Wednesday, March 17, 2010

Shutter Island and the Defence of the Lobotomy

Shutter Island is amazing, as is Leonardo DiCaprio, who I love with the heart of a hormonal thirteen-year-old who has just watched Titanic four times. My heart will go on, Jack...*sob*

Ahem.

Shutter Island, a film taking place in the fifties on a remote island housing the criminally insane, has some other stuff going for it, too. Things like hallucinogenic drugging, human experimentation, and the ever popular lobotomy (a procedure used frequently on psychiatric patients in the forties and fifties, despite severe, irreversible side effects).

The removal of the prefrontal cortex of a patient with schizophrenia (or other severe psychotic disorders) is not a popular subject - for many, it represents the modern culmination of a long history of abuse. Psychiatric patients have been exorcised, burned as witches, confined, beaten, neglected, and sexually abused; throughout human history, there is very little that we haven’t inflicted on those that are vulnerable, and mental patients seemed like ideal subjects for medicine’s wildest whims.

According to my good friend Wikipedia, the side effects of the lobotomy are as follows: “Convulsive seizures are reported as sequelae of prefrontal lobotomy in 5 to 10 percent of all cases. Such seizures are ordinarily well controlled with the usual anti-convulsive drugs. Post-operative blunting of the personality, apathy, and irresponsibility are the rule rather than the exception. Other side effects include distractibility, childishness, facetiousness, lack of tact or discipline, and post-operative incontinence.” Of those that were lobotomized, the vast majority were women.

The lobotomy met its end in the mid nineteen-fifties, when psychotropic medication began to take effect and forever change psychiatry, and by the nineteen seventies and One Flew Over the Cuckoo’s Nest, lobotomies had largely fallen out of use.

For those of you who watched Jack Nicholson sit with his friend, the Chief, and saw the scar on his forehead and that vacant look in his eyes and yelled at your respective televisions in shock and horror, the lobotomy was the perfect symbol of all that was wrong with psychiatry.

And lucky for you, I’m here to tell you that you’re wrong.

Because, while archaic, while crude, and while riddled with side-effects, the lobotomy represented a giant leap forward for psychiatry and the treatment of mental patients.

I’ve argued in defense of the lobotomy, and the similarly maligned ECT, and will continue to do so, but not because either represents an ideal, or even a particularly ‘good’ option for treating the mentally ill. And that’s because there simply aren’t any ‘good’ options when it comes to treating severe and chronic mental disorders like depression, psychosis, or paranoid schizophrenia.

As unconscionable at the removal of a person’s prefrontal lobe might be, I do find it preferable to the standard of care pre-lobotomy (namely, chaining up patients in an asylum and trying to beat them to sanity at least once or twice a day, every day, until they died). And the very idea of living a life of severe mental illness - say, schizophrenia - is itself unconscionable, even with the option of today’s ‘modern’ pharmaceutical treatments - which, while less invasive than brain surgery, are not without devastating side effects (tardive dyskinesia, a Parkinson's-like disease, is one of the more visible and gruesome examples of antipsychotic effects.)

When my (stupid) brother argued against the treatment of women with ECT (electric-shock treatment, in case you weren’t a psych major), I was offended - because ECT remains one of the most effective treatments of severe depression available. Nobody like’s the idea of electrocuting their brain - of course not - but for the patients who have ECT as an option, it’s a flicker of very real hope, after years of failed attempts at psychopharmaceutical therapy (which involve random manipulations of poorly understood brain chemicals, often with severe side effects, too). Such patients are often severely disabled, suicidal, and unable to live in their homes - so in a choice between a lifetime of suicide watch in a psych ward and the alternative, as difficult as that decision would be...I would like to keep open the option of ECT.

Treatments keep getting better, and strides in research continue to be made - and the simple fact is that, for many people, removing a small section of their prefrontal lobe, with a drill, improved their lives. The illnesses best treated by lobotomy are those of compulsive and damaging over-thinking - chronic severe anxiety, OCD, and affect disorders such as dysthymia. It makes sense - the damage done by lobotomy seems not dissimilar to the effects of Ativan or valium in ‘sedating’ patients, relaxing them, and lowering their IQs.

