Neuropsychobiology
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Randomized Controlled Trial Comparative Study Clinical Trial
Isoflurane narcotherapy in depressive patients refractory to conventional antidepressant drug treatment. A double-blind comparison with electroconvulsive treatment.
This is the first report on a controlled study comparing the therapeutic and non-therapeutic (side) effects of electroconvulsive treatment (ECT) and isoflurane narcotherapy (ISONAR; deep anesthesias with the inhalation of anesthetic isoflurane) in drug-refractory, severely depressed women, who had been randomly allocated either to ECT (n = 10) or ISONAR (n = 10). Patients from each group were subjected to a total of six treatment sessions (two sessions per week) and maintained on a fixed antidepressant drug dose. The antidepressant efficacy of either treatment was evaluated for each treatment session (in search of a 'rapid antidepressant effect') and at weekly intervals. ⋯ ISONAR-treated patients improved in most psychometric variables, whereas patients on ECT deteriorated. Finally, the EEG patterns of the ISONAR-treated patients remained normal or augmented (dominant alpha power), whereas patients on ECT developed an increase in abnormalities in EEG patterns and theta/delta power. This indicates an organic brain syndrome in patients on ECT.
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Randomized Controlled Trial Clinical Trial
Do the B-vitamins exhibit antinociceptive efficacy in men? Results of a placebo-controlled repeated-measures double-blind study.
Additive analgesic effects of long-term application of a combination of the vitamins B1, B6, B12 (thiamine diphosphate 100 mg, pyridoxsine-HCl 200 mg, cyanocobalamin 20 micrograms, p.o.) on a single dose of the nonsteroidal anti-inflammatory drug (NSAID) diclofenac (diclofenac-Na, 50 mg, p.o.) were investigated with a noninflammatory experimental pain model in 38 healthy volunteers. B-vitamins were given with 3 dosages/day for 1 week. Then experimental sessions of 3 h followed to test the analgesic efficacy of the NSAID. ⋯ No B-vitamin effects of the B-vitamins could be detected, either additive analgesic effects on diclofenac analgesia or on the concomitant variables describing unspecific sedative effects. Clearly the B-vitamin pretreatment for 1 week enlarged the plasma levels for vitamin B6 by 700%, for vitamin B1 by 70% and for vitamin B12 by 50%. All B-vitamin concentrations were independent of each other.