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Eve Russell is Clinical Director of Old Age Psychiatry at South Manchester University Hospitals (Withington Hospital, Healey House, Nell Lane, Manchester M20 2LR). She is the consultant responsible for ECT at South Manchester. Her research interests are wide and include psychotherapy in older adults and pharmacological treatments for dementia.
An editorial in The Lancet two decades ago (Lancet, 1981) described the contemporary practice of electroconvulsive therapy (ECT) in Britain as "a shameful state of affairs". It concluded that, "if ECT is ever legislated against or falls into disuse it will not be because it is an ineffective or dangerous treatment; it will be because psychiatrists have failed to supervise and monitor its use adequately".
This conclusion followed an audit conducted by the Royal College of Psychiatrists, which covered aspects of the administration of ECT (Pippard & Ellam, 1981). Fewer than half of the units met the minimum standards set by the College at the time (Royal College of Psychiatrists, 1977). Many treatments failed to induce seizures and more than a quarter of units had obsolete ECT machines. Consultant psychiatrists were rarely involved in the work of the clinics, with half the junior staff receiving no or only minimal training.
Following publication of these findings, both the Department of Health and the College established working groups and committees with a remit to advise on updating equipment and to initiate improvements in practice and training. Guidance on the practical administration of ECT was produced and hospitals were advised to nominate a consultant psychiatrist with responsibility for ECT.
A subsequent audit (Pippard, 1992) revealed much improvement in the physical conditions in which ECT was given and in anaesthetic and nursing practice. However, half the clinics surveyed had not updated their ECT machines and training and supervision remained unsatisfactory in many units.
Despite the publication of detailed College standards for the provision of ECT (Royal College of Psychiatrists, 1995), a third audit (Duffett & Lelliott, 1998) highlighted continuing deficiencies in the equipment used and training and supervision of junior psychiatrists.
In the public eye, ECT remains an emotive and controversial subject, and some groups campaign for it to be banned. There is also public concern that ECT should be given only to appropriate patients, with minimal side-effects and distress, and should be administered by competent doctors. At present, standards within ECT services remain patchy. Ways of inspecting all aspects of the provision of ECT are being considered by the College, and the Mental Health Act Commission also takes an interest in the subject.
In this context, it is surprising that few ECT consultants are given sessional time to carry out the task effectively. The purpose of this article is to give some guidance to colleagues either taking on the role or reassessing clinical standards in their unit.
| Existing clinical guidelines |
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Detailed examination of these standards, identifying any deficits in the existing service, should be undertaken by the consultant psychiatrist, consultant anaesthestist and senior nurse responsible for ECT. The necessity and resource implications of raising standards must be supported by management. Provision of high-quality ECT is not cheap (Box 1
).
| Box 1. Raising standards first steps Audit existing service against College standards Ensure joint working with consultant anaesthetist and nurse in charge of ECT Look locally to share best practice and standardise equipment and written protocols Meet early with management to consider resource implications (both equipment and staffing, including consultant sessional time)
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If deficits in the service are recognised, improvement in standards must be made rapidly and jointly by the consultant psychiatrist responsible for ECT, consultant anaesthetist and nurse manager for ECT. It is useful at this stage to look at other ECT services, aiming to utilise specialist interest and experience in the subject. If trainees rotate through several hospital sites, minimising differences in models of ECT machines and written protocols will help trainees. Developing better practice can be facilitated by sharing experience at informal meetings.
If there are serious deficits and resources are scarce, alternative approaches should be considered. Within a locality, patients requiring ECT might be admitted to a single site, or a team (e.g. a consultant psychiatrist, consultant anaesthestist, ECT nurse and recovery nurse) could travel to different sites providing training and supervision in the safe administration of ECT. The latter arrangement would be less disruptive for patients.
| Environment and facilities |
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In addition, it can be useful to have a further two areas: one between the waiting-room and treatment room where patients can prepare for treatment, for example, removing dentures and speaking in privacy to the anaesthetist and nurse, without the presence of the equipment in the treatment room; and a second area beyond the recovery room where patients can sit and have a cup of tea while awaiting transfer back to the ward. If the premises do not meet minimum College requirements, then the managers need to be informed and resources made available to effect the necessary alterations.
