The Clinical science of electroconvulsive therapy

Bibliographic Information

The Clinical science of electroconvulsive therapy

edited by C. Edward Coffey

(The Progress in psychiatry series / David Spiegel, series editor, no. 38)

American Psychiatric Press, c1993

Available at  / 3 libraries

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Note

Includes bibliographical references and index

Description and Table of Contents

Description

This volume presents a timely account of the present state of ECT research and clinical practice and the irreplaceable niche ECT occupies in the treatment hierarchy of severe mental illness. Interdisciplinary contributors to The Clinical Science of Electroconvulsive Therapy use both longitudinal and cross-sectional perspectives to synthesize the latest information on ECT. This book reviews—comprehensively and carefully—today's knowledge of indications, techniques, clinical outcomes, and mechanisms of action of ECT.

Table of Contents

The New Clinical Science of ECT. Who should get ECT? ECT technique: electrode placement, stimulus type, and treatment frequency. ECT stimulus dosing: relations to efficacy and adverse effects. Clinical and laboratory predictors of ECT response. Structural brain imaging and ECT. EEG monitoring of ECT seizures. Hemispheric components of ECT response in mood disorders and schizophrenia. ECT and memory. Continuation and maintenance therapy with outpatient ECT. ECT in Special Patient Populations. ECT in medically ill patients. ECT as a treatment for neurologic illness. Mechanisms. The neurobiology of ECT: animal studies. Antidepressant action and the neurobiologic effects of ECT: human studies.

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