Cranial Electrotherapy Stimulation Reduces Aggression in Violent Retarded Population: A Preliminary Report [Abstract]
Childs, Allen. The Journal
of Neuropsychiatry and Clinical Neurosciences, 17(4), 2005.
Nine aggressive, retarded
patients refractory to conventional care at a maximum security hospital were
given a three month course of cranial electrotherapy stimulation using
Alpha-Stim CES technology (Electromedical Products International, Inc. Mineral
Wells, Texas, www.alpha-stim.com). Aggressive episodes declined 59% over
baseline, seclusions were down 72%, restraints 58% and PRN medications
decreased 53% (see Table 1). The most dramatic change was a disorganized
schizophrenic patient whose aggressive episodes declined from 62 to 9,
seclusion’s from 53 to 8, restraints from 9 to 1 and PRN’s dropped from 25 to 1
(see case example below). No patients discontinued CES because of side effects.
This preliminary report indicates that CES appears to be an efficacious, safe
and cost-effective addition to the treatment regimen in this patient
population.
Case Example
The patient is a 38 year old,
unmarried citizen of Mexico
undergoing her second hospitalization at NTSH-V, having again been sent from
another state hospital as manifestly dangerous. Prior to this admission she had
committed 45 acts of aggression resulting in 14 injuries at the previous state
hospital and she continued biting, hitting, exposing herself, urinating and
defecating in the seclusion room and being too disorganized to participate in
any programming. She has spent all but six months of the past decade in state
hospitals in Texas.
The patient was the sixth of
seven children born to impoverished parents in Mexico. Her mother died from
complications of childbirth when the patient was two years old and her
alcoholic father was cold and distant with her and her siblings. She attended
school only through the third grade, could not get along with other students
and learned very little. She can not read or write in English or Spanish. She
has been diagnosed as being mildly retarded. The patient is said to have spent
her childhood running loose in the streets and she could not keep friends
because of her explosive temper.
At age 15 she was hospitalized in Mexico and
diagnosed as schizophrenic. The family had no money for her medications so they
were not continued after her multiple hospitalizations in Mexico. At age
23 she delivered a child which was taken by the Mexican authorities because of
her mental condition. She was quite traumatized by this and shortly thereafter,
she kidnapped the infant of another woman. She spent 6 months in jail during
which time she had no psychiatric treatment.
The family brought her at age 24
to the United States
and within a year she had begun a decade of hospitalization. In a prior
hospitalization she had stabilized on clozapine but unfortunately her seizures
increased and she also had QTC prolongation problems resulting in
discontinuation of the medicine. No other medication has had much effect on her
relentlessly assaultive and disorganized behavior. She was noted on this
admission to be babbling incoherently, bizarre, malodorous and disheveled. Such
sentences as she spoke were meaningless compilations of words, which seemed to
be in a “bizarre language unknown to anyone.”
In the three months prior to
starting CES, the patient was assaultive 62 times, requiring seclusion on 53
occasions, was restrained 9 times and received 25 PRN injections of
antipsychotic medicine. Shortly before Alpha-Stim CES was started, at the 0.5
Hz frequency, 1 hour twice daily, the 60 mgs haloperidol daily was
discontinued, leaving her on lithium, valproic acid, phenytoin and
aripiprazole.
In the first three months of CES therapy the number of aggressive
episodes dropped from 62 to 9, seclusions went down from 53 to 8, restraints
declined from 9 to 1 and she required only one PRN injection, down from 25
before CES therapy.
Her interactions became much more appropriate with peers
and even when she required seclusion she no longer urinated and smeared feces
in the seclusion room. In the second month of CES therapy there were no
seclusion’s or restraints and in the third month, only three personal
restraints and one seclusion. She began attending classes and therapies and was
able to be housed on a dormitory for less aggressive patients. In all she
seemed less demented as CES continued and she was no longer as disorganized in
her thinking.
Table 1 Outcomes
|
Diagnosis
|
Age/
Sex
|
IQ
|
R
A
C
E
|
Aggressive Episodes
|
Seclusions
|
Restraints
|
PRN’s
|
|
3 mo Pre
3 mo
Post %
|
3 mo Pre
3 mo
Post %
|
3 mo Pre
3 mo
Post %
|
3 mo Pre
3 mo
Post %
|
|
Schizoaffective Disorder
|
34 F
|
67
|
AA
|
35
24 31.43
|
1
6 500.00
|
1
0 100.00
|
5
19 280.00
|
|
45
15 66.67
|
12
6 50.00
|
12
5 58.33
|
16
10 37.50
|
|
Schizophrenia, Disorganized
|
31
F
|
66
|
AA
|
17
11 35.29
|
9
9 0.00
|
8
2 75.00
|
16
2 87.50
|
|
Schizophrenia, Paranoid
|
47
M
|
75
|
C
|
24
17 29.17
|
22
1 95.45
|
2
16 700.00
|
3
3 0.00
|
|
Intermittent Explosive
Disorder
|
31
M
|
67
|
C
|
27
4 85.19
|
11
1 90.91
|
16
3 81.25
|
9
2 77.78
|
|
Huntingtons Chorea
|
27
F
|
66
|
C
|
19
6 68.42
|
19
4 78.95
|
19
4
78.95
|
12
2 83.33
|
|
Pervasive Developmental
Disorder w/Psychosis
|
30
M
|
58
|
H
|
24
14
41.67
|
0
0 0.00
|
0
0 0.00
|
0
0
0.00
|
|
3
3 0.00
|
0
0 0.00
|
0
0 0.00
|
0
0
0.00
|
|
Schizophrenia, Disorganized
|
35
F
|
64
|
H
|
62
9 85.48
|
53
8 84.91
|
9
1 88.89
|
25
1 96.00
|
|
Schizoaffective Disorder
|
25
M
|
63
|
C
|
15
3 80.00
|
4
0 100.00
|
11
3 72.73
|
6
1 83.33
|
|
Schizoaffective Disorder
|
41
M
|
68
|
C
|
14
11 21.43
|
0
2 0.00
|
2
0 100.00
|
9
7 22.22
|
|
Totals
|
285
117 ↓58.95%
|
131
37 ↓71.76%
|
80
34 ↓57.50%
|
101
47 ↓53.47%
|
CES Reduces Aggression in Violent Retarded Population 69.13 Kb
|