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Anesthesia for ECT. Patrick McElhone, CRNA Chief CRNA Hines VA Hospital. Disclosures. Anesthesia for ECT. History Theories on how ECT works Indications for ECT Complications of ECT. History of ECT.
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Anesthesia for ECT Patrick McElhone, CRNA Chief CRNA Hines VA Hospital
Anesthesia for ECT • History • Theories on how ECT works • Indications for ECT • Complications of ECT
History of ECT • The concept of inducing convulsions to promote mental wellness has existed since the 16th century • Swiss alchemist Paracelsus gave camphor by mouth to induce convulsions and “cure lunacy”
Seizures Cure Catatonic Schizophrenia • In 1934, Ladislaw Meduna, a Hungarian psychiatrist, investigated a hypothetical inverse relationship between seizures and schizophrenia • Lack of glial cells in individuals with schizophrenia • Overgrowth of these cells in people with epilepsy.
Seizures Cure Catatonic Schizophrenia • Meduna hypothesized that inducing epilepsy would cure cure patients with schizophrenia • Meduna injected camphor in oil into a patient with catatonic schizophrenia, causing a 60 second grand mal seizure. • The patient went into a full recovery after a short series of such treatments
Development of ECT: Camphor to Electricity • Camphor was replaced by Metrazol • Frequent seizures • Vertebral fractures • Pulmonary tuberculosis • Myocardial damages • Hypertension • Alternative methods to induce Seizure • Electricity was recently used to induce seizures in dogs
Development of ECT • Italian scientists Cerletti and Bini defined the parameters to applying electricity to the human scalp to induce seizures • 1938, 39yo, found delusional at train station electrically induced seizures • Full recovery reported after 11 treatments • Electroconvulsive Therapy was born
How Does ECT Work: Psychological Effects • Patient’s expectations • Placebo effect • Force regression • Retrograde amnesia • Proven incorrect
How does ECT Work: Neurophysiological Effects • Anticonvulsant • Treatment of Intractable Seizures • Increased Seizure Threshold during treatment course • Decrease Seizure Duration over the treatment course • Increase inhibitory neurotransmitter • Decrease in excitatory neurotransmitters • Post-ictal bioelectrical suppression • All associated with improved clinical improvement
How Does ECT Work: Effects on Hippocampus • Promote neurogenesis dentate gyrus • Perera et al. • 12 ECT total (3x week/4 weeks) to monkeys • Increase in cell proliferation in the dentate gyrus • Increase lasted for 4 weeks • Meduna saw a lack of glial cells in schizophrenics and an over growth of glial cells in epileptics
How Does ECT Work? Decrease Glucocorticoid levels • Chronic Stress leads to decrease cell proliferation in the dentate gyrus • Basis for the animal model of depression • ECT can mitigate this response • Increase in BDNF
Indications for ECT • Schizophrenia • Catatonia • Mania • Depression
Indications for ECT • Increased Clinical Urgency • Depressive Hallucinations • Catatonia • Suicidal Ideations • Intolerance to psychotropic drugs • Failure of drug therapy • Patient Preference • Co-existing Medical Disorders for which psychoactive medication poses a risk • Pregnancy • Cardiac patients-TCAs
ECT for Schizophrenia • First use of ECT • Fell out of use with antipsychotic medications in 1950s • Most common indication for ECT in India and other Asian Countries • Indications: • Augment to pharmacotherapy • Rapid improvement is needed • Refractory to medication • Catatonia
ECT for Schizophrenia • Combined with antipsychotics • Multitude of studies showing improvement when combined with Clozepine • Effects were not persistent and required continuation in treatments
ECT for Mania • 80% Manic patient had remission or marked improvements • Showed improvement when pharmacotherapy did not • Lower seizure threshold • Improvement seen in few treatments
ECT For Depression • Treatment Resistant Depression • 80% of all ECT in US • 50% of patients showed improvements • 50% relapse with 12months
ECT For Depression compared to medication • 20% higher response vs. tricyclic antidepressants • 45% higher response vs. MAOIs • “No study has found any treatment to be superior to ECT for the treatment of major depression
Complications of ECT • Skeletal Injuries • Cervical Fractures-Unmodified • Long Bone Fractures-Unmodified • Cognitive Decline • Memory Loss • Concentration and Attention Problems • Confusion • Brain Injury?? TBI? • Why??? • Complications from procedure/anesthesia
Bilateral vs Uni-lateral Electrode Placement • Bilateral • Most common in use • Better seizures • Memory loss • Uni-lateral • Less impairment of new learning capacity • Less amnesia for remote events • Possible to not trigger seizure
"Well, what is the sense of ruining my head and erasing my memory, which is my capital, and putting me out of business? It was a brilliant cure but we lost the patient....” -Ernest Hemingway
