EEG Monitoring in
ECT: A
Guide to Treatment Efficacy
by Max Fink, M.D., and Richard Abrams, M.D.
Psychiatric Times, May 1998
For over 50 years we clinicians have administered electro-convulsive therapy
with little to guide us in deciding whether or not a particular induced
seizure is an effective treatment. At first we thought that pilo-erection or
pupillary dilatation predicted the efficacy of a seizure, but these signs
were difficult to assess and were never subjected to controlled experiments.
The duration of the motor seizure was examined next, and in evaluations of
the seizures in unilateral and bilateral ECT, it seemed reasonable to opine
that a minimum of 25 seconds defined a good seizure (Fink and Johnson,
1982). In studies of unilateral and bilateral ECT with threshold and suprathresh-old energy dosing, motor seizure durations were greater than 25
seconds, yet the threshold-unilateral condition yielded ineffective courses
of treatment (Sackeim et al., 1993). Indeed, the new experience finds that
longer seizures are not necessarily better for determining efficacy (Nobler
et al., 1993; Krystal et al., 1995; McCall et al., 1995; Shapira et al.,
1996). The occurrence of a prolonged, poorly developed, low-voltage seizure
of indeterminate length and poor postictal suppression is a clear call for
restimulation at a higher dose, with the expectation of inducing a shorter,
better developed and clinically more effective seizure.
The Seizure EEG
Modern brief pulse ECT devices provide the facility to monitor the seizure
by an electroencephalogram, an electrocardiogram, and lately, an electromyogram. For a decade it has been feasible to examine the
electrographic characteristics of the EEG seizure as well as its duration.
The EEG usually develops patterned sequences consisting of high voltage
sharp waves and spikes, followed by rhythmic slow waves that end abruptly in
a well-defined endpoint. In some treatments, however, spike activity is
poorly defined and the slow waves are irregular and not of particularly high
voltage. It is also difficult to define the endpoint, with the record
showing a waxing and waning period followed by an imprecise termination.
Could these patterns be related to treatment efficacy?
One suggestion was that bilaterally induced seizures were characterized by
greater midseizure ictal amplitude in the two to five hertz frequency band
than those induced by unilateral ECT (Krystal et al., 1993). Moreover, the
seizures in bilateral ECT showed greater interhemispheric symmetry
(coherence) during the seizure and more pronounced suppression (flattening)
of EEG frequencies in the immediate postictal period. In other words,
bilaterally induced seizures were more intense and more widely distributed
throughout both hemispheres than seizures induced with unilateral
stimulation.
The clinical relevance of these observations derives from the frequently
reported therapeutic advantage of bilateral over unilateral ECT in the
relief of depression (Abrams, 1986; Sackeim et al., 1993). The apparent
validity of these observations led others to specifically examine the
clinical predictive value of the described EEG patterns.
The EEG data of Nobler et al. (1993) came from studies of patients receiving
either unilateral or bilateral ECT and energy stimulation either at
threshold or two and one-half times threshold (Sackeim et al., 1993; 1996).
The patients who received threshold unilateral ECT fared poorly compared to
those who received bilateral ECT. Regardless of the electrode placement,
however, those patients who exhibited greater midictal EEG slow-wave
amplitude and greater postictal EEG suppression experienced greater clinical
improvement and relief of depression (Nobler et al., 1993), confirming the
observations by Krystal et al. (1993). Greater immediate post-stimulus and
midictal EEG spectral amplitudes, greater immediate post-stimulus
interhemispheric coherence and greater postictal suppression were reported
with higher dose stimuli (two and one-half times threshold) compared to
barely suprathreshold stimuli (Krystal et al., 1995). In another study,
clinical improvement in depression correlated best with evidence for an
immediate postictal reduction both in EEG amplitude and coherence (Krystal
et al., 1996).
