Cranial Electrotherapy Stimulation: A Safe Neuromedical Treatment for Anxiety, Depression or Insomnia
Gilula, Marshall F. and
Barach, Paul R. Southern Medical Journal. 97(12): 1269-1270, 2004.
To The Editor: The Institute of Medicine's To Err is Human made
headlines by estimating that medical errors account for between 44,000 and
98,000 deaths annually in the United States. Together with the subsequent
quality dimension report, Crossing the Quality Chasm, the Institute of Medicine
has brought patient safety into the spotlight. The greatest variance of adverse
events in medicine probably is due to medication errors. Today's primary care
physician has a multitude of electronic devices such as personal
digital assistants, software, and newsletters designed to help minimize
medication error and promote safe medication practices. Electronic therapeutic
devices can actively reduce the number of medication errors, by reducing the
amount of medication needed to treat anxiety, depression, insomnia, and pain. Among
the electromedical devices available to the ordinary office practice of general
medicine is the cranial electrotherapy stimulation (CES) device. CES is the
noninvasive application of low levels of microcurrent (less than 1 milliampere)
stimulation applied transcutaneously to the brain for therapeutic purposes.
Physicians associate these devices with pain treatment centers and the
management of chronic, severe pain, but CES can be efficacious for other
conditions.
CES is a treatment modality
that has been neglected by mainstream medicine for the treatment of anxiety,
depression, or insomnia. Selective serotonin reuptake inhibitors (SSRIs) are
known as the gold standard for the treatment of depression. However, CES is now
more relevant because of recent government warnings on SSRIs. Thus far, CES has
not demonstrated any of these adverse effects. There is no shortage on
antidepressant research, but today's peer-reviewed literature has a relative
dearth of CES reports. The companies that produce these devices are small and
as yet unable to support high-budget standars of double-blinded, randomized,
institutional review board-controlled studies. A surprising number of CES
studies in the peer-reviewed literature have been done without funding.
CES in the United States
has received Food and Drug Administration marketing clearance for the treatment
of anxiety, depression, and insomnia. CES devices are sold over the counter in Europe and other parts of the world. Mood disordered
alcoholics have shown increased activity of the enzyme MAO-B in the spinal
fluid after 20 CES treatments. Patients with treatment-resistant depression
have shown significant (P<. 0089) elevations in plasma serotonin. Increases
in cerebrospinal fluid levels ß-endorphins up to 219%, plasma endorphins up to
98%, and cerebrospinal fluid serotonin up to 200% have been demonstrated in
normal volunteers receiving 20 minutes of CES. A recent annotated bibliography
of CES by Kirsch details 126 human and 29 experimental animal studies of CES conducted
over the past 40 years. More than half the studies cited are from the
peer-reviewed literature. The majority of the studies were double-blinded and
conducted at major American universities. In aggregate, there were 6,007
patients treated under varying research conditions, with 4,541 actually
receiving CES treatment. One hundred twelve (89%) of the studies reported
positive outcomes. Seventeen studies followed-up the patients to assess any
continued results after 1 week to 2 years, and all the patients showed at least
some residual effect after one or a series of treatments CES is both
noninvasive and considerably less expensive. Neurosurgical implantation
techniques of deep brain stimulating electrodes and vagal nerve stimulators
that are currently used and studied for the treatment of affective disorders
are more expensive. However, CES requires continuing medical assessment and
supervision. The same caveat is true of all antidepressants and other
medications in today's Physician's Desk Reference for the treatment of anxiety,
depression, and insomnia. The patient safety movement and burgeoning Internet
resources are working to increase the number of patients more actively involved
in their own care. CES deserves to be a modality in the armamentarium not only
for chronic pain but for reducing or occasionally replacing the amount of
medication necessary in the treatment of anxiety and depression. CES is not a
miraculous modality, but it's definitely worth a try.
Marshall F. Gilula, M. D
and Paul R. Barach, M. D. , M. P. H.
Department of
Anesthesiology, Center for Patient Safety, Jackson
Memorial Hospital,
University of Miami
School of Medicine.
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