ECT and memory loss
- 1 September 1977
- journal article
- review article
- Published by American Psychiatric Association Publishing in American Journal of Psychiatry
- Vol. 134 (9) , 997-1001
- https://doi.org/10.1176/ajp.134.9.997
Abstract
The author reviews several studies that clarify the nature of the memory loss associated with ECT. Bilateral ECT produced greater anterograde memory loss than right unilateral ECT and more extensive retrograde amnesia than unilateral ECT. Reactivating memories just before ECT did not produce amnesia. Capacity for new learning recovered substantially by several months after ECT, but memory complaints were common in individuals who had received bilateral ECT. Other things being equal, right unilateral ECT seems preferable to bilateral ECT because the risks to memory associated with unilateral ECT are smaller.Keywords
This publication has 17 references indexed in Scilit:
- Reactivation of recent or remote memory before electroconvulsive therapy does not produce retrograde amnesiaBehavioral Biology, 1976
- Retrograde amnesia following electroconvulsive therapyNature, 1976
- Memory Functions Six to Nine Months After Electroconvulsive TherapyArchives of General Psychiatry, 1975
- ELECTROCONVULSIVE THERAPY AND MEMORYJournal of Nervous & Mental Disease, 1975
- A stable impairment in remote memory following electroconvulsive therapyNeuropsychologia, 1975
- Retrograde Amnesia: Temporal Gradient in Very Long Term Memory Following Electroconvulsive TherapyScience, 1975
- Persistent anterograde amnesia after stab wound of the basal brainNeuropsychologia, 1968
- Amnesia: A Function of the Temporal Relation of Footshock to Electroconvulsive ShockScience, 1968
- The Effect of Repeated Electroshock on Learning in DepressivesPublished by Springer Nature ,1959
- TRAUMATIC AMNESIABrain, 1946