Sign In To HealthyPlace Cancel

   
Forgot your password?


advertisement.png
REGISTER SIGN IN BOOKMARK
advertisement.png
A Comparison of Some Retrograde and Anterograde Effects of Electroconvulsive Shock in Patients With Severe Depression
Written by Frith CD; Stevens M; Johnstone EC; Deakin JF; Lawler P; Crow TJ   
PDF Print E-mail
Dec 29, 2000 A +  A -  RESET  

Br J Psychol 1987 Feb;78 ( Pt 1):53-63
Author(s): Frith CD; Stevens M; Johnstone EC; Deakin JF; Lawler P; Crow TJ
Abstract: Seventy severely depressed patients were randomly assigned to receive either a standard course of bilateral electroconvulsive therapy (ECT) or a course of simulated ECT (muscle relaxant and anaesthesia) identical to the real course except that the shock was omitted. Anterograde amnesia due to the shock was demonstrated in recognition Abstract: memory for word lists and in recall of labels for faces, but this was eliminated by priming. Retrograde amnesia was also present for labels for faces learned the day before a treatment, but this was not eliminated by priming. Recognition memory for material learned in the remote past was better in the patients who had received shock than in those who had received only anaesthetic.

next: Cognitive Effects of Electroconvulsive Therapy: A Clinical Review for Nurses

Top   |   E-mail   |  
Last Updated( Feb 11, 2009 )
reviewed by: Harry Croft, MD
Psychiatrist, HealthyPlace.com Medical Director
 

NEWSLETTER SIGNUP

Sign up for the HealthyPlace.com newsletter mailing list.
* Email
* First Name
* Last Name
* = Required Field
advertisement.png