Equipment other than ECT apparatus
The monitoring and resuscitation equipment provided should be compared with the standards set within the ECT Handbook. The guidelines of the Royal College of Anaesthetists are more detailed: for example, for the recovery room, the ECT Handbook does not mention pulse oximetry, which the Royal College of Anaesthetists would regard as essential. Written protocols for checking anaesthetic equipment and drugs must define the frequency and responsibility for and mechanisms of recording checks. Funding to replace and update equipment should be identified in future budgets.
| Anaesthetic cover |
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The anaesthetist will also need skilled nursing assistance. If this is regarded as the responsibility of one nurse, continuity of care is maintained for patients and this nurse can also contribute to the management of the suite and to the development of protocols for patient care.
| Nursing expertise |
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The senior nurse needs to develop and maintain a high level of expertise in recovery and resuscitation and work to train and raise standards. There also needs to be a team of nurses trained in recovery. Although their initial training is relatively straightforward, it is more difficult for them to maintain recovery skills, particularly if only small numbers of patients are receiving ECT. The consultant anaesthetist may be able to offer help with ongoing training.
| Role of the psychiatrist |
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| ECT machines |
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Modern ECT machines deliver brief square-wave pulses of 12 milliseconds and hence only a fraction of the electrical energy of traditional ECT machines producing sine-wave signals. The machine should have a wide range of stimulus settings, allowing adequate treatment of patients regardless of their seizure thresholds. Some older machines were unable to deliver charges of less than 150 millicoulombs, which is above the seizure threshold in many young patients, or the higher amounts of electrical energy needed for patients with higher thresholds, for example, older bald men. A test facility allowing the static impedance to be ascertained before delivering the treatment is useful, giving feedback to trainees of faults and assurance that the electrodes are applied properly. Although the College does not recommend mandatory routine electroencephalogram (EEG) monitoring, we have found this a useful way of monitoring seizure adequacy, as discussed below.
As with the anaesthetic equipment, responsibility for checking the machine and recording that checks have been made must be clearly defined. Back-up machines should also meet College standards but, rather than purchase expensive machines that will become obsolete in cupboards, the purchase of a reliable and fast maintenance contract, or arrangements made with local colleagues to help out as needed, may be preferable.
| Psychiatric cover |
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Training of junior doctors remained a problem in the 19951996 audit, and although 79% of trainees reported receiving training in ECT, 40% were not supervised by a member of the College when they first administered ECT, and 45% lacked quite basic knowledge about its administration, such as being unaware that a fit was needed for the treatment to be effective or that the threshold was likely to be higher in older men and to increase during the course of treatment. When knowledge of the mechanism of action of ECT was compared between different groups of doctors, knowledge was seen to increase as trainees went on to higher training, but their knowledge about its administration remained static. It therefore cannot be assumed that specialist registrars are necessarily more able to administer ECT effectively than are basic trainees.
The training of basic trainees needs to address both knowledge and practical aspects. Trainees need formal teaching, written information and personal supervision from the ECT consultant within the ECT suite. We have found it helpful to put aside a half-day at the start of each intake of basic trainees for training in ECT. During this session, the consultant anaesthetist will discuss the importance of adequate preparation of the patient and the potential medical problems associated with ECT both during and after the treatment. Trainees will also see edited parts of the College's training video (Royal College of Psychiatrists, 1994) and learn about the principles of patient selection, consent to treatment and the administration of ECT, including stimulus dosing. This teaching session should be followed-up by personal supervision by the consultant within the ECT suite, illustrating the theoretical points learnt with reference to treatment of individual patients.
From the point of view of ECT training and continuity of care for patients, the ECT rota needs to be arranged such that the trainees carry out a series of consecutive treatments. At times, this may not be popular with trainees or their consultants, as the timing of sessions may conflict with other training opportunities or attendance at ward rounds. Allowing trainees adequate notice and to choose their block of time for training in ECT can overcome many of these difficulties. If the lists are long, a compromise may be for trainees to attend weekly, although this reduces the continuity of care for patients and often reduces trainees' understanding of stimulus dosing.
The ECT consultant can play an important role in academic teaching about ECT. A seminar on ECT can be incorporated into medical student teaching, including videos and an open discussion of the topic.