Anesthesia in ECT aka Modified ECT • 1940s Neuromuscular blocking agents (NMB) used to prevent joint/bone injury during treatment • Curare • Succinylcholine • Short acting IV anesthetics were administered to prevent memory of being paralyzed • Unmodified ECT • Done without anesthesia is still practiced in Japan, China and India
Anesthesia for ECT Overview • Akinesia #1 • Prevent excessive motor activity during seizure • Musculoskeletal Injury • Oxygen consumption • Amnesia • Prevent recall of being paralyzed • Autonomic Stability • Managed parasympathetic and sympathetic effects of ECT • Analgesia • Ensure patient comfort from procedure • Myalgia from succinylcholine • Headaches from ECT
AkinesiaNeuromuscular Blocking Agents • Competitively block acetylcholine at the neuromuscular junction • Prevent motor end plate activation • 2 primary types • Depolarizing • Succinylcholine • Non-deplolarizing • Rocuronium • Vecuroniom • Cis-atricurium
Depolarizing neuromuscular blocking agents • Succinylcholine (Anectine) • Activates the motor end-plate • Cause a prolong depolarization • Fasciculations • Relaxation occurs during the relative refractory period • Primary NMB used in ECT • Dose 0.5-1.5mg/kg • Contraindications • Malignant Hyperthermia • Paralysis/Weakness • Burns • Hyperkalemia
Non-deplorazing neuromuscular blocking agents • Block end-plate but do not cause any action • Longer duration of action • Rocuronium • Cisatricurium • Reversible • Neostigmine • Blocks acetylcholinesterase • Allows competitive build-up of Acetylcholine • Sugamadex • Binds to free rocuronium • Rapid, complete
GABAergic agents • Activate gaba receptors • Influx of Cl- Channels • Hyperpolarization of neuron • Anticonvulsants • Limits effectiveness in ECT • Medications • Methohexital • Etomidate • Propofol
Methohexital (Brevital) • “Gold Standard” • Barbiturate • No Change on ECT induced seizure duration • Dosage: • 0.75-1.0mg/kg • Increased dosage • Chronic ETOH • Benzodiazepines • Contraindicated in acute intermittent porphyria
Etomidate • Gabametic • Increases seizure duration • Compared to methohexital, thiopental, and propofol • Useful seizure <20s • Dosage • 0.15–0.3 mg/kg • Hemodynamically stable • Increased sympathetic response
Propofol • Potent anticonvulsant effects during ECT • 1-1.5mg/kg • 1.5mg/kg still shown to allow adequate seizure • Minimal hypnotic dosage 0.75mg/kg compares to methohexital
Ketamine • NMDA receptor antagonist • Blocks glutamate • Decrease seizure duration compared to methohexital • Enhances sympathomimetic activity • Increases ICP
Autonomic stability-Initial Response to ECTHemodynamic Changes with ECT • Parasympathetic Surge • Anticipate bradycardia • Asystole • Increase secretions • Anticholinergics Pretreatment • Glycopyrrolate 0.2-0.4mg • Less tachycardia • Atropine 0.4mg-1.0mg • Sympathomimetics during arrest • Epinephrine 10-100mcg
Autonomic Stability-Second Response to ECT • Sympathetic Surge • Increased BP 20-40% • Increase HR >20% • Last 3-5min • Risks: • Myocardial Ischemia • Treatment • Beta receptor antagonists • Labetalol • Esmolol • Vasodilators • Hydralazine
Regional Cerebral Oxygen Saturation During Electroconvulsive Therapy: Monitoring by Near-Infrared SpectrophotometrySaito, Shigeru MD; Miyoshi, Sohtaro MD; Yoshikawa, Daisuke MD; Shimada, Hitoshi MD; Morita, Toshihiro MD; Kitani, Yasuharu MDAnesthesia & Analgesia: October 1996 - Volume 83 - Issue 4 - pp 726-730Neurosurgical Anesthesia • 43 patients, ECT under GA • Continually monitored • Heart rate (HR) • Mean arterial blood pressure • Regional cerebral oxygen saturation (rSO2) • rSO2 changed conisently • Initially, -9.4% +/- 0.9% • Later, +8.7%, =?- 0.9% • Demonstrated a close correlation between the increase in rSO2 and the mean blood pressure after the electrical shock (r2 = 0.832, P < 0.0001)
Analgesia in ECT • Muscle aches-myalgia • Succinylcholine • Headache-ECT electrodes • Treatment • Ketoralac • IV NSAIDs Acetaminophen • Opioids • Fentanyl 25-50mcg • Best assessed after ECT
Complications from ECT • Airway • Difficult airway management • Larygnospasm • Respiratory • Aspiration • Prolonged muscle weakness • Cardiovascular • Effects of ECT • Bradycardia/asystole • Tachycardia • Cardiovascular • Effects of anesthetics • Prolonged seizures • Propofol • Midazolam • Emergence delerium • Midazolam
Airway Management • NMB induce apnea • Ventilatation • Oxygenation • NMB abolish the airway protective reflexes • Increased risk of aspiration
Apnea • Mask Ventilation-most common • Supra-glottic airway • Prolonged apnea • Difficult mask ventilaiton • Endotracheal Intubation • High risk for aspiration • Prolonged apnea
Aspiration • Nothing by mouth • Endotracheal tube intubation for high risk patients • GERD • Hiatal Hernia • Delayed gastric emptying • Extubate awake and airway reflexes have returned
Equipment for ECT Anesthesia • Machine • Suction • Monitors • Nerve Stimulator! • EKG and BP • Pulse-Oximetry and ETCO2 • Airway • Oral Airway • Bite Block • Endotracheal tube • IV • Drugs
Experiences? Questions? Thank you