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Frontal Cerebral Perfusion After
Antidepressant Drug Treatment Versus ECT in Elderly Patients With Major
Depression: A 12-Month Follow-Up Control Study
Víctor Navarro,
M.D., Ph.D.
Cristóbal Gastó, M.D., Ph.D.
Francisco Lomeña, M.D., Ph.D.
José J. Mateos, M.D.
María J. Portella, Psy.D.
Guillem Massana, M.D., Ph.D.
Miguel Bernardo, M.D., Ph.D.
Teodoro Marcos, Psy.D., Ph.D.
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Background: Little is
known about the evolution of brain perfusion alterations in patients
with major depression, and still less about the changes in functional
neuroimage produced by different antidepressant biological treatments.
Method: Between January
2001 and December 2003, long-term follow-up frontal brain perfusion was
compared in 2 subgroups of elderly patients (>= 60 years) treated for
severe unipolar major depression (DSM-IV): one subgroup of 16 patients
administered electroconvulsive therapy, and another of 26 patients
receiving pharmacologic treatment. All patients were remitters. A
medication-free brain single photon emission computed tomography was
performed in baseline conditions and after a minimum period of 12 months
of euthymia. Twenty-eight age- and sex-matched healthy controls were
also assessed.
Results: No significant
differences were found between the 2 subgroups in frontal uptake ratios
after a 12-month follow-up period of euthymia. During the acute episode,
patients presented significant anterior hypofrontality; 12 months later
the hypofrontality had disappeared.
Conclusion: The long-term
evolution of frontal perfusion in elderly major depressives who respond
to antidepressant biological treatment is essentially the same in those
who receive electroconvulsive therapy and in those who receive
medication.
(J Clin Psychiatry
2004;65:656-661)
This entire article is available in PDF format |
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Received May 24, 2003; accepted
Sept. 15, 2003. From the Clinical Institute of Psychiatry and Psychology
and Department of Nuclear Medicine, Hospital Clinic, University of
Barcelona, and Institut d´Investigacions Biomèdiques August Pi i Sunyer (IDIBAPS),
Barcelona, Spain.
The authors report no financial or
other support of this work.
Corresponding author and reprints:
Víctor Navarro, M.D., Ph.D., Psychiatry Department, Hospital Clinic,
Villarroel 170, 08036 Barcelona, Spain (e-mail: 30739vno@comb.es). |
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