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Trying 'Deep Brain Stimulation' To Zap Psychiatric Disease

LAURAN NEERGAARD   02/21/11 01:47 PM ET   AP

Brain Pacemakers

WASHINGTON — Call them brain pacemakers, tiny implants that hold promise for fighting tough psychiatric diseases – if scientists can figure out just where in all that gray matter to put them.

Deep brain stimulation, or DBS, has proved a powerful way to block the tremors of Parkinson's disease. Blocking mental illness isn't nearly as easy a task.

But a push is on to expand research into how well these brain stimulators tackle the most severe cases of depression, obsessive-compulsive disorder and Tourette's syndrome – to know best how to use them before too many doctors and patients clamor to try.

"It's not a light switch," cautions Dr. Michael Okun of the University of Florida.

Unlike with tremor patients, the psychiatric patients who respond to DBS tend to improve gradually, sometimes to their frustration.

And just because the tics of Tourette's fade or depression lightens doesn't mean patients can abandon traditional therapy. They also need help learning to function much as recipients of hip replacements undergo physical therapy, says Dr. Helen Mayberg of Emory University.

"Once your brain is returned to you, now you have to learn to use it," she told the annual meeting of the American Association for the Advancement of Science.

Roughly 70,000 people around the world have undergone deep brain stimulation for Parkinson's or other movement disorders when standard medications fail, says Okun, among leading researchers who gathered at that meeting last week to assess the field.

How does it work? Surgeons implant a wire deep in the brain. Tiny electrical jolts – running from a pacemaker-like generator near the collarbone up the neck to that electrode – disable overactive nerve cells to curb the shaking.

Scientists figured out which spot to target based on surgery that sometimes helps worst-case Parkinson's patients by destroying patches of brain tissue. But with deep brain stimulation, the electrodes don't destroy that tissue. The electrical signals can be adjusted or even turned off if they don't help, or if they cause neurological side effects. (The surgery, however, does sometimes cause dangerous brain bleeding or infections.)

Psychiatric illnesses require a similar operation – but surgeons must implant the electrode into a different spot in the brain.

There's the rub: It's not clear which spot is best for which psychiatric disease. In fact, two manufacturers – Medtronic and St. Jude Medical – have begun major studies of DBS' effects on depression. Each places the implant in a different region, based on promising pilot studies.

And the Food and Drug Administration in 2009 approved Medtronic's version for a small group of obsessive-compulsive patients who get no relief from today's treatments, under a special program that lets devices for rare conditions sell before there's final proof that they work. Dr. Joseph Fins, medical ethics chief at New York Presbyterian Hospital, worries that may hurt efforts to get such proof. The more available the electrodes are, the more people may seek to try the $30,000 surgeries without enrolling in strict trials.

How good is the evidence so far? The researchers are pushing for a registry to track DBS recipients to better tell, but overall they're cautiously optimistic.

Just over 60 people with intractable obsessive-compulsive disorder have undergone DBS since 2000, says Dr. Benjamin Greenberg, a Brown University psychiatrist who is heading a major study funded by the National Institute of Mental Health. About three-fourths of the first few dozen patients studied significantly improved, some as long as eight years.

"You still have a burden, but you have a life," is how he describes the improvement.

These are people who try to relieve fears or anxiety with obsessive behavior, such as washing their hands or checking locks repeatedly – many of whom never got out of the house because their daily rituals consumed so much time, Greenberg says.They'd failed behavior therapy designed to teach that whatever they fear doesn't happen if they skip the ritual.

But with the brain pacemaker, somehow that behavior therapy starts working, Greenberg says – maybe by enabling their brains to better remember the lessons.

One big hurdle: The battery, tucked near the collarbone, tends to last less than two years. Changing it entails outpatient surgery, one reason that about a third of studied patients stop getting zapped. So Greenberg just began testing a newer version that patients can recharge every few days.

Results on about 100 DBS patients with severe depression have been published so far, and roughly half improve regardless of which of the two targeted brain regions is zapped, says Emory's Mayberg, who shares a patent licensed to St. Jude.

Separately, she's now studying what the successfully treated brains have in common that might help predict the best candidates, hoping to ease "a tremendous burden on the patients" as they decide whether to try these experiments.

___

EDITOR's NOTE – Lauran Neergaard covers health and medical issues for The Associated Press in Washington.

