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Inner-brain electrode may curb depression.


Deep-brain stimulation, an electrical treatment increasingly common for degenerative nerve disorders such as Parkinson's disease, has now shown promise in treating severe depression.

People suffering from depression have a wide range of treatment options, including psychotherapy, drugs, and--in extreme cases--electro-convulsive therapy. According to the American Psychiatric Association The American Psychiatric Association (APA) is the main professional organization of psychiatrists and trainee psychiatrists in the United States, and the most influential world-wide. Its some 148,000 members are mainly American but some are international. , however, about 20 percent of patients don't respond to any of the standard treatments.

Previous studies by Helen S. Mayberg Helen S. Mayberg was born in 1956 in California. She is an American neurologist. Dr. Mayberg is known in particular for her work delineating abnormal brain function in patients with clinical depression using functional neuroimaging.  at Emory University in Atlanta and her colleagues suggested that a brain region known as the subgenual cingulate cingulate /cin·gu·late/ (sing´gu-lat) pertaining to a cingulum.

cin·gu·late
adj.
Of or relating to a cingulum.
 is overactive o·ver·ac·tive  
adj.
Active to an excessive or abnormal degree: an overactive child.



o
 in people with treatment-resistant depression.

To determine whether reducing activity in this area could have a positive effect on depression, Mayberg's team implanted a thin wire into the subgenual cingulate of six depressed people. The wire delivers steady electrical stimulation that jams brain signals that would normally emerge from this region, says Mayberg.

Six months after the operation, four of the patients reported lasting relief from their depression, Mayberg's team reports in the March 3 Neuron.

Although she stresses that this work is still preliminary, Mayberg notes that deep brain stimulation In neurotechnology, deep brain stimulation (DBS) is a surgical treatment involving the implantation of a medical device called a brain pacemaker, which sends electrical impulses to specific parts of the brain.  may eventually treat some types of depression.--C.B.
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Title Annotation:Biomedicine
Publication:Science News
Article Type:Brief Article
Geographic Code:1USA
Date:Mar 12, 2005
Words:187
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