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Journal article

Deep Brain Stimulation for Treatment-Resistant Depression

Abstract

Treatment-resistant depression is a severely disabling disorder with no proven treatment options once multiple medications, psychotherapy, and electroconvulsive therapy have failed. Based on our preliminary observation that the subgenual cingulate region (Brodmann area 25) is metabolically overactive in treatment-resistant depression, we studied whether the application of chronic deep brain stimulation to modulate BA25 could reduce this elevated activity and produce clinical benefit in six patients with refractory depression. Chronic stimulation of white matter tracts adjacent to the subgenual cingulate gyrus was associated with a striking and sustained remission of depression in four of six patients. Antidepressant effects were associated with a marked reduction in local cerebral blood flow as well as changes in downstream limbic and cortical sites, measured using positron emission tomography. These results suggest that disrupting focal pathological activity in limbic-cortical circuits using electrical stimulation of the subgenual cingulate white matter can effectively reverse symptoms in otherwise treatment-resistant depression. (Reprinted with permission by Neuron, 2005; (45):651–660)

Authors

Mayberg HS; Lozano AM; Voon V; McNeely HE; Seminowicz D; Hamani C; Schwalb JM; Kennedy SH

Journal

FOCUS The Journal of Lifelong Learning in Psychiatry, Vol. 6, No. 1, pp. 143–154

Publisher

American Psychiatric Association Publishing

Publication Date

January 1, 2008

DOI

10.1176/foc.6.1.foc143

ISSN

1541-4094
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