Friday, April 3, 2009

OPTIONS FOR TREATMENT-RESISTANT DEPRESSION

OPTIONS FOR TREATMENT-RESISTANT DEPRESSION
Have you been through numerous drug trials without getting relief from your depression? Do antidepressants only work for a short while before “pooping out”? Treatment-resistant depression (TRD) can be very discouraging for those who have it, but there are options that may be able to help you.
One option is electroconvulsive therapy (ECT). While ECT doesn't come without side-effects, it does bring rapid relief for about 80 percent of patients and it can work where other treatments have failed.
A newer option is vagus nerve stimulation (VNS), which involves the implantation of a pacemaker-like device to periodically send a pulse to the vagus nerve, which communicates with brain cells involved in mood control.
If medications have failed you, please don't give up hope. Speak with your doctor about other treatment options available to you, such as ECT and VNS.
Comments
Jim says:
Thank you for finally stating the fact that treatment-resistant depression exists. I have had major depression for the last 25 years. For a while medication worked, but then it “pooped out” as you say. I went for year where all I did was try every possible combination of drugs without any luck. I am puzzled why your column never lists psychoanalysis as an option. True, it is very expensive, but it is the only thing that has brought me relief. I feel that it is purposely not talked about because professionals would then have to deal with clients that see an option, but it out of their reach causing more problems. The fact is that many analysts will work with the patient on finances and analysts-in-training will often do it for next to nothing. I believe that this is often the reason that nobody talks about “TRD”, again, professionals are concerned that patients will give up hope if medication doesn't work. Thank you very much for bringing to light two more options that few doctors will every recommend.
Sincerely,
Jim
Chris says:
I had ECT when I was 18 and it worked excellent. I also had it when I was 35 and it made things worse. It affected my memory so much it affected my job; I could not function. I could not remember simple things like relatives names', simple recipes, my phone number, forgetting what I was saying mid-sentence, getting lost in a town where I grew up and lived my whole life, spelling words (which I never had a problem with), vocabulary and just plain English. To this day, I still struggle. It is a little better but I still have memory issues. It has left me feeling as though my IQ is back to elementary level.
If you do decide this route, go to a good place like an University, that is where I went when I was 18.
Sheri says:
Hi,
I was 22 and gave my Dr an ultimatum. Have a series of blood studies and if they showed depression, then I wanted ECT. No more “ we can try this” without effect. Will the Dexamethasone Suppression test and Thyroid tests were way off. I was a slug with no motivation or want to thru another day. I was lucky the tests pointed my Dr to an Endocrinologist who sent me to a surgeon for a tumor on my adrenal gland. I had no problems with depression after surgery until recently. That was 26 years ago. It saved my life as I had started muscle wasting.
I found then how many people who are depressed have medical problems that either are the culprit or aggravate the illness. It is very important for anyone with any form of depression to get a thorough medical evaluation which includes the Dexamethasone Suppression test and other labwork. There are medical problems that can be fixed and it will take the depression with it.
No more assuming that it is emotional. Most Dr's have to be reminded to look further. Not just medicate.
Thank you,
Sheri
Annie says:
ECT does pose a risk of side effects and complications, such as memory loss and confusion.
But now the procedure has become refined, with precisely calculated electrical currents administered in a controlled medical setting to achieve the most benefits with the fewest risks.
Http//depression.about.com/b/2009/03/10/options-for-treatment-resistant-depression.htm?...

No comments: