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Current progress in neuroimaging research for the treatment of major depression with electroconvulsive therapy

Xinke Li, Haitang Qiu

2022World Journal of Psychiatry19 citationsDOIOpen Access PDF

Abstract

Electroconvulsive therapy (ECT) uses a certain amount of electric current to pass through the head of the patient, causing convulsions throughout the body, to relieve the symptoms of the disease and achieve the purpose of treatment. ECT can effectively improve the clinical symptoms of patients with major depression, but its therapeutic mechanism is still unclear. With the rapid development of neuroimaging technology, it is necessary to explore the neurobiological mechanism of major depression from the aspects of brain structure, brain function and brain metabolism, and to find that ECT can improve the brain function, metabolism and even brain structure of patients to a certain extent. Currently, an increasing number of neuroimaging studies adopt various neuroimaging techniques including functional magnetic resonance imaging (MRI), positron emission tomography, magnetic resonance spectroscopy, structural MRI, and diffusion tensor imaging to reveal the neural effects of ECT. This article reviews the recent progress in neuroimaging research on ECT for major depression. The results suggest that the neurobiological mechanism of ECT may be to modulate the functional activity and connectivity or neural structural plasticity in specific brain regions to the normal level, to achieve the therapeutic effect.

Topics & Concepts

NeuroimagingElectroconvulsive therapyMechanism (biology)Functional magnetic resonance imagingNeuroscienceDiffusion MRIMagnetic resonance imagingBrain Structure and FunctionMedicinePositron emission tomographyFunctional neuroimagingDepression (economics)NeuroplasticityPsychologyCognitionRadiologyMacroeconomicsEpistemologyPhilosophyEconomicsElectroconvulsive Therapy StudiesTranscranial Magnetic Stimulation StudiesFunctional Brain Connectivity Studies
Current progress in neuroimaging research for the treatment of major depression with electroconvulsive therapy | Litcius