ArticlesReader.com Menu
Newest Articles
Most Viewed Articles
ArticlesReader.com RSS
Submit Article
Login
Signup
Search the articles

Articles Main Categories
Advice
Animals
Automobiles
Business
Career
Communications
Computer Programming
Computers
Entertainment
Environment
Family
Fashion
Finance
Food
Health & Medical
Home & Garden
Humor
Internet Business
Internet Marketing
Legal
Leisure & Recreation
Marketing
Other
Politics
Reference & Education
Religion
Self Improvement
Sports
Technology & Science
Travel
Writing
Subscribe
Receive alert message from us when new articles submitted to our site for free.

Enter your name

Enter your email

Syndicate

















Related Products
Home::Depression

New Treatment for Chronic Depression

Author : Charles Donovan

Vagus Nerve Stimulation for Chronic Treatment-Resistant Depression



About Vagus Nerve Stimulation



VNS is not brain surgery, although it is a treatment that affects the function of the brain. Vagus Nerve Stimulation uses specific stimulation of the vagus nerve to send stimulation to specific parts of the brain that are involved in mood. It is not like Electro-Convulsive Therapy (ECT), a treatment that involves stimulation of the entire brain and induces convulsions in patients. In fact, patients may not even feel the stimulation from VNS since the vagus nerve does not have the type of nerves that carry pain signals. Nor does VNS interfere with drugs, and patients having Vagus Nerve Stimulation can continue taking their other drugs without worrying about side effects or interactions between drugs.



On June 15th, the FDA's Neurological Advisory Panel recommended APPROVAL of the vagus nerve stimulator as a treatment for chronic depression.




What is the Vagus Nerve ?


Vagus means "wandering" in Latin, and is the perfect description for the vagus nerve, the longest nerve in the body. It averages almost two feet in length and "wanders" throughout the upper body. The vagus nerve starts in the brain, goes down the neck and into the body where if affects the vocal cords, the acid content of the stomach, the heart, the lungs, and other organs. In the brain it projects to areas believed to be responsible for seizures, mood, appetite, memory and anxiety (note 3). However, the vagus nerve cord does not have many pain nerves, so stimulation of the vagus nerve is not painful, although some patients may feel some sensation when electrical pulses are generated.



The History of Vagus Nerve Stimulation
Vagus Nerve Stimulation has been used to treat epilepsy patients for years; the first human clinical trial was in 1988,(note 1) and the FDA approved VNS therapy for epilepsy in 1997 (note 2). So far over 22,000 people worldwide have had VNS therapy (note 3), and it has proven to be a safe and effective treatment for epilepsy. These patients have reported minimal side effects, which have tended to decrease over time. The efficacy of the treatment has also been shown to increase with longer treatment time (note 1).


When Vagus Nerve Stimulation was first approved for epilepsy, some patients reported an improvement in mood. Researchers decided to design a study specifically to measure changes in a patient's mood and depression due to stimulation of the vagus nerve. In 1999, scientists began the first open label (no placebo group) study for depression with 60 patients. This first study found that there was indeed an improvement in mood for depressed patients. Based on this study, a more detailed and thorough study was designed to determine if Vagus Nerve Stimulation would be a safe, tolerable and effective treatment for chronic depression.


The recently completed one-year, double blind, placebo controlled trial had 235 patients from 21 participating hospitals in the United States, and showed clinically significant improvements due to treatment compared to baseline (note 2). The acute (short-term) phase lasted three months, during which half of the patients received stimulation (treatment group) and half did not (control group). The long-term phase of the study lasted an additional 9 months (for one year total treatment) of stimulation. The HRSD-24 (24 item clinician-rated Hamilton Rating Scale for Depression) improvements observed over the first year were highly significant. The results of this long-term, pivotal study were submitted to FDA in October 2003; the FDA's decision on the use of Vagus Nerve Stimulation for depression is not anticipated before October 2004 (note 2). Of note, Vagus Nerve Stimulation therapy was approved for use in patients with treatment resistant depression in the European Union in March 2001, and in Canada in April 2001 (note 2) .



