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ABSTRACT: Background
Seizure duration has long been measured as a potential marker of ECT treatment efficacy, with concern that short seizures may be clinically ineffective. Relatively small studies have documented a trend towards shorter seizures during acute course ECT, but data from large cohorts would help provide normative data on seizure duration changes during treatment.Objective
This study analyzes the effects of age, sex, ECT dose, and treatment number on the duration of electrographic seizures during acute course ECT in a large single-center cohort.Methods
A single-center retrospective chart review was conducted of adult patients receiving a first course of ECT from 2000 to 2017 at a large freestanding psychiatric hospital.Results
3648 patients met inclusion criteria, receiving 32,879 acute course ECT treatments. There was a shortening of mean ECT seizure duration over the acute course, with the greatest decrease in duration over the first 3 treatments but continuing decreases over the entire acute course. Older age, higher ECT dose, and increasing treatment number were all associated with shorter seizures, while sex was not significantly associated. Increasing treatment dose was associated with shorter seizures relative to no dose increase, with those patients receiving the highest cumulative doses also having the shortest cumulative seizure time.Conclusions
Among patients undergoing acute-course ECT treatment, seizure duration decreased over the treatment course, and increases in applied electrical charge were associated with shorter seizures.
SUBMITTER: Luccarelli J
PROVIDER: S-EPMC8316429 | biostudies-literature |
REPOSITORIES: biostudies-literature