What can you do about chronic depression when lifestyle changes, medication, and therapy aren’t helping? For some, transcranial magnetic stimulation (TMS) can be life-changing. This innovative treatment uses pulses of magnetic energy to stimulate the brain’s prefrontal cortex (the mood regulation area) and alleviate symptoms of depression.
We’ve brought in the experts from Active Path Mental Health to debunk some myths associated with the treatment.
Fact or Fiction: TMS is the same thing as electroshock therapy.
This is fiction. TMS is FDA-cleared and has very few side effects. (By contrast, electroshock therapy induces generalized seizures in the body, and requires sedation.)
Sessions are just 20 minutes, and patients can drive themselves home afterward. The biggest potential side effect, according to Active Path Mental Health? A mild headache.
Fact or Fiction: TMS causes memory loss.
This is fiction. Multiple clinical trials have shown no increase in memory loss with TMS treatment. This is an important difference from ECT, where there is a risk of memory loss.
Fact or Fiction: TMS doesn’t work.
This is fiction. Most patients experience improvement by the fourth week of treatment, but some may see a change before that.