How Does Vagus Nerve Stimulation Therapy work ?


The Pulse Generator (battery) delivers a small amount of electrical current to the vagus nerve intermittently (30 seconds on and five minutes off ) (note 3) 24 hours a day, 7 days a week for up to 10 years. The stimulation is delivered automatically, so the patient does not have to do anything. Because there is nothing to remember, compliance is assured. The stimulation is not supposed to be uncomfortable, and some patients do not even feel the stimulation. A nurse at the doctor's office can adjust the level of stimulation (amount of electricity delivered) if the patient ever feels uncomfortable. In the study currently being reviewed by the FDA, researchers noted several similarities between epileptic and depressed patients (note 4).


One of the most important similarities is that Vagus Nerve Stimulation treatment efficacy improves over time. The longer the patient receives stimulation, the better the results. In addition, both populations of patients share the following:



· Assured adherence to treatment regimen
· Safety of the procedure
· Safety of the therapy
· High continuation rates
· No drug interactions




What is the surgery like?


Vagus Nerve Stimulation is NOT brain surgery, even though it is an invasive surgical procedure that changes the function of the brain. The stimulator is a pacemaker-like device that generates electrical pulses (Pulse Generator); it is implanted under the skin in the left chest through a small incision. While this may sound like a serious or dangerous procedure, it is not. The FDA has approved the use, and confirmed the safety of this procedure, and 22,000 patients have received the implant to treat epilepsy. The Vagus Nerve Stimulation surgery involves two small incisions, one in the chest and one at the lowest part of the neck. At no time is the brain physically manipulated by the surgeon.


The surgery to implant the NCP System takes 45 minutes to two hours. Local, regional or general anesthesia (putting the patient to sleep) is used during the surgery; the doctor and anesthetist determine which type of anesthesia is best for each patient. Most Vagus Nerve Stimulation patients will have outpatient surgery, (note 3) but some patients may need to stay in the hospital overnight, and in that case they will need a family member or companion to take them home from the hospital.



What Happens After the Vagus Nerve Stimulation Surgery?


Most Vagus Nerve Stimulation patients go home the same day or the next day. You will feel some minor stiffness/soreness around the area of the implant for a few days. Your doctor may prescribe a minor pain medication such as Tylenol with codeine. A week later your surgeon will probably want to check the scars and a nurse can program/change the settings on the stimulator in the doctor's office.



Is the Vagus Nerve Stimulation Surgery final?


The Vagus Nerve Stimulator can be turned off or removed (explanted) at any time if the patient feels that it is not helping, or in the unlikely event that the patient can't tolerate the stimulation. The device can be completely turned off in less than 30 seconds in the doctor's office, all it takes is for a nurse to hold a programmable wand over the skin above the Pulse Generator. Explantation (removal) of the Vagus Nerve Stimulation device is also possible, however, less than one half of one percent of the 22,000 patients have elected to have the device removed. As for implantation, the surgery to remove the device is a very simple procedure. Only the Pulse Generator is taken out of the body; attempting to remove the electrode from around the vagus nerve could cause damage, and is not recommended.



References



1. Pharmacoresistant Epilepsy and VNS Therapy. September 24, 2003 presentation by J.W. Wheless, MD. The University of Texas Health Science Center, Houston TX, USA.


2. Form 10-Q for Cyberonics Inc, September 4, 2003.


3. Vagus Nerve Stimulation Therapy Mechanisms of Action. September 24, 2003 presentation by M.S. George, MD. Medical University of South Carolina, Charleston, SC, USA.


4. The Investigation of Vagus Nerve Stimulation Therapy in Treatment-Resistant Depression. September 24, 2003 presentation by R.L. Rudolph, MD. Cyberonics, Inc.