Presentations to colleagues in other medical specialities, for example, anaesthetists and general practitioners, can also be helpful in dispelling myths about ECT.
| Preparation for ECT |
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If there is any doubt about the patient's capacity to consent, either permanently as a result of cognitive impairment or temporarily owing, for example, to delusional ideas, then it is common and in my view good practice to seek the advice of a second opinion doctor under Section 3 of the Mental Health Act 1983, although this practice has been questioned (Chubb & Alldrick, 2000).
Usually, the nurse in charge will check that patients are consenting to treatment and that the necessary provisions, including Mental Health Act documentation, are in place. Mechanisms also need to be in place to verify the identity of students attending the suite and to obtain patients' consent for them to be present during treatment.
Physical assessment of patients before ECT
Electroconvulsive therapy is a deceptively simple procedure, but it results in increased sympathetic drive and profound haemodynamic changes, with the risk of heart failure or arrhythmias. Such cardiac changes are not confined to the first treatment, and it is important that monitoring of the patient's fitness for ECT continues throughout the course of treatment and that changes in the patient's physical health are relayed to the ECT treatment team.
The patient assessment for ECT should include as a minimum:
In a patient with a learning disability, depression may be difficult to assess, but this should be attempted with the help of nursing observations. Investigations carried out will depend on the age and associated medical comorbidity and may often include full blood count, urea and electrolytes, chest X-ray and electrocardiogram; it may also involve more detailed investigation, for example, blood glucose in diabetes, sickle cell test or lithium levels. It is important that protocols produced for assessment of patients before ECT are agreed with the consultant anaesthetist and do not conflict with those produced elsewhere, for example, a potential conflict would arise if a chest X-ray were made routine in fit young people.
There must also be infection-control procedures in place, with good liaison between the wards and ECT suite, both for protecting patients thought to be at high risk of infections such as hepatitis and HIV and, increasingly, for preventing hospital-acquired infection such as MRSA (methicillin-resistant Staphylococcus aureus).
Awareness needs to be raised about the effect of drugs, both on seizure thresholds (and hence efficacy of treatment) and in increasing the risk of prolonged seizures. Nursing staff must be aware of the effect of benzodiazepines, commonly prescribed on an as required basis, on seizure threshold. Anticonvulsants such as carbamazepine, used in epilepsy and as mood stabilisers, increase seizure threshold and decrease seizure duration. There needs to be discussion with the patient's consultant about continuing prescription. It may be appropriate to defer prescription of carbamazepine as a mood stabiliser or reduce the dose of an existing prescription if there are difficulties in producing effective seizures. There are case reports of young patients on selective serotonin reuptake inhibitors having very prolonged seizures, and this possibility needs to be drawn to the attention of the anaesthetist prior to treatment. Caffeine can be used to decrease seizure threshold and increase seizure duration therapeutically.
Other drugs may increase the risk of complications during treatment, and written protocols, for example, for the discontinuation of clozapine during ECT, need to be agreed and available. The necessity of continuing other drugs, such as tricyclic antidepressants, which may increase the risk of cardiovascular complications in patients with previous cardiac disease, also needs to be considered.
The consultant anaesthetist responsible for ECT can play an invaluable role in developing these protocols, disseminating information from the literature and giving advice on individual patients.
| Prescription of ECT |
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Frequency of treatment
A fixed number of treatments should not be prescribed at the start of a course of ECT. The treatments should be prescribed singly or at a maximum of two at a time, with patient review before further prescription. Some patients benefit from a small number of treatments and others may require longer courses. Treatment should be stopped when the patient is euthymic. There is no evidence that prolonging the course after this point has any benefit.
It is the practice in National Health Service hospitals within the UK to give treatments twice weekly, but in the USA treatments are given three times per week. Studies using the older machines producing sine-wave stimulation showed that twice-weekly ECT worked as quickly as three times per week (Gangadahar et al, 1993). Although it has been suggested that more frequent ECT should be given to manage patients with life-threatening disorders, there is no good evidence base for this, nor for the induction of two seizures during each anaesthetic. Both treatment strategies would increase the acute cognitive impairment after ECT and there is no evidence that they are more efficacious than the standard treatment.
