| Literature DB >> 26489663 |
Liam Trevithick1,2, R Hamish McAllister-Williams3,4, Andrew Blamire5, Tim Branton6, Ross Clark7, Darragh Downey8, Graham Dunn9, Andrew Easton10, Rebecca Elliott11, Clare Ellwell12, Katherine Hayden13, Fiona Holland14, Salman Karim15, Jo Lowe16, Colleen Loo17, Rajesh Nair18, Timothy Oakley19, Antony Prakash20, Parveen K Sharma21, Stephen R Williams22, Ian M Anderson23.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: There is a robust empirical evidence base supporting the acute efficacy of electroconvulsive therapy (ECT) for severe and treatment resistant depression. However, a major limitation, probably contributing to its declining use, is that ECT is associated with impairment in cognition, notably in anterograde and retrograde memory and executive function. Preclinical and preliminary human data suggests that ketamine, used either as the sole anaesthetic agent or in addition to other anaesthetics, may reduce or prevent cognitive impairment following ECT. A putative hypothesis is that ketamine, through antagonising glutamate receptors, protects from excess excitatory neurotransmitter stimulation during ECT. The primary aim of the ketamine-ECT study is to investigate whether adjunctive ketamine can attenuate the cognitive impairment caused by ECT. Its secondary aim is to examine if ketamine increases the speed of clinical improvement with ECT. METHODS/Entities:
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Year: 2015 PMID: 26489663 PMCID: PMC4618126 DOI: 10.1186/s12888-015-0641-4
Source DB: PubMed Journal: BMC Psychiatry ISSN: 1471-244X Impact factor: 3.630
Fig. 1Flowchart of schedule of visits. fNIRS: function near infrared spectroscopy; MINI: Mini International Neuropsychiatric Interview; Observer ratings: Breif Psychiatric Rating Scale; Montgomery Åsberg Depression Rating Scale; Clinical Global Impression; Self ratings; EuroQol; Quick Inventory of Depressive Symptomatology-Self Report
Description of neuropsychological and clinical efficacy outcome measures
| Abbreviation | Full Name | Description | Reference |
|---|---|---|---|
| Neuropsychological Measures | |||
| HVLT-R | Hopkins Verbal Learning Test – Revised | Anterograde verbal learning and memory assessment | [ |
| AMI-SF | Autobiographical Memory Inventory – Short Form | Retrograde assessment of personal memories | [ |
| COWAT – letter and category | Controlled Oral Word Association Test | Letter and Category fluency assessment | [ |
| MCG – Complex Figure Test | Medical College of Georgia Complex Figure Test | Anterograde visuospatial memory assessment | [ |
| Digit Span | Digit Span | Working memory assessment | [ |
| GSE-My | Global Self-Evaluation of Memory | Self-reported assessment of memory | [ |
| Reorientation | Reorientation | Number of 5 orientation items correct 30 and 60 min after ECT | [ |
| Clinical Efficacy Measures | |||
| MADRS | Montgomery-Åsberg Depression Rating Scale | Observer-rated assessment of depressive symptoms | [ |
| CAS | Clinical Anxiety Scale | Observer-rated assessment of anxiety symptoms | [ |
| BPRS | Brief Psychiatric Rating Scale | Observer-rated assessment of psychiatric symptoms | [ |
| CGI-S, CGI-I | Clinical Global Impression – Severity and Improvement | Observer-rated global measure of illness severity and improvement | [ |
| QIDS-SR | Quick Inventory Depressive Symptomology – Self Rated | Self-rated measure of depressive symptoms | [ |
| EQ-5D | EuroQol | Self-rated measure of health-related quality of life | [ |