Researchers Use Electroconvulsive Therapy To Disrupt Recall of Nasty Events 96
ananyo writes "In the film Eternal Sunshine of the Spotless Mind, unhappy lovers undergo an experimental brain treatment to erase all memories of each other from their minds. No such fix exists for real-life couples, but researchers report in Nature Neuroscience that a targeted medical intervention helps to reduce specific negative memories in patients who are depressed. The technique, called electroconvulsive (ECT) or electroshock therapy, induces seizures by passing current into the brain through electrode pads placed on the scalp. Despite its sometimes negative reputation, ECT is an effective last-resort treatment for severe depression, and is used today in combination with anaesthesia and muscle relaxants. Marijn Kroes, a neuroscientist at Radboud University Nijmegen in the Netherlands, and his colleagues found that by strategically timing ECT bursts, they could target and disrupt patients' memory of a disturbing episode."
Erase all button (Score:4, Informative)
Re:Erase all button (Score:4, Funny)
The problem is that this therapy tends to erase all memories. It is a very blunt instrument, just slightly better than a lobotomy.
I don't recall having any problems with ... Oh wait!
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Hopefully that will hit human trials before blunter tools like this get into use.
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Something to do with how memory is recalled and then re-remembered
You're probably thinking of the propranolol [nature.com] trial. There has also been promising results with MDMA [mdmaptsd.org], also thought to be blocking the re-encoding of bad memories.
aside: submitters - this is Slashdot - you don't have to relate every bit of science to some tangentially related Hollywood movie plot.
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The alternative would be Insulin Coma Therapy, at least for some disorders. Not practiced in the West any more.
Sources: Insulin Coma Therapy [pbs.org]
The famous mathematician John Nash [pbs.org] (depicted in A Beautiful Mind*) was treated with it.
If you suffer from Nash's malady, don't read my current sig.
* Book [amazon.com], movie [imdb.com], trailer [youtube.com], documentary [youtube.com], DVD [amazon.com].
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The problem is that this therapy tends to erase all memories. It is a very blunt instrument, just slightly better than a lobotomy.
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Strat
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> It is a very blunt instrument, just slightly better than a lobotomy.
True.
You could also argue that it is similar to using a heavy rubber hammer to stir up all the grey matter.
Nobody knows what actually happens when flashing someones scalp with thousands of volts.
Changes to the brain tissue will occur at some level. IQ and memory drops significantly (over 10% to 20%), but the actual brain damage is not visible.
The fact that ECT is being used today is sickening. However it is difficult to control this ki
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Then what should be used instead to treat, say, depression? Because listing the side effects is meaningless without anything to compare them to.
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>Then what should be used instead to treat, say, depression?
Perhaps there is no cure for real depression.
To some, being depressed is like being unhappy or having a downer. For a few, it is a serious physical condition that is very hard to change.
Maybe it would be a good idea to understand what depression is as a condition, before trying to find a cure.
But eating the right food and doing regular exercising is usually better than what your doctor will subscribe for you.
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Any so called medical perfessional who wants to use this needs to have it used on them first before any procedure.
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Personally, I've seen someone actually improving after serious depression.
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It doesn't always work either. I totally remember when I accidentally grabbed that 220V mains line 20 years ago.
Nah. (Score:1)
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They just used the ECT to give you a lobotomy.....
I assume it can't be quite as bad, as the brain section, though erased, is still there and can learn again.
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Which worked so well after WWII. [wsj.com] But don't worry. This time we know what we're doing. Really. Trust us. At least we're not using drugs [maps.org]. Drugs are bad mkay?
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ECT is old school, been around for a very long time.
The first documented "medical research" applications of ECT used 60Hz 120V applied to the temples... in later years they refined the technique to include sedation of the patient so they didn't break their own limb bones with involuntary muscle contractions.
Eternal Sunshine of the Men in Black (Score:2)
Seems like a mixed blessing (Score:3, Interesting)
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However, I wonder if this will eventually get more widespread and become used for trivial things, like removing memories of a bad breakup or other parts of life which might be painful, but tolerable.
So . . . you nicht die NSA und Obamacare liken? Ve haf vays . . . af maken you forgetten!
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Are you familiar with ECT? Because I can't really see it being used voluntarily outside of some pretty extreme cases. It isn't exactly like the doctor pushes a button and you just forget....we are talking about inuction of massive seizures from an external electrical source.
I think there is a very simple way of telling if an event is so traunmatic that it warrants this sort of treatment: If undergoing the therapy sounds preferable to continuing as you are; even after considering the chances that it doesn't
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I disagree, the saying time heals all wounds is particulalry apt to traumatic events, what seems impossible to recover from without such dastract treatment a week after the event, may beome manageable a few months out, and just a bad memory in a few years.
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I'm aware of what it involves. I'm also aware that we continually improve and refine these processes
We also refined our processes of execution... oh how much more humane. Look at how much more the victims of the death penalty are pleased with the final outcome?
