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ECT was first introduced as a treatment for schizophrenia in the 1930s, and quickly became adopted as a common treatment method for mood disorders—and as a dreaded mechanism for disciplining unruly psychiatric inpatients. While its use today has mostly been displaced by medication, ECT (now administered under anaesthesia and muscle relaxants) continues to be used for the treatment of several conditions for which medication is not appropriate, occupying a narrow but important niche in modern psychiatry.
Currently ECT is mainly used to treat severe depression, particularly if complicated by psychosis (NIH & NIMH Consensus Conference, 1985; Depression Guideline Panel, 1993; Potter & Rudorfer, 1993). It is also used in cases of severe depression where antidepressant medication (sometimes in multiple courses), psychotherapy, or both have proven ineffective (Potter et al., 1991; Depression Guideline Panel, 1993), when medication cannot be taken, or when alternative treatments would be too slow (for example, in a person with delusional depression and intense, unremitting suicidalitySuicide (from Latin sui caedere to kill oneself) is the act of ending one's own life. It is considered a sin in many religions, and a crime in some jurisdictions. On the other hand, some cultures have viewed it as an honorable way to exit certain shameful). Specific indications include depression accompanied by a physical illness or pregnancyPregnancy is the process by which a mammalian female carries a live offspring from conception until it develops to the point where the offspring is capable of living outside the womb. It starts with conception, the process of fertilization to form a zygot, which renders the use of the usually preferred antidepressants dangerous to the patient or to a developing fetusA fetus (alternatively foetus is an embryo in later stages of development, from the third month of pregnancy until birth in humans. Fetus literally means 'young one'. Fetal growth There is much natural variation in the growth of the fetus. Approximately 4. Under such circumstances, carefully weighing risks and benefits, some psychiatrists consider ECT to be the safest treatment option for severe depression. It is also sometimes used to treat the manic phaseFor the classical mythological figures named Mania, see Mania (mythology). Mania describes a medical condition characterised by severely elevated mood. Associated with bipolar disorder, where episodes of mania alternate with episodes of depression. Note: of bipolar disorderAs categorized by the DSM-IV, bipolar disorder is a form of mood disorder characterised by a variation of mood between a phase of manic or hypomanic elation, hyperactivity and hyper imagination, and a depressive phase of inhibition, slowness to conceive i and in the uncommon condition of catatoniaThis a page about catatonic state. For the band, see Catatonia (band . Catatonia is a severe psychiatric and medical condition, characterized by, in catatonic stupor, a general absence of motor activity, and, in catatonic excitement, violent, hyperactive.
ECT should be administered under controlled conditions, with appropriate personnel (Rudorfer et al., 1997) and some mental health lawMental health law is that area of law that deals with mental conditions. This includes areas in both common law and statute law. Common law issues include such concepts as mens rea, insanity defences, sane and insane automatism amongst others. Statute laws mandate this.
Recent epidemiologicalEpidemiology is the study of the demographics of disease processes, including the study of epidemics and other diseases that are common enough to allow statistical tools to be applied. So, besides contagious diseases, it also focuses on diabetes, coronary surveys in the United States show that the modern use of ECT is generally limited to evidence-based indications (Hermann et al., 1999). Indeed, concern has been raised that in some settings, particularly in the public sector and outside major metropolitan areas, ECT may be underutilized due to the wide variability in the availability of this treatment across the country (Hermann et al., 1995). Consequently, minority patients tend to be underrepresented among those receiving ECT (Rudorfer et al., 1997).