
> >
> > In a correspondence with Max Fink, MD, he recommended to me that I not judge the treatments of today by the failures of 1991. I would consider high dose unilateral right.

I described my procedure to him. I know this is going to provoke cynacism, but he recommended that I obtain his book. There was only so much he could tell me in a short email.

I think the main difference is the switch from unilateral left to unilateral right and the finding that high-dose unilateral right is almost as effective as bilateral, but without the memory and cognitive side effects.


- Scott

 

Re: Chill out Crazy Horse

Posted by Crazy Horse on July 19, 2006, at 10:02:10

In reply to Re: Chill out Crazy Horse, posted by UgottaHaveHope on July 19, 2006, at 0:49:07

> Linkadge has just as must rights to express his opinions, along with share his experiences and stories as you do on this board. This place is to help and encourage others, or just share your own personal journey, and NOT to take personal shots at someone else.
>
> From everything I've read from your other posts in the past, you've always been great at helping people and I hope that continues.

You're right..his post just really hit a nerve with me. I'm Sorry Linkadge. Not trying to make a bunch of excuses..but i've been in a real pissy mood for the last week and yesterday was extremely bad. I have been having bad insomnia, and well..it effects me in a bad way, i become angry and irritable. Again i'm sorry, and i appreciate you (UgottaHaveHope) for diplomatically pointing out to me that i was wrong.

MONTE

 

Thanks UGottaHaveHope » Crazy Horse

Posted by gardenergirl on July 19, 2006, at 12:35:04

In reply to Re: Chill out Crazy Horse, posted by Crazy Horse on July 19, 2006, at 10:02:10

> Again i'm sorry [Linkadge], and i appreciate you (UgottaHaveHope) for diplomatically pointing out to me that i was wrong.
>
> MONTE

Thanks to both.

gg

 

ECT and Memory Loss

Posted by Denise190466 on July 19, 2006, at 13:49:55

In reply to Thanks UGottaHaveHope » Crazy Horse, posted by gardenergirl on July 19, 2006, at 12:35:04

Hi,

I'm thinking of pushing to have ECT again (this time the whole course and not just two treatments). I was thinking though, surely you would be aware of the memory loss and how bad you were being affected during the course of the treatments and the intervals inbetween.

so if you found that your memory was getting progressively worse during the treatments, couldn't you stop them?

The two treatments I had didn't seem to affect my memory at all, I know only two not enough to really know. But I can remember everything right up to lying on the table and waiting for them to anaesthetise me beforehand.

I remember the conversation I had with the ECT Nurse, the people who were with me in the waiting room and everything I said to them.

Neither do I have any other memory loss as far as I am aware. But then like I said two treatments is probably not enough to know. Maybe you get to the fifh and then whoosh it's all gone.

The only thing I would complain about is the horrible grey pokey waiting roomm, the big burley ECT nurse who didn't exactly have good interpersonal skills and kept telling me, when I told her I only wanted Unilateral and would accept nothing else, that I should have bilateral because otherwise I would end upstairs like this other guy on a drip because of all the anaesthetics he'd had beforehand! That made me feel really good before going in. Hardly reassuring!

I was having my legs waxed today lying in this lovely beauty clinic room, lovely smells pervading the air, listening to lovely relaxing music and I was thinking why couldn't the atmosphere be a bit more like this in the ECT Clinic?? You'd think they'd do all they could to put the patient at their ease.

Denise

 

Re: ECT and Memory Loss » Denise190466

Posted by pseudoname on July 19, 2006, at 14:21:45

In reply to ECT and Memory Loss, posted by Denise190466 on July 19, 2006, at 13:49:55

> so if you found that your memory was getting progressively worse during the treatments, couldn't you stop them?

That seems reasonable. You could, I suppose, find or devise memory tests to give yourself both now and after you've started ECT for comparison. "What did you have for breakfast yesterday?" that sort of thing.

> I can remember everything right up to lying on the table and waiting for them to anaesthetise me beforehand.

