Cs. Peretti et al., BILATERAL ECT AND AUTOBIOGRAPHICAL MEMORY OF SUBJECTIVE EXPERIENCES RELATED TO MELANCHOLIA - A PILOT-STUDY, Journal of affective disorders, 41(1), 1996, pp. 9-15
The aim of this pilot study was to systematically assess the influence
of bilateral, sine wave ECT on autobiographical memory of past subjec
tive experiences related to melancholia. Twenty-one inpatients who met
DSM-III-R criteria for a Major Depressive Episode, Melancholic Type,
were included in the study. Twelve patients were treated by ECT (12 tr
eatments), antidepressants and benzodiazepines; the comparison group c
omprised 9 patients treated by antidepressants and benzodiazepines. Th
e Structured Interview Guide for the HDRS (SIGH-D) was used at admissi
on and after the ECT treatment to standardize data collection about su
bjective experiences related to the depressive episode. Memory of subj
ective experiences related to melancholia was assessed with free-recal
l, cued-recall and recognition tasks. In addition, a free recall of ev
ents of the day on which the patients came to the hospital for their t
reatment was administered. These tasks were administered 1 week after
the last treatment in the ECT-treated group and 4 to 6 weeks after the
beginning of the treatment in the comparison group. Free-recall, cued
-recall and recognition performances were significantly lower in the E
CT-treated group than in the comparison group. No significant correlat
ion was found between memory of events related to hospital admission a
nd memory of subjective experiences related to depression. In conclusi
on bilateral, sine wave ECT impairs autobiographical memory of subject
ive experiences related to melancholia in subjects tested 1 week after
completion of a course of ECT.