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Correspondence |
Queen's Park Hospital, Blackburn BB2 3HH
Sir: The study by Jan Wise et al (Psychiatric Bulletin, August 2000, 24, 301) is interesting. The authors have found no significant difference in seizure duration between the cuffed and uncuffed limbs and suggest that the use of the cuff method to observe absent seizure cease, as it merely delays addressing the real cause of absent seizures. The following issues also need to be considered in this respect:
Therefore, both EEG and the cuff method have a role in monitoring seizures in ECT sessions, especially so because there are no recommended dosages of succinylcholine for purpose of administering ECT.
Perhaps, an assessment of the difference in seizure intensity across limbs and the mean dosage of relaxant used would have been informative regarding the degree of modification achieved during ECT.
References
FINK, M. (1983) Missed seizures and the bilateral-unilateral electroconvulsive therapy controversy. American Journal of Psychiatry, 140, 1198-1199.
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