These analyses of the seizure EEG show promise of defining a clinically
effective seizure. The available brief pulse ECT devices allow visual
examination of the seizure record so that we can estimate the presence and
duration of spike activity and the development of rhythmic high voltage slow
wave activity, measure the duration of total seizure activity, and evaluate
the endpoint of the fit (precise or imprecise).
In recent research studies, the methods of EEG analysis have been complex.
Investigators often use sophisticated multi-channel instrumentation recorders
and EEG-analytic computer systems that are not usually available in clinical
settings, but their elegant findings are consistent with the visual
observations of the records provided by clinical ECT devices.
EEG Seizure Measurement
ECT device manufacturers provide some quantification of the EEG changes. The
clinical Thymatron DGx device made by Somatics Inc. provides three
quantitative measures of the seizure EEG: seizure energy index (integration
of total energy of the seizure), postictal suppression index (degree of
suppression at end of the seizure) and endpoint concordance index (a measure
of the relation of the endpoints of the EMG and the EEG seizure
determinations when simultaneously recorded).
In 1997, Somatics introduced a proprietary computer-assisted EEG analysis
system for use with their ECT device to obtain the EEG power spectral and
coherence analytic measures for routine clinical use.
In their new Spectrum 5000Q device, the Mecta Corporation makes available
the EEG algorithms derived from research by Krystal and Weiner (1994) and
licensed from Duke University to assist clinicians in better determining the
quality and efficacy of individual seizures. The clinical significance of
these measures has not been prospectively examined, yet the measures provide
accessible quantitative indices of the seizure EEG which hold the promise of
clinical application and provide the means for establishing their validity (Kellner and Fink, 1996).
For immediate application, clinicians can visually examine the available EEG
outputs for evidence of good seizure intensity and generalization. The
present criteria for an effective seizure include a synchronous,
well-developed, symmetrical ictal structure with high amplitude relative to
baseline; a distinct spike and slow wave midictal phase; pronounced
postictal suppression; and a substantial tachycardia response. These are
reasonable criteria based on present experience. Another measure, that of
interhemispheric coherence (symmetry), can be roughly estimated visually
from a two-channel EEG recording when care is taken to position the
recording electrodes symmetrically over both hemispheres.
Examples of inadequate and adequate seizures are shown in Figures 1, 2a and
2b. These samples are derived from an ongoing study involving energy dosing
estimates in the first treatment of a 69-year-old man with recurrent major
depression. In the first two stimulations, 10% (50 millicoulombs) and 20%
(100 millicoulombs) energies were applied. In the third application, 40%
(201 millicoulombs) energy was applied. Electrode placement was bilateral.
Interseizure EEG
In patients receiving a course of ECT, EEG recordings made in the days after
treatments showed profound and persistent effects. With repeated seizures,
the EEG showed a progressive increase in amplitudes, a slowing and greater
rhythmicity of frequencies, and the development of burst patterns. These
changes in EEG characteristics were related to the number of treatments,
their frequency, type of energy and electrical dosage, clinical diagnosis,
patient age and clinical outcome (Fink and Kahn, 1957).
The improvement in patient behavior from the Fink and Kahn (1957) study
(observed as a decrease in psychosis, lifting of depressed mood and decrease
in psychomotor agitation) was associated with the development of high
degrees of EEG change. The EEG characteristics predicted which patients had
improved and which had not.
The association was quantitative the greater the degree of slowing of EEG
frequencies and the earlier that "high degree" slowing appeared, the earlier
and more dramatic was the change in behavior. Elderly patients developed EEG
changes early while younger adults were often slow in showing the changes.
In some patients the EEG did not slow despite many treatments, except when
the treatments were given more frequently during the week.
The association between ECT-induced interictal EEG slowing and improvement
in depression was confirmed by Sackeim et al. (1996). EEG records were
examined at different times during the treatment course in 62 depressed
patients who received either unilateral or bilateral ECT at threshold or
high-dose energies. ECT produced a marked short-term increase in delta and
theta power, the former of which resulted from effective forms of ECT. The
changes in the EEG were no longer present at two-month follow-up. The
authors concluded that the induction of EEG slow-wave activity in the
prefrontal cortex was tied to the efficacy of ECT.