Dose titration
One way in which the administration of ECT has improved is the move away from fixed dosing, whereby all patients received the same dose of electricity, to stimulus dosing, where the magnitude of the electrical stimulus is altered depending on the individual patient. This can be done either by using age and gender to predict the likely dose or by using a protocol of increasing dose to determine an approximation of seizure threshold at the start of treatment.
Double-blind studies (Sackeim et al, 1993) have demonstrated that the antidepressant effect of ECT is dependent not on the absolute electrical dose administered, but on whether or not the dosage substantially exceeds the seizure threshold. Although there is a significant correlation between age and seizure threshold, thresholds have been shown to vary at least three-fold in patients aged 3060 years (Dykes & Scott, 1998), supporting the practice whereby the stimulus threshold is determined for individual patients.
Seizure thresholds vary between individuals according to the factors given in Box 2
, and protocols need to reflect these factors. Thresholds also rise during a course of ECT.
| Box 2. Seizure threshold Increases with age Is higher in men than in women Is increased by benzodiazepines and anticonvulsants May increase during a course of ECT
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The treatment dose will exceed the threshold. A moderately supra-threshold stimulus has been shown to have greater efficacy than a dose just above threshold. The evidence suggests that when unilateral ECT is used, the treatment dose needs to exceed the seizure threshold by a larger amount (up to 3- to 6-fold) than with bilateral ECT (50100%) (Sackeim et al, 1993).
A recent study has shown right unilateral ECT at high dosage (5 x threshold) to be as effective as bilateral ECT at 1.5 x threshold (Sackheim et al, 2000), while producing less severe and persistent cognitive effects.
Although fixed dosing remains common in the UK, it is associated with a higher risk of missed or partial seizures that have no therapeutic effect and with a significantly greater risk of adverse cognitive effects compared with dose titration techniques.
Monitoring the seizure adequacy
Many modern ECT machines now include EEG monitoring, which helps to prevent unwarranted re-stimulation, as well as to detect prolonged seizures. Motor seizure monitoring without EEG can be unreliable, even if the Hamilton cuff technique is used (Mayur et al, 1999). Clear protocols should be in place to stop lengthy seizures.
When methohexitone was used, it was common practice, although without an evidence base, to aim for a generalised bilateral tonicclonic seizure lasting over 15 seconds and/or 25 seconds on an EEG recording. Since methohexitone has been unavailable and other induction agents have been used, the evidence for any particular length of fit being effective is even weaker. Propofol anaesthesia results in shorter duration of fits, but there is debate as to whether it reduces therapeutic effectiveness (Fear et al, 1994).
Reductions in seizure duration during a course of ECT can give an indication of increasing seizure threshold and the need to increase the stimulus dose, but decisions to increase the dose during the course of ECT need to be based on information of clinical improvement and cognitive side-effects, not only on seizure duration.
Mechanisms should be in place to ensure that patients leave the suite having received a therapeutic treatment. Protocols should address finding threshold and treatment doses, re-stimulation in the case of missed seizures and adjustment of the dose during the course of treatment. The ECT consultant has an important role in auditing the use of these protocols and maintaining standards.
Records of treatment
Treatment cards should record the drugs administered, anaesthetic complications, the dose and the effect of treatment, on both muscle and EEG activity, and could usefully incorporate feedback from the patient's team on clinical improvement and side-effects. Self-report questionnaires completed by the patient can also be of benefit. Increasing confusion during a course of treatment may be secondary to ictal activity, but, in patients with existing cardiac problems, may indicate an increasingly compromised cardiovascular system or other physical problems such as intercurrent infection.
| Post-treatment protocols |
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| Other protocols |
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Many ECT consultants will have no experience of giving ECT to children and should seek advice from colleagues before doing so.
Use in out-patients
There are circumstances in which ECT can safely be given on an out-patient basis, but protocols need to be in place to ensure that patients are adequately prepared prior to treatment and monitored after it. This may be particularly relevant in patients receiving maintenance ECT.
Written advice to patients and carers should be provided. It can be interesting to compare the detailed advice given to patients attending, for example, for endoscopy with the situation that in the past has occurred in psychiatry when patients have had to find their own way home within an hour or so of receiving ECT. From an anaesthetic point of view, all guidelines suggest that patients who receive anaesthesia on a day-case basis should be accompanied home by a responsible adult and that there is a responsible adult with them continually over the next 24 hours. A mechanism needs to be in place whereby patients' physical and mental state are checked, for example, by the nurse in charge of the ECT suite, before they leave the clinic or by staff in the community mental health team or day hospitals. Lines of responsibility need to be clear.
