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Ben J. A. Palanca

1 paper in the library · 16 citations · publishing 2018

Papers

Cognitive and Neurophysiological Recovery Following Electroconvulsive Therapy: A Study Protocol

Frontiers in Psychiatry May 14, 2018 Ben J. A. Palanca, Hannah R. Maybrier, Angela M. Mickle et al. 16 citations

Electroconvulsive therapy (ECT) deliberately induces generalized seizures to treat severe psychiatric illness, offering a chance to study how consciousness, cognition, and brain activity recover after seizures. Fifteen patients with treatment-resistant major depressive disorder will receive right unilateral ECT under etomidate anesthesia. They will then undergo three treatments in randomized order: etomidate plus ECT, ketamine plus ECT, and ketamine plus sham ECT, repeated for six total sessions. Cognitive tests assess sensorimotor speed, working memory, and executive function before and after each treatment. The study will measure time to return of responsiveness, cognitive recovery trajectories, postictal delirium, and EEG changes. It aims to develop biomarkers for tailoring cognitive and emotional recovery in ECT patients.