Consider, for example, the various psychiatric medications available on the market that are increasingly prescribed for trivial reasons.
What, like Thorazine [stopshrinks.org], Haldol, and other chemical straitjackets; "Anti-psychotics" touted by psychiatrists d
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Well, to be fair, there haven't been many complaints.
That's normal! (Score:3)
"Researchers Use Electroconvulsive Therapy To Disrupt Recall of Nasty Events"
That therapy is so nasty, that all other nasty events in the past are dimmed in comparison.
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"Researchers Use Electroconvulsive Therapy To Disrupt Recall of Nasty Events"
That therapy is so nasty, that all other nasty events in the past are dimmed in comparison.
Don't worry - they can just zap you again!
A twofer (Score:2)
Marijn Kroes, a neuroscientist at Radboud University Nijmegen in the Netherlands, and his colleagues found that by strategically timing ECT bursts, they could target and disrupt patients' memory of a disturbing episode."
Death for 1 in 25,000 treatments? (Score:3)
Seems rather dangerous to me.
Re:Death for 1 in 25,000 treatments? (Score:4, Informative)
Death rate from tonsillectomy: 1/15,000
Death rate from colonoscopy: 1/17,000
Deaths from general anesthesia: estimate vary, but roughly 1/100,000
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But it does not take multiple treatments for either of those to to have a lasting beneficial effect, with 6-12 treatments typical and maintenance treatments required afterwards that is more like 1 in 3k to start and roll the rice over and over again.
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A similar study showed that ECT was 73.4% effective in removing memories regarding previous health insurance policies [obamacareisatotal.con].
I see tea parties coming up, instead of those botox parties. Having a fun afternoon and getting rid of all those nasty evolution theories in your head.
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Newspapers and magazines are dying. They cost too much these days.
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Get with the times and whack the people with a Kindle, will ya?
Comment removed (Score:5, Interesting)
They still offer ECT for depression (Score:3, Funny)
I had a severe clinical depression and was hospitalized for a while. I shared a room with a guy who was undergoing ECT and he was a complete zombie.
To the doctors complete surprise I declined the ECT offer. They didn't quite understand my point, that I was the mad scientist. Not them.
Why use a blunt instrument? (Score:3)
When there is a method that can be used in a much more targeted fashion?
http://www.sciencedaily.com/releases/2013/09/130910140941.htm [sciencedaily.com]
In the near future, it could be as simple as take a pill, interview an analyst about your most disturbing memories and be free of them. The trick is not to recall anything you don't want to forget before the pill wears off.
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And now please don't think about an elephant in a tutu...
Clockwork orange (Score:3)
Electric soma... (Score:1)
Rape and PTSD (Score:3)
So rape and PTSD are just learning experiences?
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There is a difference between remembering bad things to learn from them and turning them into something pathological.
To give you an example, a normal person would maybe walk across the road when the traffic light shows red and gets almost run over by a car. He will learn that it's not a smart thing to cross the road when the traffic light shows red.
The pathological "lesson" from it would be that it is dangerous to cross the road. These people do not learn from the experience in the normal sense. They do of
ECT saved a close relative's life ... (Score:3)
... nothing was working to turn her severe depression. Multiple suicide attempts. ECT literally saved her life.
Yes, it had sucky side effects. But she is alive. And a lot happier now.
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It's said that dumb people are happier. I hope that's not what you imply.
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Did you seriously just type that?
Of course not.
She's a lot more human than most people who replied to my post, that's for sure ...
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I'll take that as a real question ... man, the others who replied are a piece of work.
Yes, she is the same person. She's different in that a brain disorder is no longer telling her that she is horrifically miserable and should kill herself. That's a difference that is OK.
If I forgot all of the nasty stuff with the ex (Score:2)
If would forget the mistakes I made in choosing them as a partner, learn nothing from those mistakes, and end up with someone just as horrible as the last person.
God damn drums (Score:1)
That's Shocking! (Score:2)
pain/pleasure (Score:2)
The fundamental basis is pain vs pleasure.
Scientific American had an article a few years ago that therapy was bad for certain groups of people such as children in school shootings. It brought up and reinforced tragedies instead of allowing them to gradually decay in the memory banks. I can see this doing the same thing for people who can't stop remembering things. It's b
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The reason we don't teach people to meta-think is that it would make it harder to feed them political and economic messages. A good consumer buys what he's told, a good drone works where he's told and a good parishioner condemns what and who he's told. The less they think about what they're doing and why, the less
Erasing memories (Score:1)
Why would anyone want this when a proven method (large amount of alcohol)exists?
Not this again (Score:2)
Yeah, it probably erases a lot of good memories too. Every few years you see something like this where the supporters of ECT try to come up with new reasons to justify using it.
Memories of bad romances? Hell, that's a good thing. They keep me from making the same damn mistakes I've made in the past.
Nothing can erase goatse. (Score:1)
Nothing can erase goatse. I know, because I tried...
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