Electroconvulsive therapy has been described as a mood stabilizer, as it is effective in all stages of bipolar disorder. Electroconvulsive therapy–induced mania is a known and potentially dangerous risk of treating bipolar depression with electroconvulsive therapy and there are no established guidelines for the management of electroconvulsive therapy–induced mania. We report a case of electroconvulsive therapy–induced mania where electroconvulsive therapy was continued as the sole, effective antimanic agent, which is the first described case in literature.
CITATION STYLE
Thomas, R. K., White, P. J., & Dursun, S. (2018). Treating electroconvulsive therapy–induced mania with more electroconvulsive therapy: Evidence for electroconvulsive therapy as the ultra-mood stabilizer. SAGE Open Medical Case Reports, 6, 2050313X1879923. https://doi.org/10.1177/2050313x18799236
Mendeley helps you to discover research relevant for your work.