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New Brain Stimulation Treatment may Help Treat Depression

by VR Sreeraman on Oct 15 2009 4:53 PM

Bilateral epidural prefrontal cortical stimulation (EpCS), a new brain stimulation technique developed by researchers at Medical University of South Carolina (MUSC), has been found to help patients with treatment resistant depression.

The study, lead by Ziad Nahas, M.D from the MUSC, found that the new and safer brain stimulation treatment significantly improved depression in a small study group.

EpCS targets electrical stimulation to the anterior frontal poles and the lateral prefrontal cortex.

"We focused on these two regions because they are part of a larger brain networks critical in regulating mood. Both play complementary roles integrating emotional and cognitive experiences and offer a distinct opportunity for targeted antidepressant treatments," Nahas said.

"Cortical stimulation has several advantages provided that it shows efficacy in treating depression. It is reversible, non-destructive and potentially safer than other forms of invasive brain stimulation since the stimulating paddles don't come in direct contact with the brain," Nahas added.

Five patients were implanted with EpCS over the anterior frontal poles and the lateral prefrontal cortex bilaterally. Four separate paddle leads were then connected to two small generators surgically implanted in the upper chest area of the patient.

The researchers individualized the treatment parameters for each patient to maximize the long-term antidepressant effects. They relied in part on input from the patients themselves who signaled positive mood changes when first stimulated. In general, their devices were set to periodically deliver electrical charges at intensities below the seizure threshold.

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The devices were never active at night. Only patients who failed to respond to several antidepressant treatments - including medications, psychotherapy, transcranial magnetic stimulation, vagus nerve stimulation or electroconvulsive therapy, were included in the study.

Patients were closely followed after the surgical implant and evaluated regularly using standard clinical ratings. After seven months, the average improvement was 54.9 percent based on the Hamilton Rating Scare for Depression and 60.1 percent on the Inventory of Depressive Symptoms Self Report .

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Three of the patients reached remission. One patient experienced a scalp infection that required removing the implants over the left hemisphere.

"These preliminary results are encouraging but not definitive. Now that we have a proof of concept, we should aim at studying bilateral EpCS in larger placebo-controlled studies," Nahas said.

The data are reported in the on-line issue of Biological Psychiatry.

Source-ANI
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