Postictal recovery of orientation in person, place and time relates to restoration of cortical activity after electroconvulsive therapy
S. Stuiver, J. Pottkämper, J. Verdijk, F. ten Doesschate, M. van Putten, J. Hofmeijer, J. van Waarde

TL;DR
This study finds that recovery of brain activity after ECT is linked to regaining awareness of person, place, and time.
Contribution
The study establishes a novel link between EEG recovery and clinical reorientation after ECT-induced seizures.
Findings
Longer reorientation time was associated with slower postictal EEG recovery.
Seizure duration and benzodiazepine use were linked to increased reorientation time.
Increased ECT stimulus charge and age were associated with reorientation delays in specific domains.
Abstract
Most patients show temporary impairments in clinical orientation (i.e., orientation in person, place, and time) after electroconvulsive therapy (ECT)-induced seizures. It is unclear whether postictal reorientation is related to electroencephalography (EEG) restoration. This tentative relationship may shed light on mechanistic aspects of reorientation after ECT. To study whether postictal EEG restoration after an ECT-induced seizure is related to recovery of clinical orientation in the cognitive domains person, place and time. We performed a longitudinal study in ECT patients and collected continuous postictal EEGs. Postictal EEG restoration was estimated by the evolution of the normalized alpha/delta ratio (ADR). Recovery of orientation in the cognitive domains of person, place, and time was assessed using the Reorientation Time (ROT) questionnaire. In each cognitive domain, a linear…
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Taxonomy
TopicsElectroconvulsive Therapy Studies
