Author/Authors :
Talaei, Ali Department of Psychiatry - Ibn-e-Sina Psychiatric Hospital, Mashhad University of Medical Sciences, Mashhad , Morteza-Nia, Mohammad Department of Psychiatry - Ibn-e-Sina Psychiatric Hospital, Mashhad University of Medical Sciences, Mashhad , Jafar-Zadeh, Morteza Department of Psychiatry - Ibn-e-Sina Psychiatric Hospital, Mashhad University of Medical Sciences, Mashhad , Saghebi, Ali Department of Psychiatry - Ibn-e-Sina Psychiatric Hospital, Mashhad University of Medical Sciences, Mashhad , Ardani, Amir Rezaei Department of Psychiatry - Ibn-e-Sina Psychiatric Hospital, Mashhad University of Medical Sciences, Mashhad
Abstract :
The response rate to the treatment of obsessive compulsive
disorder (OCD) is 21.6% to 61.3%, which shows a relative
resistance to current treatments and a need for novel
therapeutic approaches. Here we report a case of resistant
OCD with fast and dramatic response to a relatively new
method of repeated transcranial magnetic stimulation. In this
method a pulse magnetic field emits from a coil over the
surface of the scalp to induce a localized electrical current in
the cortex below. Cortical activity can then be either inhibited
or stimulated. The patient was a 40-year-old woman with
severe OCD who admitted to our psychiatric hospital. She was
treated with 10 sessions of rTMS (110% intensity, 1 Hz
frequency and duration of 30 minutes per day / a total of 1200
pulses per day) on right supplementary motor area. Her
improvement evaluated serially with Yale Brown Scale. By
the end of the 2nd day she reported a major improvement of
symptoms. Dramatic improvement was observed in her
obsessive and compulsive behaviors, and avoidance recovered
completely. She also reported significant improvement in
ability to control obsessive thoughts and impulses, and anxiety
symptoms. Since repeated transcranial magnetic stimulation is
a low risk method with almost no interaction with the common
medications, as well as the faster response obtained by using
this method, it can be used as an add-on treatment in resistant
cases of OCD and even in the initial stages of this disorder.
Keywords :
Obsessive compulsive disorder , transcranial magnetic stimulation , treatment , motor cortex