An important clinical application of EEG methodology is in determining the
adequacy of a course of ECT. When a clinical change does not occur in a
timely fashion, the interseizure EEG can be examined visually or by computer
analysis. Failure of the EEG from the frontal leads to show well-defined
delta and theta activity after several treatments suggests that the
individual treatments were inadequate. At such times, the treatment
technique should be reexamined for adequacy (i.e., sufficient electrical
dosage, choice of electrode placement, concurrent drug use), or the
frequency of the treatments should be increased. If the patient fails to
improve despite apparently sufficient EEG slowing, the diagnosis and
treatment plan should be reexamined.
The renewed interest in the seizure EEG as a marker of seizure adequacy, and
in the interseizure EEG as a marker of ECT course adequacy is likely to
underlie the next phase of research into the physiology of ECT.
Dr. Fink is professor of psychiatry and neurology at the State University of
New York at Stony Brook. He is the author of Convulsive Therapy: Theory and
Practice (Raven Press), and founder of the quarterly journal, Convulsive
Therapy.
Dr. Abrams is professor of psychiatry at the Chicago Medical School. He has
conducted basic science and clinical research on ECT for more than 25 years
and has written over 70 articles, books and chapters on ECT.
References
Abrams R (1986), Is unilateral electroconvulsive therapy really the
treatment of choice in endogenous depression? Ann N Y Acad Sci 462:50-55.
Fink M, Johnson L (1982), Monitoring the duration of electroconvulsive
therapy seizures: cuff¹ and EEG methods compared. Arch Gen Psychiatry
39:1189-1191.
Fink M, Kahn RL (1957), Relation of EEG delta activity to behavioral
response in electroshock: Quantitative serial studies. Arch Neurol
Psychiatry 78:516-525.
Kellner CH, Fink M (1997), Seizure adequacy: does EEG hold the key? Convuls
Ther 12:203-206.
Krystal AD, Weiner RD (1994), ECT seizure therapeutic adequacy. Convuls Ther
10:153-164.
Krystal AD, Weiner RD, Coffey CE (1995), The ictal EEG as a marker of
adequate stimulus intensity with unilateral ECT. J Neuropsychiatry Clin
Neurosci 7:295-303.
Krystal AD, Weiner RD, Gassert D et al. (1996), The relative ability of
three ictal EEG frequency bands to differentiate ECT seizures on the basis
of electrode placement, stimulus intensity, and therapeutic response.
Convuls Ther 12:13-24.
Krystal AD, Weiner RD, McCall WV et al. (1993), The effects of ECT stimulus
dose and electrode placement on the ictal electroencephalogram: An
intraindividual crossover study. Biol Psychiatry 34:759-767.
McCall WV, Farah BA, Raboussin D, Colenda CC (1995), Comparison of the
efficacy of titrated, moderate-dose and fixed, high-dose right unilateral
ECT in elderly patients. Amer J Ger Psychiatry 3:317-324.
Nobler MS, Sackeim HA, Solomou M et al. (1993), EEG manifestations during
ECT: effects of electrode placement and stimulus intensity. Biol Psychiatry
34:321-330.
Sackeim HA, Luber B, Katzman GP et al. (1996), The effects of
electroconvulsive therapy on quantitative electroencephalograms.
Relationship to clinical outcome. Arch Gen Psychiatry 53:814-824.
Sackeim HA, Prudic J, Devanand D et al. (1993), Effects of stimulus
intensity and electrode placement on the efficacy and cognitive effects of
electroconvulsive therapy. N Engl J Med 328:839-846.
Shapira B, Lidsky D, Gorfine M, Lerer B (1996), Electroconvulsive therapy
and resistant depression: Clinical implications of seizure threshold. J Clin
Psychiatry 57:32-38.
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