Surveys show public misperceptions and confusion about brain damage and electroconvulsive therapy (ECT). Fictional movies have misrepresented ECT to suggest brain damage and to ridicule mental illness and psychiatric patients. "Brain damage" has become a colloquial expression without consistent meaning. In contrast, brain injury is the medical term for destruction of brain cells, such as from kinetic impact (concussion), hypoxia, or infection. Studies of both high-resolution magnetic resonance imaging (MRI) and enzyme assays find that causes of brain injury are accompanied by observable structural changes on MRI and elevated blood and cerebrospinal fluid levels of brain enzymes that leak from injured brain cells. Concussion is also followed by intracerebral bleeding, progressive brain atrophy, diffuse axonal injury, cranial nerve injury, and 2-4 fold increased risk for dementia. In contrast, there is no evidence that ECT produces any of these. Studies of ECT patients find no brain edema, structural change persisting 6 months, or elevated levels of leaked brain enzymes. Statistical comparisons between brain injury and ECT effects indicate no similarity ( P < 0.00000001). Moreover, the kinetic, thermal, and electrical effects of ECT are far below levels that could possibly cause harm. This robust evidence shows that there is no basis to claim that ECT causes brain injury.
Keyphrases
- brain injury
- cerebral ischemia
- subarachnoid hemorrhage
- resting state
- white matter
- magnetic resonance imaging
- functional connectivity
- healthcare
- oxidative stress
- computed tomography
- end stage renal disease
- multiple sclerosis
- magnetic resonance
- contrast enhanced
- newly diagnosed
- blood brain barrier
- emergency department
- mild cognitive impairment
- peritoneal dialysis
- patient reported outcomes
- high throughput
- signaling pathway
- preterm infants
- cross sectional
- low grade
- endothelial cells
- high speed
- gestational age
- mild traumatic brain injury