Brain Stimulation (Jul 2021)

Biophysical mechanisms of electroconvulsive therapy-induced volume expansion in the medial temporal lobe: A longitudinal in vivo human imaging study

  • Akihiro Takamiya,
  • Filip Bouckaert,
  • Maarten Laroy,
  • Jeroen Blommaert,
  • Ahmed Radwan,
  • Ahmad Khatoun,
  • Zhi-De Deng,
  • Myles Mc Laughlin,
  • Wim Van Paesschen,
  • François-Laurent De Winter,
  • Jan Van den Stock,
  • Stefan Sunaert,
  • Pascal Sienaert,
  • Mathieu Vandenbulcke,
  • Louise Emsell

Journal volume & issue
Vol. 14, no. 4
pp. 1038 – 1047

Abstract

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Background: Electroconvulsive therapy (ECT) applies electric currents to the brain to induce seizures for therapeutic purposes. ECT increases gray matter (GM) volume, predominantly in the medial temporal lobe (MTL). The contribution of induced seizures to this volume change remains unclear. Methods: T1-weighted structural MRI was acquired from thirty patients with late-life depression (mean age 72.5 ± 7.9 years, 19 female), before and one week after one course of right unilateral ECT. Whole brain voxel-/deformation-/surface-based morphometry analyses were conducted to identify tissue-specific (GM, white matter: WM), and cerebrospinal fluid (CSF) and cerebral morphometry changes following ECT. Whole-brain voxel-wise electric field (EF) strength was estimated to investigate the association of EF distribution and regional brain volume change. The association between percentage volume change in the right MTL and ECT-related parameters (seizure duration, EF, and number of ECT sessions) was investigated using multiple regression. Results: ECT induced widespread GM volume expansion with corresponding contraction in adjacent CSF compartments, and limited WM change. The regional EF was strongly correlated with the distance from the electrodes, but not with regional volume change. The largest volume expansion was identified in the right MTL, and this was correlated with the total seizure duration. Conclusions: Right unilateral ECT induces widespread, bilateral regional volume expansion and contraction, with the largest change in the right MTL. This dynamic volume change cannot be explained by the effect of electrical stimulation alone and is related to the cumulative effect of ECT-induced seizures.

Keywords