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WASHINGTON — Call them brain pacemakers, tiny implants that hold promise for fighting tough psychiatric diseases – if scientists can figure out just where in all that gray matter to put th...
WASHINGTON — Call them brain pacemakers, tiny implants that hold promise for fighting tough psychiatric diseases – if scientists can figure out just where in all that gray matter to put th...
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
senorlou
Why would anyone vote GOP?
12:03 AM on 03/16/2011
First of all, if you haven't experienced major Depression personally, then what do you know?  You may have read about it, studied it, looked at people suffering from it, whatever - but you don't know Depression.  It is a disease, a brain disorder.  Your head is flooded with cortisol.  You're pumped night and day full of fear - as if something much, much worse than Death is going to happen, and you're involved - if not at fault.  You say and do crazy things.  Sometimes you just shut down.  Getting the picture?
If this little zap device would help a person in a Major Depression - I am 100% for it.  You would eat a live octopus during a Depression if it would make you even possibly feel better for an instant.  The pain involved is incredible.  Depressives: listen to me - you are brave people who are suffering - for whatever reason - from a terrible illness.  Don't be afraid of technology, medication, meditation, talk therapy, and get all the love and care you can.  I can't stand it when people act like Depression is some kind of lifestyle choice, or some logical reaction to something in your life, work, whatever.  No, it is not that at all.  
As I said, I'll be the first one in line for the zapper, if it really does work.
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Chlowina
We're skrwd
11:47 PM on 03/24/2011
Have treatment resistant depression. Save a place for me.
02:47 AM on 03/15/2011
In Deep Brain Stimulation, the electrical impulses are controlled from the outside and patterned to each individual patient. The device regulates brain activity (altering the firing of the brain's neurotransmitters) 24 hours a day.
http://www.thebrainhealth.com/depression-seeks-help-with-deep-brain-stimulation.html
09:58 PM on 02/22/2011
Good post. Depression is certainly a growing problem, as one can see by watching current headlines. But not all cases require medicines, or even electrical treatments. My patients are enjoying the following perspective at this blog: http://stressworksinc.com/Blog/post/Depression-and-stress-More-than-meets-the-eye.aspx
HUFFPOST SUPER USER
demilieu
Texas liberal...with reservations
05:50 PM on 02/22/2011
It's not covered by insurace yet for depression. When you're depressed it's depressing you can't afford a treatment that may help your suffering. Another treatment, cited as a possible replacement for ECT, is deep brain magnetic stuimulation. It is recognized as a valuable therapy and covered in Canada. The FDA has so far approved at least one company's magnetic stimulation device aimed at treating clinical depression.
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
ninetailedfox
banning people.....so childish
01:01 PM on 02/22/2011
Also the brain is not an organ id want to do weird experiments to. Some drugs and experiments are anything but beneficial.
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
ninetailedfox
banning people.....so childish
01:00 PM on 02/22/2011
Depression is caused by many factors, including but not limited to: environment, family life, marriage life, job issues and of course, religion. I know a lot of people that are depressed because of some if not all of these factors.
HUFFPOST SUPER USER
demilieu
Texas liberal...with reservations
05:53 PM on 02/22/2011
Well, having a messed up life may make one prone to clinical depression. However, a lot of rich, famous and generally successful people suffer from depression that can't be tied to having a crappy life.
HUFFPOST SUPER USER
senorlou
Why would anyone vote GOP?
12:16 AM on 03/16/2011
You nailed it.  Olympic athletes, football stars, rock stars, you name it - we're everywhere.  No rhyme or reason, far as I see.  You just get it.
12:32 PM on 03/21/2011
It means their nerve cells don't have enough salt between them to transfer the energy messages. Put seratonin, norepinephrine or salts between them, and the messages can fly along normally. Its a chemistry problem, doesn't have anything to do with lifestyle or failures. They used to do lots of therapy trying to help the depressed, and found that it really didn't do a lot of good until they added chemicals. Now they do therapy but only to help with lifestyle problems, once a person is on the right chemicals. It would be wonderful if they found the complete and perfect chemicals for each person with a mental illness, but that is for the future. And I bet it won't be long.
HUFFPOST SUPER USER
senorlou
Why would anyone vote GOP?
12:06 AM on 03/16/2011
There's a difference - a HUGE difference between living the consequences of your screw ups, and Major Depression.  Now, those things could trigger Major Depression, but it had to be lurking around for that person to finally crack up.  That's what Depression is, you realize.  It's a crack up, an illness.  If you're suffering from major Depression, you're sicker than a dog.  Bats in the belfry.  You're whacked out of your mind.
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
teresa1960
07:52 AM on 02/22/2011
It really peeves me when the "industry" calls psychiatric disorders "diseases" when in reality they are rather "symptoms" of a root cause. If the "industry" focused on treating the "causes" health care
cost would be reduced significantly. Of course if they did such a thing, big pharma would suffer massive profit losses.
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
Valerio della Porta
Entrepreneur and Web Developer
08:33 AM on 02/22/2011
Exactly: why would you treat the root causes and cure the patient when you can treat him for a lifetime?

