Difference between revisions of "Deep brain stimulation (DBS)"
(Created page with "Treatment of major depressive disorder has been studied in subcallosal deep brain stimulation 159 A blinded controlled trial failed to produce significant difference between a...") |
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− | Treatment of major depressive disorder has been studied in subcallosal deep brain stimulation | + | Treatment of major depressive disorder has been studied in subcallosal deep brain stimulation. A blinded controlled trial failed to produce significant difference between active and sham stimulation at a 6-month endpoint. Authors argue that when looking at a longer timeline (18-24 months) in an open-label study there is greater observed benefit, which persists > 8 years later. (Crowell et al, 2019). |
− | A blinded controlled trial failed to produce significant difference between active and sham stimulation at a 6-month endpoint. Authors argue that when looking at a longer timeline (18-24 months) in an open-label study there is greater observed benefit, which persists > 8 years later. | ||
Revision as of 08:46, 13 June 2021
Treatment of major depressive disorder has been studied in subcallosal deep brain stimulation. A blinded controlled trial failed to produce significant difference between active and sham stimulation at a 6-month endpoint. Authors argue that when looking at a longer timeline (18-24 months) in an open-label study there is greater observed benefit, which persists > 8 years later. (Crowell et al, 2019).
References
Crowell, A. L. et al. Long-Term Outcomes of Subcallosal Cingulate Deep Brain Stimulation for Treatment-Resistant Depression. Am. J. Psychiatry 176, 949–956 (2019). https://pubmed.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/31581800/