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Positive jolt: electroshock therapy may have side benefit.


People with depression have high concentrations of norepinephrine norepinephrine (nôr'ĕpīnĕf`rən), a neurotransmitter in the catecholamine family that mediates chemical communication in the sympathetic nervous system, a branch of the autonomic nervous system. , a nervous system hormone that signals blood vessels Blood vessels

Tubular channels for blood transport, of which there are three principal types: arteries, capillaries, and veins. Only the larger arteries and veins in the body bear distinct names.
 to constrict con·strict
v.
To make smaller or narrower, especially by binding or squeezing.
 and ratchets up blood pressure, researchers report. Treating these individuals with electroshock therapy electroshock therapy
n. Abbr. EST
See electroconvulsive therapy.
 lowers their norepinephrine concentrations-and their heart rate and blood pressure too, scientists find.

A fast pulse, vessel constriction constriction /con·stric·tion/ (kon-strik´shun)
1. a narrowing or compression of a part; a stricture.constric´tive

2. a diminution in range of thinking or feeling, associated with diminished spontaneity.
, and high blood pressure are valuable tools in a person's fight-or-flight response. But if high norepinephrine concentrations chronically Keep a person in that state, it puts a strain on the heart, says Mitchel A. Kling, a psychiatrist at the National Institute of Mental Health The National Institute of Mental Health (NIMH) is part of the federal government of the United States and the largest research organization in the world specializing in mental illness.  in Bethesda, Md. Excess norepinephrine, he says, could partly explain the long-standing connection between depression and heart failure, which is a weakening of the heart. Depression doubles the risk of death in people with heart failure, as do high norepinephrine concentrations.

"Depression is not good for your heart, basically," says Kling.

He and his colleagues conducted standard clinical tests on 22 people with the most severe form of depression and 23 people free of depression. The groups were similar in age. Volunteers with depression had a higher average pulse rate and higher blood pressure than did people in the comparison group. Blood and spinal-fluid samples revealed higher concentrations of three stress hormones--norepinephrine, cortisol cortisol (kôr`tĭsôl') or hydrocortisone, steroid hormone that in humans is the major circulating hormone of the cortex, or outer layer, of the adrenal gland. , and epinephrine-in study participants with depression than in the others. The stress-hormone differences showed up even during sleep.

Next in the study, eight of the depressed patients volunteered to receive a series of electroshock electroshock /elec·tro·shock/ (-shok) shock produced by applying electric current to the brain.

e·lec·tro·shock
n.
See electroconvulsive therapy.

v.
 treatments, which are also called electroconvulsive therapy. Among psychiatrists, electroshock treatment remains controversial. Many depressed people show gains from it, but some complain of memory loss and other side effects. Its benefit sometimes lasts only a few days and other times endures for months or years, Kling says.

The eight patients in Kling's study averaged nine electroshock treatments apiece over roughly 3 weeks. Four weeks after the last treatment, the patients again provided blood and spinal-fluid samples. These showed a clear drop in the concentration of norepinephrine, but not cortisol or epinephrine, the researchers report in an upcoming Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences The Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America, usually referred to as PNAS, is the official journal of the United States National Academy of Sciences. .

"To my knowledge, no one has ever looked at the effect of electroconvulsive therapy on the levels of norepinephrine," says cardiologist Inder S. Anand of the Veterans Affairs Medical Center and University of Minnesota (body, education) University of Minnesota - The home of Gopher.

http://umn.edu/.

Address: Minneapolis, Minnesota, USA.
 in Minneapolis. Combined with other work, this research is "pretty convincing" that stress chemicals such as norepinephrine are being over-produced in the depressed brain, he says.

Even more interesting, he says, is that electroshock can change conditions in the brain to the point of reversing norepinephrine's oversupply.

Made by nerve cells, norepinephrine carries signals between the cells. Electroshock therapy might "reset" overzealous nerve cells in the brain and reduce their norepinephrine production, Kling hypothesizes. But the therapy's long-term benefits in this regard are unknown, he says.

Suppressing norepinephrine might nevertheless offer benefits for patients with heart failure, Kling says. Some of the many antidepression drugs on the market may reduce norepinephrine concentrations too, he says, "but there is surprisingly little data on that."
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Title Annotation:This Week
Author:Seppa, Nathan
Publication:Science News
Geographic Code:1U5MD
Date:May 28, 2005
Words:502
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