Charles Donovan was a patient in the FDA investigational trial for vagus nerve stimulation and depression. He testified to the Panel at the Advisory Meeting on June 15th. After 25 years of chronic depression, vagus nerve stimulation completely cured his chronic depression. The author is so grateful and humbled by this remarkable device. Learn more at his website: www.VagusNerveStimulator.com

Spam emails More free articles

Related articles


  1. Wellbutrin For Depression: When It's More Than Just The Blues
  2. Vagus Nerve Stimulation as a Treatment for Depression to be Launched in May
  3. How Is Your Anxiety Today?
  4. How Do You Know if You Have Manic-Depression
  5. Depression: Escape Your Mental Prison
  6. Do You Think You Have Depression?
  7. Aromatherapy and Depression
  8. FDA Deems Vagus Nerve Therapy Approvable as a Treatment for Depression
  9. Depression and Procrastination: Twins in the Job Search
  10. What’s The Latest on Suicide Risk and Antidepressants For Children?
  11. Recognizing Depression’s Warning Signs
  12. Depression: What It Is and What You Can Do About It
  13. 10 Simple Coping Strategies When a Family Member Has Clinical Depression
  14. Depression: Bringing Yourself Down
  15. Depression Treatment: Depression Would Be Second Largest Illness by 2010!
  16. Vagus Nerve Stimulation and Depression
  17. A Look at the Different Depression and Anxiety Medications
  18. Know the Signs of Depression and Improve Your Life
  19. Adult Men and Women Who Suffer From Chronic Depression
  20. St Johns Wort and Depression
  21. Is it ADHD or is it Depression?
  22. ADHD and Depression -- More Common Than Thought
  23. Depression in Teenagers: Now What Can We Do?
  24. The Patient's Guide to Vagus Nerve Stimulation and Depression
  25. New Treatment for Chronic Depression
More related feeds
Treatments for Dog Depression
A change of environment where a dog is moved to a new home or put in a kennel may also cause your dog to feel depressed and stop eating or drinking. Returning home or getting used to the new home will likely see your dog's Depression ...

Insurance and Long-Term Psychotherapy: Part I, Why Parity Now?
... to be an especially effective treatment for chronic mental illnesses, including personality disorders and mood disorders. In one study in the survey, patients with treatment-refractory depression and anxiety were seen for a mean of ...

Some Heavy Bed Time Reading - There is a Messiah in the making
In an unconscious alliance of interests, influential psychiatrists developed and popularised the view of depression as a common biologically based disorder, amenable to drug treatment and as yet frequently unrecognised. ...

(Space) Electromagnetic Brain Stimulation for Addiction
This shows that in the future TMS may be increasingly used as a new treatment modality for a variety of different addictions. It may be able to improve depression symptoms as well among those people. The company Brainsway is testing ...

New York Times Accepts Biological Basis Of Depression, Other ...
"¶Researchers have found biological causes and effective treatments for numerous mental illnesses." OK, right there that is the author's and the paper's voice and opinions sanctifying the brain chemistry hypothesis of depression, ...

Economic bailout bill linked to better mental health insurance ...
By wiping away such restrictions, doctors said, the new law will make it easier for people to obtain treatment for a wide range of conditions, including depression, autism, schizophrenia, eating disorders and alcohol and drug abuse. ...

depressioninfo - DEPRESSION.INFO.
How to avoid depression? Depression treatment & information 1 Vote(s)

Important News from NLH - New Evidence Update - Depression
Patients may be more interested in looking at the Depression pathway on the NHS Choices website. (Link to NHS Choices webpage). Contents:. 1. Incidence and Prevalence. 2. Diagnosis. 3. Treatments. a. Pharmacological treatments ...

If You’ve Read the Last Three, Ignore This
If the work-up can find no known cause then the patient likely has DM and the correct treatment for this CHRONIC AND INCURABLE illness is begun. The treatment in the hospital is aimed at medical stabilization of the acute symptoms and ...

New study aims to help schizophrenics
Though symptoms of schizophrenia include hallucinations, voices, depression, isolation and lack of emotional awareness, the most difficult part of treating patients is getting them to seek treatment, according to Carolyn LaGioia, ...

 


 

© 2007 articlesreader.com - All Rights Reserved