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    Along with meds, brain stimulation may aid depression

    NEW YORK (Reuters Health) - Treating people with depression using weak electrical currents passed into the brain through a headband may help relieve some of their symptoms when combined with an antidepressant, a new study suggests.

    Researchers found that after six weeks of treatment with a combination of brain stimulation and sertraline, marketed as Zoloft, nearly two-thirds of depressed participants got significantly better.

    But by itself, brain stimulation was no better than medication.

    "In the field of depression, it's important to know about treatment options, and medications alone don't work for everyone," said Dr. Sarah Lisanby, a psychiatrist who studies brain stimulation at Duke University in Durham, North Carolina.

    "Now there's a broadened array of new, device-based therapies that allow us to affect brain function in less invasive ways," including transcranial direct current stimulation, or tDCS, added Lisanby, who wasn't part of the new research team.

    No tDCS devices, including the one used in the new study, are currently approved by the U.S. Food and Drug Administration for use on the brain. But older types of non-invasive brain stimulation are approved and becoming established treatment options for depression, researchers noted (see Reuters Health article of May 3, 2010 here: http://reut.rs/kX7X6D).

    For the study, Dr. Felipe Fregni from the Harvard Medical School in Boston and Brazilian colleagues randomly assigned 120 people in Brazil with moderate or severe depression to one of four treatments: tDCS and sertraline, tDCS and a placebo drug, sham stimulation and sertraline or sham stimulation and a placebo.

    Electrical current therapy was given for 30 minutes at a time over 12 total sessions.

    At the beginning of the study, participants in each of the four groups had an average depression score between 30 and 31 on a 0-to-60 scale, where a higher score indicates worse depression.

    After six weeks, people in the combined stimulation and sertraline group saw their depression drop to a score of 13, on average, compared to 25 among people who received both fake treatments.

    Data on side effects suggested tDCS had no effect on cognition, researchers said. Skin redness was more common with the real device than the sham stimulator.

    And there were five episodes of mania among people who got the combined treatment, even though the researchers had screened out anyone with bipolar disorder - which typically includes periods of depression alternating with mania.

    The drug alone and electrical stimulation alone were similarly effective at easing depression symptoms, Fregni's team noted Wednesday in JAMA Psychiatry.

    However, the dose of sertraline used - 50 milligrams per day - might have been too low to help most people, Lisanby and another psychiatrist, Dr. Philip Janicak, told Reuters Health.

    Janicak, from Rush University Medical Center in Chicago and not involved in the study, said "the question is still out" as to whether this type of stimulation can help people with depression.

    "tDCS could very well be an effective treatment," he said. But, "at this point I would never recommend it, based on the evidence that's currently available."

    The new study was funded by the Sao Paulo Research Foundation.

    Because the tDCS device, marketed as Chattanooga Ionto, has not been approved as a depression treatment, it's hard to say how much it would cost in the U.S., Lisanby noted. She said it should be "relatively cheap and affordable," given that it's small, portable and powered with 9-volt batteries.

    SOURCE: http://bit.ly/P0ZWgD JAMA Psychiatry, online February 6, 2013.

    24 comments

    • B Dog  •  11 days ago
      EEG Biofeedback or Neurofeedback has been around for years, and can assist depressed patients without drugs. The problem is that the drug companies don't want anything that could reduce their business, even if it's better for them, so they use their double blind studies to sue the biofeedback companies into remission.
    • susannah  •  11 days ago
      The people in the study probably just said they were feeling better so the doctors would stop shocking their brains!
    • steamrollinprogression  •  10 days ago
      suckers line up,this one is for you.
    • slv  •  11 days ago
      Depression is about the most over used diagnosis besides back problems You hear about. I read articles all the time about people treating it the good old fashioned way -- balance of healthy diet, physical activity and spirituality. How about skipping the meds, facing problems and working to resolve them and eat healthy and get out there and move. I know when my serotonin gets low I find a good walk in the sun and eating well does wonders versus swilling sugar and sitting on my butt. Now there are legitimate uses for meds but sometimes the meds are worse than going without.
      • steamrollinprogression 10 days ago
        compassion is'nt everlasting.no one likes someone who is comfortable playing victim.
    • Jules  •  11 days ago
      Well, it started with ECT...that wasn't mild. But, it actually showed progress with depression. So, this news makes sense.
    • Adam Karrsen  •  11 days ago
      Some 110 and a xanax at home will do the same.
    • Doghouse Riley  •  10 days ago
      Just let me have a cyanide tablet so I can get it over with. Everyone HAS the RIGHT to check out of this hellish, vile, horrid, disgusting, dirty, filthy world. Schopenhauer was correct: "The World is Hell." "We would be better off having never existed at all." The metaphysical conditions of being-in-the-world are conditions of perpetual, inescapable absurdity, purposelessness, and agony. Suicide, despite its negative reception, is a very viable option. Camus and Schopenhauer were both wrong.
    • Sunny  •  10 days ago
      If you feel hungry, unsafe, or uncomfortable, no one thinks it is the feeling that should change; we think we should get food, find somewhere safe, and get warm and dry. Sometimes mild depression seems like a normal response. If you are lonely, or have been hit with health insurance premium increases and taxes going back up, is it supposed to feel good, or make you want to change something? Call a friend, cut back on spending until you can pay your bills, then you aren't depressed.
    • Blake  •  11 days ago
      A week with a supermodel also was said to relieve depression in most male patients.
    • Darius  •  11 days ago
      Aid: to promote the progress or accomplishment of; facilitate.

      Do we really want to help depression progress? O_o
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