'An incredible window into the brain': New treatments target severe depression - Action News
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'An incredible window into the brain': New treatments target severe depression

In Canada, almost a million people live with treatment-resistant depression. Doctors are looking at different approaches that go straight to the source of the problem deep within the brain.

'I felt what I call lighter ... and the suicidal thoughts diminished,' patient says

Sky Zazlov is prepped to receive MRI-guided focused ultrasound therapy at Sunnybrook Health Sciences Centre in Toronto for her severe depression. 'I'm not looking for a magic bullet,' she says. 'But I hope this will take away some of the despair.' (Craig Chivers/CBC)

At 35, Sharon Jakabknew something was wrong when she started hallucinating.

"I saw my grandmother on the wall in the room. She was talking to me. I wasn't sleeping, and I was a mess," she saysfrom her home in Burlington, Ont. Jakabhad been suffering from postpartumdepression following the birth of her daughter.

About a year and a half later, Jakabhad another episode of postpartumdepression following an ectopic pregnancy.

It became so bad, she was suicidal. "There was a gun in the house and there were cartridges. I was all set to kill myself."

She had to suicide-proof her home by taking away all dangerous objects, evenskates, which have sharpblades.

Sharon Jakab, right, received magnetic seizure therapy this year to deal with her severe depression. She and her partner Karen Inkster suicide-proofed their home in Burlington. Ont. (Craig Chivers/CBC)

Now 61, Jakabhas been in and out of hospitals, dealing with what she calls "waves of depression" that havelasted most of her adult life. She's tried about a dozen medications, including the antipsychoticdrugclozapine. "Clozapinereally helped me a lot, but I still suffered from depression, psychosis and mania."

Because standard treatment like medication and therapy weren't effective, Jakab wasdiagnosed withtreatment-resistant depression, a severe form of depression that close to a million Canadians experience.

'A huge public health problem'

Electroconvulsivetherapy or ECT, better known as shock treatment, is still considered the go-to treatmentbut comes with the common side effect of memory loss. So doctors are nowexploring less invasive experimental approaches like brain stimulation thatrewires the brain's circuits.

"Hard-to-treat depression is a huge public health problem" says Dr. Jeff Daskalakisof Toronto, at the Centre forAddiction and Mental Health's Temerty Centre for therapeutic brain intervention. "The idea that we have treatments that could potentially rectify or improve their illness can be very reassuring to patients."

Dr. Jeff Daskalakis is working on new ways to deal with treatment-resistant depression. One method uses magnets instead of electricity to induce a seizure in a patient. (Craig Chivers/CBC)

One of those treatments being tested at CAMHis magnetic seizure therapy or MST. Amagnetic coil to the front part of the patient's headdelivers a high-frequencypulse that induces a seizure.A big advantage is there are few or noadverse effectslike memory loss.

"If we can limit those effects by delivering the stimulus at a much lower intensity with an alternative type of approach, in this case magnets as opposed to electricity, we can spare cognition and produce a seizure that gets people better,"says Daskalakis.

Over 150 patients have received MSTduring clinical trialsat CAMH.

Jakabjumped at the chance of getting the treatment. "I didn't want to have ECT", she says."I had One Flew Over the Cuckoo's Nest image in my mind,"she adds,referring to the movie where Jack Nicholson gets a jolt of electricity through his head.

Over eightmonths last year, Jakabreceived 30 sessions of MST. "I felt what I call lighter, because I feel less sad, less depressed, and the suicidal thoughts diminished."

Dr. Daniel Blumberger is part of a research team at the Centre for Addiction and Mental Health in Toronto looking at non-invasive therapies for treatment-resistant depression. (Craig Chivers/CBC)

"I think what's challenging about treating depression is that everybody is different, and people come to it in a different way", saysDr. Daniel Blumberger, medical head of the TemertyCentre. "There are probably multiple different types of depression, and finding the right treatment for the right individual is probably the next phase of delivering treatment for the illness."

Blumbergerhas been working on a less invasive technique thanMST, called repetitive transcranial magnetic stimulation, or rTMS. It delivers a repetitive burst of magnetic pulses to the part of the brain affected by depression.

Over 1,000 patients have used the treatment which lasts three minutes. A study published in The Lancet this year showed howeffectivethetreatment is, compared to the standard length of about 37 minutes.

"The outcome can be dramatic", says Blumberger. "We will see a clinically significant response in about 50 per centof patients, and 30 per centof people have remission of their depressive symptoms."

'Ninety per cent of what we've learned about the brain, we've learned in the last 10 to 15 years,' says Toronto psychiatrist Dr. Anthony Levitt. (Craig Chivers/CBC News)

At Sunnybrook Health Sciences Centre in Toronto, researchers have been using a technique called MRI-guidedfocused ultrasound to help patients overcome hard-to-treat depression. With pinpoint accuracy, ultrasound beams heat and disruptspecific areas of the brain associated with depression.

"The ultrasound goes directly to that circuit, makes a cut, and stops it from firing when it shouldn't be firing," says Dr. Anthony Levitt, chief of the HurvitzBrain Sciences Program at the hospital. "This is an incredible window into the brain. We no longer have to open the skull to cause damage to the brain."

He adds, "Ninety per cent of what we've learned about the brain, we've learned in the last 10 to 15 years."

Sky Zazlov of Toronto was one of the first patients to try the ultrasound treatmentin May.She was diagnosed with treatment-resistant depression in 2011.

"It seems unrelenting," she says. "I don't even know how to explain it because it's not angering, it's frustrating."

Sky Zazlov, right, with her son Isaac, was diagnosed with treatment-resistant depression in 2011. Close to one million Canadians suffer from this condition. (Craig Chivers/CBC)

Before she was placed inside the MRIscanner, technicians shaved her headand fitted her witha round metallic helmet that transmits the ultrasound waves.The procedure lastsseveral hours, and as the patient iswheeled out, it's too soon to know if the treatment worked.

A few months later, Zazlov is disappointed. There have been no changes in her mood. But she says she's not giving up. Neither are her doctors, who've told her it could be up to ayear before thetreatment provides some relief.

"I'm not looking for a magic bullet," says the 40-year-old mother. "I'm willing to put the work in, but I hope this will take away some of the despair."

With files from Marcy Cuttler