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Early and late effects of electroconvulsive therapy associated with different temporal lobe structures.

Shimpei YamasakiToshihiko AsoJun MiyataGenichi SugiharaMasaaki HazamaKiyotaka NemotoYujiro YoshiharaYukiko MatsumotoTomohisa OkadaKaori TogashiToshiya MuraiHidehiko TakahashiTaro Suwa
Published in: Translational psychiatry (2020)
Recent studies examining electroconvulsive therapy (ECT) have reported that early sessions can induce rapid antidepressant and antipsychotic effects, and the early termination of ECT was reported to increase the risk of relapse. We hypothesized that different neural mechanisms associated with the therapeutic effects of ECT may be involved in the different responses observed during the early and late periods of ECT treatment. We investigated whether these antidepressant and antipsychotic effects were associated with temporally and spatially different regional gray matter volume (GMV) changes during ECT. Fourteen patients with major depressive disorder, with or without psychotic features, underwent 3-Tesla structural magnetic resonance imaging scans before (time point [Tp] 1), after the fifth or sixth ECT session (Tp2), and after ECT completion (Tp3). We investigated the regions in which GMV changed between Tp1 and Tp2, Tp2 and Tp3, and Tp1 and Tp3 using voxel-based morphometry. In addition, we investigated the association between regional GMV changes and improvement in depressive or psychotic symptoms. GMV increase in the left superior and inferior temporal gyrus during Tp1-Tp2 was associated with improvement in psychotic symptoms (P < 0.025). GMV increase in the left hippocampus was associated with improvement of depressive symptoms in Tp2-Tp3 (P < 0.05). Our findings suggest that different temporal lobe structures are associated with early antipsychotic and late antidepressant effects of ECT.
Keyphrases
  • major depressive disorder
  • bipolar disorder
  • magnetic resonance imaging
  • depressive symptoms
  • computed tomography
  • physical activity
  • quantum dots
  • blood brain barrier
  • working memory
  • free survival