And, were it a choice between losing 15 points on my IQ and having chronic incontinence, or believing that the woman trying to feed me a bagel was operating a secret cult of cannibals bent on devouring my body and soul as operatives of a CIA agent conspiracy...and I don’t know what I’d chose. I’m glad I don’t have to make that decision. But condemning options hardly seems like the right answer.

There is simply the reality of severe and chronic mental illness, no matter what, and it is always, painfully sad.

8 comments:

Ken MacDonald said...

You are a fatuous ass. Taking statistics and observing the behavior of pigeons does not qualify you to argue in favor of anything. Removing a part of our brains is different from chaining us up? How do YOU know which the patient would prefer?
And if they preferred suicide would that alter your trite monologue? I suppose you read the minds of comatose patients as well! There are situations without evidence to make a choice and this is one of them -- no evidence from the patient, the one that matters, that is. You keep looking the other way when you pass those smelly beggars on the street missy. Talk to someone who has loved a psychotic or a schizophrenic. Talk about their lucid moments. Talk about the founder of Orthomolecular Medicine who died in Victoria BC in the last 5? years and had success treating schizophrenics with niacin among other things. May your significant other get Alzheimers.

Ruby "Bean" Donegal said...

Dude, um, Ivy works with the mentally ill, and is probably more intelligent than you are.
An opinion is an opinion, but some opinions happen to have science on their side, not just mean words.
To use a beautiful phrase from the 90s:
"Take a chill-pill man"

Jesse said...

I to work in mental health, and in part, agree with the initial author in his defense of the lobotomy. After 13 years of education and licensure, and after working inpatient wards (both civil and forensic)I understand his point of view partially. My primary reason for partial agreement is the motivation for the lobotomy. Yes, I agree that lobotomies as conducted in the 40-60's were a horrid mistake, but lets not lose site of the reason for why they were done. The main proponets of lobotomy, Dr. Edgar Mointz and Dr. Walter Freeman, II, beleived that the procedure alleviated suffering. The hope was to deliver an intervention that helped people. They were not conducting psychosurgery for random purposes or out of some selfish desire to "see what happens." I worked with individuals who because of severe and likley intractible psychosis,are suffering daily to a point that is beyond measure. Rendering them apathetic, child-like, or otherwise "zombified" in not an acceptable alternative, but at the time of the lobotomy, practioners thought that this was a compasionate option to end suffering. It is also noteworth to mention that psychosurgery remains and option today as a treatment option for severe compulsive conditions, as mentioned by the primary author.

Anonymous said...

Balls2wall

Anonymous said...

Jesus, you people are the reason scientology is able to fool people with ther hogwash about psychiatry being evil. Issuing vague apologia for a procedure that can only be described as a crime against humanity based on little more than anecdotal experience is absurd and unbecoming a mental health professional. For shame.

Anonymous said...

I don't think a person who hasn't suffered these illnesses has much ground to stand on as to what's 'best' for us. I know it's a miserable existence for some, but we are still human beings. In my opinion, those docs would rather make us docile than be annoyed by our behavior. It's basically euthanasia without physical death, and that's a walking hell I never want to experience.

Anonymous said...

I've had 18 ECT treatments. My doctor told me he'd thrown up his hands as to what to do to me. The treatments were TERRIFYING despite the anesthetic that prevented me from experiencing the seizure while conscious. They had to add an additional sedative to my IV because I would wake up having a panic attack. The doctor wouldn't speak to me before or after the treatments, but had no problem sending that electricity into my brain. I had no response and lost an entire year of memories. My short term memory never recovered. So live THAT and then explain why these are/were good options for us.

Anonymous said...

She explicitly *said* they weren't good options. Just that *having* the option was good.

And, y'know, having a choice... that *is* good. When it comes to mental illness, there often is no good choice, just the lesser evil. Having all the options there to find which is the lesser evil for a given person is a good thing.