I can remember getting to 97 when counting backwards and the anesthesiologist saying "Goodbye" and the rush of going under, which was pretty cool. The only time I've ever been out.

> that I should have bilateral because otherwise I would end upstairs like this other guy on a drip because of all the anaesthetics he'd had beforehand!

I don't understand this. They put you out with anesthetics for bilateral, too.

> this lovely beauty clinic room, lovely smells pervading the air, listening to lovely relaxing music and I was thinking why couldn't the atmosphere be a bit more like this in the ECT Clinic??

What a great idea!

 

Re: ECT and Memory Loss

Posted by Denise190466 on July 19, 2006, at 14:57:24

In reply to Re: ECT and Memory Loss » Denise190466, posted by pseudoname on July 19, 2006, at 14:21:45

Hi,

That was a quick response. Yes I know they put you out with bilateral as well but this awful woman was trying to force me to have it because she said I would need less of them to get better and therefore less anaesthetics.

Did ECT help you?

Denise

 

ECT and other options » Denise190466

Posted by pseudoname on July 19, 2006, at 15:50:35

In reply to Re: ECT and Memory Loss, posted by Denise190466 on July 19, 2006, at 14:57:24

> That was a quick response.

Well, I'm avoiding doing other stuff. LOL!

> Did ECT help you?

Nope. 18 sessions unilateral. But, in fairness, nothing else helped either — 36+ meds & combos, tons of therapy, exercise, light, life changes, love, sex, travel, and that other one I sometimes hear promoted, the passage of time…

Until my current med, when things finally seem to be starting to fall into place.

I speculate bilateral ECT zaps some of the limbic parts and stimulates them to grow (in the process producing, as link says, BDNF). In other versions, it would stimulate growth in various cortical areas. Seems like they could pick out better (like with EEGs or MRIs) who should get which version.

It also seems like the low-dose direct-current brain stimulation would work just as well without all the anesthesia fuss, but it's hardly spoken of.

I would not be absolutely opposed to ECT, but it makes my head spin that docs and insurers are so blithe about trying it and so unwilling to try, oh, to pick an example at random, buprenorphine, which costs a few bucks and produces results within days.

 

Re: Anyone had ECT? » Crazy Horse

Posted by linkadge on July 19, 2006, at 18:32:52

In reply to Re: Anyone had ECT? » linkadge, posted by Crazy Horse on July 18, 2006, at 21:44:25

>What a CROCK OF SH*T!! Although, i'm not >surprized that you would as usual reply with a >negative post..kind of your preference >don't .you think? LOL..unbelievable!! "Devils >Advocate" is a huge understatement!
>Monte -(sorry if i was a little harsh..forgive >me as i have severe brain damage from ECT).

I honestly don't know what you mean, I was being sincere. Clearly, not everbody's experience with ECT is negative, that does not negate the fact that ECT is, and will for a long time be, a very controversial treatment.

Long term results with ECT are very unpredicatable. I am glad you are lucky with your encouter.

Linkadge


 

Re: Chill out Crazy Horse » Crazy Horse

Posted by linkadge on July 19, 2006, at 18:57:27

In reply to Re: Chill out Crazy Horse, posted by Crazy Horse on July 19, 2006, at 10:02:10

That is not a probelm. I am not really out to try and piss people off.

I have encountered a number of people who have had the procedure. Some I met while in the hospital and some I met online and also around the university area.

There is no doubt that ECT can "quell" some forms of severe depression.

The main idea I got from the people I talked to was that it worked well in the short term, but most of them relapsed (without medications) to a state worse than prior. The people I talked to said they felt it was a big mistake because it had affected their jobs and their memories, and the thereaptutic effect against depression was only temporary. One guy said he didn't know who he was for about a month.

One lady said she lost all memories of here children's childhoods and teen years, and said that nothing could be worse.

I'm not trying to make life difficult for people, I just think that its unrealistic to not give to give some stories from the other side of the table.