As long as we have for-profit health care this is what we will be getting.
HUFFPOST SUPER USER
demilieu
Texas liberal...with reservations
06:08 PM on 02/22/2011
I don't know of any doctors who are happy for people to remain ill.
HUFFPOST SUPER USER
senorlou
Why would anyone vote GOP?
12:07 AM on 03/16/2011
Have you ever truly suffered from mental illness, like Depression?  If not, you really have no clue what you're posting about, do you?  Lucky you.
05:51 AM on 02/22/2011
This seems very interesting, but in my opinion is still very early to say anything about this. From the past we saw many things like this
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
truly moderate
Reform Party, a third way
05:12 AM on 02/22/2011
I just think this is to experimental....atleast in its current form. Perhaps in terminal cases it could be used, but its just such a grey area.

Like it or not, drugs are still the best way to treat conditions, along with bechavior modification therapy (example SSRIs combined with daily walks during sunlight hours/ Healthy sleep habbits and stretching plus proper pain medication plus anti inflamatories for injuries)
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
ninetailedfox
banning people.....so childish
01:02 PM on 02/22/2011
grey area, nice pun considering the brain is grey.
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
ninetailedfox
banning people.....so childish
01:03 PM on 02/22/2011
Some people try meditation for depression, it does work. Well it did for me anyways.
HUFFPOST SUPER USER
demilieu
Texas liberal...with reservations
06:06 PM on 02/22/2011
One post-mortem study of people who perished by their own hand found only about 15% had antidepressant medication present in their body. So, 85% of those who made that fateful decision were not receiving standard medication for their disease.
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
truly moderate
Reform Party, a third way
11:32 PM on 02/22/2011
And I would agree that meditation can be beneficial and I'd definately put it under behavioral modification treatment. Ofcourse, this would also include praying to God (or whatever higher power you follow) or "walking with God" which kind of combines prayer and getting out for some fresh air.

I do think medication is vital as well though. IMO, God helps those that also help themselves. We have modern medicine for a reason, so we should take a multi layered approach :)
04:03 AM on 02/22/2011
here what some other scientists ? are working on [section 1 to 5 and beyond ] http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=faKchv2nCyQ&feature=related

i very much hope that Living section aficionados can create more positivity in collective consciousness; some scientists are as dangerous as the military
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HUFFPOST COMMUNITY MODERATOR
ConfuciusSay-
Aglets: their purpose is sinister.
12:45 AM on 02/22/2011
A less invasive method of deep brain stimulation is TransCranial Magnetic Stimulation- more likely to become accepted.
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
ibivi
art deco style
12:27 AM on 02/22/2011
If anyone has lost a loved one to suicide because they had intractable depression, DBC would certainly have given them hope of saving those lives. Please keep refining this treatment-there are many people out there who would benefit.
10:19 PM on 02/21/2011
Dr. Frankinstein, I presume...
08:36 PM on 02/21/2011
How can the -Huffington Post- agree to print this article that describes -Deep Brain Stimulation- as a possitve form of help for mental health clients? This is a form of human rights violations called medical experimentation on vulnerable clients and their caregivers and this type of experimentation causses pain and suffering and false hope and then suicide? Try asking any clients that has had this kind of experimentation or they don't matter as long as we supposedly can experiment on vulnerable human beings that are -Brain Washed- into believing they are being helped?
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robin360
Obama: Not perfect, but pretty good.
04:40 PM on 02/22/2011
Your reply, though I assume well intended, is full of hysteria and false information. I had the honor of meeting Kitty and Micheal Dukakis last week. I reccomend her book "Shocked", which is both a personal memoir and medical descriptive on the benefits and history of electroshock therapy. She is by no means being "experimented" on nor is she a spokeswoman for big PHARMA. She's a woman with a 17-year history of unrelenting depression whose life was changed for the better. She is not brainwashed, but I am a little worried about you.
09:26 PM on 02/22/2011
Maybe I should have explained that I worked for years at a top mental health rehabilitation facilty (FH) in northern new jersey and also interacted with another dozen mental health facilities in new jersey? Two things gave me tremendous insight in the everyday lives of clients and their families, one is called -Real Empathy- and a -Real Observer- of clients who trusted me and gave me their honest opinons on everyday details of living with mental illness? So for every person that claims success in fighting -Depression- with electoshock therapy I will show you another ninety nine that had a horrible experience with this type of torture? If you still don't believe me then look up the history of the mental health industry for the last hundred years and you will see the same medical procedures used today that are considered human rights violations?
HUFFPOST SUPER USER
demilieu
Texas liberal...with reservations
05:57 PM on 02/22/2011
I would 'happily' try this long, long before submitting my brain to a course of ECT.
12:35 PM on 03/21/2011
My daughter had unremitting depression. Couldn't get out of bed, difficulties with living her life, medications changed a lot, trying to find something right. She got ECT, they gave her medicine to help her sleep, then did ECT. She did it once a week for several weeks. Had a few memory problems, but that was all. She was able to begin swimming three times a week, going to the library, signed up for a class at college. She's not 100% but she's doing much better. and the effects have lasted now for almost 3 years.
07:35 PM on 02/21/2011
Can it also zap away recessions?