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However, the introduction of up-to-date machines (Trezise & Conlon, 1997) and increased consultant supervision (Trezise, 1998) have both been shown to be associated with a reduction in the number of treatments given. With appropriate resources, good liaison with colleagues and continuing audit, standards can be raised, thus ensuring that ECT is safely and effectively administered to the benefit of patients.
| Multiple choice questions |
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| References |
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Duffett, R. & Lelliott, P. (1998) Auditing electroconvulsive therapy. The third cycle. British Journal of Psychiatry, 172, 401405.
Dykes, S. R. & Scott, A. I. F. (1998) Initial seizure threshold in bilateral electroconvulsive therapy. Psychiatric Bulletin, 22, 298299.
Enns, M. W. & Reiss, J. P. (1998) Position paper on ECT. Canadian Psychiatric Association. http://www.cpa-apc.org/Publications/Position_Papers/Therapy.asp
Fear, C. F., Littlejohns, C. S., Rouse, E., et al (1994) Propofol anaesthesia in electroconvulsive therapy. British Journal of Psychiatry, 165, 506509.
Freeman, C. P. (1999) Anaesthesia for electroconvulsive therapy. Psychiatric Bulletin, 23, 740741.
Gangadahar, B. N. Janakiramai, A. H. N., Subbakrishna, D. K., et al (1993) Twice versus thrice weekly ECT in melancholia a double-blind prospective comparison. Journal of Affective Disorder, 27, 273278.[CrossRef][Medline]
Lancet (1981) (ed) ECT in Britain: A shameful state of affairs. Lancet, ii, 12071208.
Mayur, P. M., Gangadhar, B. N., Janakiramaiah, N., et al (1999) Motor seizure monitoring during electroconvulsive therapy. British Journal of Psychiatry, 174, 270272.
Pippard, J. (1992) Audit of electroconvulsive treatment in two national health service regions. British Journal of Psychiatry, 160, 621637.
Pippard, J. & Ellam, L. (1981) Electroconvulsive treatment in Great Britain. British Journal of Psychiatry, 139, 563568.
Royal College of Psychiatrists (1977) Memorandum on the use of electroconvulsive therapy. Part I. Effectiveness of ECT: a review of the evidence. British Journal of Psychiatry, 131, 261268.
(1994) Electroconvulsive Therapy (ECT). The Official Video Teaching Pack of the Royal College of Psyhiatrists' Special Committee on ECT. London: Royal College of Psychiatrists.
(1995) The ECT Handbook (Second Report of the Royal ollege of Psychiatrists' Special Committee on ECT). Council Report CR39. London: Royal College of Psychiatrists.
(1999) Guidelines for Health Care Commissioners for an ECT Service. Royal College of Psychiatrists Special Committee on ECT. Council Report CR73. London: Royal College of Psychiatrists.
Sackeim, H. A. Prudic, J. Devanand, D. P., et al (1993) Effects of stimulus intensity and electrode placement on the efficacy and cognitive effects of electroconvulsive therapy. New England Journal of Medicine, 328, 839846.
, , , et al (2000) A prospective, randomized, double-blind comparison of bilateral and right unilateral electroconvulsive therapy at different stimulus intensities. Archives of General Psychiatry, 57, 425434.
Shaikh, G., Ireland, R., McBreen, M., et al (1999) Audit of a recently introduced stimulus dosing policy in an electroconvulsive therapy clinic. Psychiatric Bulletin, 23, 541543.
Trezise, K. (1998) Changes in practice of ECT: a follow-on study. Psychiatric Bulletin, 22, 687690.
& Conlon, B. (1997) Effects of changes in practice of electroconvulsive therapy over a 2 year period. Psychiatric Bulletin, 21, 1012.
Weiner, R. (1990) The Practice of ECT: Recommendations for Treatment, Training and Privileging. Washington, DC: American Psychiatric Association.
Yousaf, F., Lee, M. & King, J. (1999) A re-audit of ECT training and practice. Psychiatric Bulletin, 23, 419421.
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