I think that med-empowered felt the same way. I think he said he had some relatives who did not fair well on ECT.

If you take a drug, and it doesn't work, then you can stop taking it and most things go back to normal. If ECT doesn't work, and suppose you loose something as precious as the memory of your kids' childhood, thats a pretty big price to pay.

You will find psychiatrists who simply refuse to give their patients ECT, based on what they believe about the procedure.

There is not an overwhealming conscensious in the medical community that ECT is a safe procedure. The same thing goes with antidepressants. Antidepressants may not be safe for some children. They may prompt some children to take their lives. For years we were told they were unquestionably safe. Thats really how it can work sometimes. "They" say its safe...well who are "they"?

There are plenty of opponents, and not just shawdy Breggin types of people. The doctor I talked to at the univeristy of Toronto said that nobody had asked him that question before.

He said people had asked him how or why it worked, but nobody had asked him if he thought it was safe.

Linkadge

 

Re: ECT and other options » pseudoname

Posted by SLS on July 19, 2006, at 23:07:59

In reply to ECT and other options » Denise190466, posted by pseudoname on July 19, 2006, at 15:50:35

> It also seems like the low-dose direct-current brain stimulation would work just as well without all the anesthesia fuss, but it's hardly spoken of.

Is that bilateral?

Is there anywhere on the Net where information about this can be found?

Thanks.


- Scott

 

Re: Chill out Crazy Horse » linkadge

Posted by Crazy Horse on July 20, 2006, at 0:02:32

In reply to Re: Chill out Crazy Horse » Crazy Horse, posted by linkadge on July 19, 2006, at 18:57:27

I know, and you are right..i told you i was sorry..even sent you a babblemail. I'm just frustrated and angry at the world right now. Please forgive my rude behavior.

Monte

 

Re: Chill out Crazy Horse

Posted by Karen44 on July 20, 2006, at 0:10:07

In reply to Re: Chill out Crazy Horse » Crazy Horse, posted by linkadge on July 19, 2006, at 18:57:27

>>
> The main idea I got from the people I talked to was that it worked well in the short term, but most of them relapsed (without medications) to a state worse than prior. The people I talked to said they felt it was a big mistake because it had affected their jobs and their memories, and the thereaptutic effect against depression was only temporary. One guy said he didn't know who he was for about a month.
>
>> Linkadge
>

This is exactly why I refused ECT when it was recommended for me April 2005. My job depends on having a very good memory. I felt insulted that the doctor even suggested it and told him so; it would have meant me losing my job, and thus no insurance for all of the medical problems I had acquired all of a sudden and that were contributing factors to me being depressed. I just quit Parnate three weeks ago, and I can see it was helping some as I am now very depressed again. But as I did in the past; I plod on and go to work every day and do my job and get my work done even if I am not as efficient and it takes me 12 hours to do what I would normally do in eight hours. So, what to do; try yet another medication. There are also other things being tried now too--like the magnetic stimulation thing. I don't know much about it and if one takes medicaitions too along with it?? Has anyone tried this approach.

Karen

 

Re: Chill out Crazy Horse » Karen44

Posted by SLS on July 20, 2006, at 6:12:15

In reply to Re: Chill out Crazy Horse, posted by Karen44 on July 20, 2006, at 0:10:07

> There are also other things being tried now too--like the magnetic stimulation thing. I don't know much about it and if one takes medicaitions too along with it??

Yes, you can take medications along with it. You will find some debate about its success rate, but I believe it is worth a try as long as the expense isn't coming out of pocket. I don't think its limited success rate justifies the investment if you are treatment resistent. One of the foremost researchers of this procedure, formerly of the NIMH, recommended one of his former treatment resistent patients that she not bother with it. However, this was 5 or more years ago. They are constantly tweaking the settings on the machine. I believe they are currently using 20Hz on the right fronto-temporal placement. rTMS should be approved in the not too distant future. Insurance might cover it then.


- Scott


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