Living With Schizoaffective Disorder
What if Medicine Doesn't Help?
There are people for who it seems
no antidepressant will help,
but they are rare, and for those who cannot be treated by antidepressants,
it is very likely that
electric shock treatment will help. I realize that's a very frightening
prospect and it is still controversial, but ECT (or electroconvulsive
therapy) is widely regarded by psychiatrists as the safest and most
effective treatment there is for the worst depression. Most effective
because it works when
antidepressants fail, and safest for the simple reason that it works
almost immediately, so the patient is not likely to kill themselves while
waiting to get better, as can happen while waiting for an antidepressant to
yield some relief.
Those who have read such books as
Zen and the Art of Motorcycle Maintenance and
One Flew Over the Cuckoo's Nest will understandably have a
low regard
for shock treatment. In the past, shock treatment was poorly understood by
those who administered it and I have no doubt that it has been abused as
depicted in Kesey's book.
Note: While you may have seen the Cuckoo's Nest
movie, it's really worthwhile to read the book. The inner experience of
the patients comes through in the novel in a way that I don't think is
possible in a motion picture.
It has since been found that the memory loss that Robert Pirsig describes
in Zen and the Art of Motorcycle Maintenance can be largely avoided
by shocking only one lobe of the brain at a time, rather than both
simultaneously. I understand the untreated lobe retains its memory and can
help the other one recover it.
A new procedure called
Transcranial Magnetic Stimulation promises a vast improvement over
traditional ECT by using pulsed magnetic fields to induce currents inside
the brain. A drawback for ECT is that the skull is an effective insulator,
so high voltages are required to penetrate it. ECT cannot be applied with
much precision. The skull presents no barrier to magnetic fields, so TMS can
be delicately and precisely controlled.
At the hospital back in '85, I had the pleasure to meet a fellow patient
who had once worked as a staff member at another psychiatric hospital some
time before. He would give us the inside scoop on everything that was going
on during our stay. In particular, he had once assisted in giving ECT
treatments and said that, at the time, it was just starting to be understood
how many times you could shock someone before, as he put it, "they wouldn't
come back". He said you could safely treat someone eleven times.
(It actually seems to be common for those who have mental illness to work
at psychiatric hospitals.
The Quiet Room author Lori Schiller worked at one for a while, and even
now teaches a class at one. A bipolar friend worked at Harbor Hills hospital
in Santa Cruz when I knew him back in the mid-80's. At her first job,
Schiller managed to keep her illness a secret for some time until another
staffer noticed her hands shaking. That's a common side effect of many
psychiatric medications, and in fact sometimes I take a drug called
propanolol to stop the tremors I get from Depakote, which got so bad at one
point that I couldn't type on a computer keyboard.)
You're probably wondering whether I have ever had ECT. I haven't;
antidepressants work well for me. Although I feel it is probably safe and
effective, I would be very reluctant to have it, for the simple reason that
I place such a high value on my intellect. I would have to be pretty
convinced that I would be as smart afterwards as I am now before I would
volunteer for shock treatment. I would have to know a lot more about it than
I do now.
I've known several other people to
have ECT, and it seemed to help them.
A couple of them were fellow patients who were getting the treatment while
we were in the hospital together, and the difference in their whole
personalities from one day to the next was profoundly positive.
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