Frontier mental health research: psychedelics & drug studies

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4 papers

Ketamine

Based on 42 papers

Researchers agree that ketamine can lift symptoms of major depression quickly for some people, often within hours to a day. Many trials show fast drops in suicidal thoughts and short-term mood improvement, but these effects usually fade over days to weeks unless treatment is repeated. Esketamine, a related nasal form, is approved for hard-to-treat depression and must be given in clinics with monitoring. Outside depression, scientists are testing ketamine for PTSD, anxiety, addiction, and other conditions. Early results are mixed or smaller for those problems. People still debate the best dose, how often to repeat treatments, how long benefits last, how much the drug experience or therapy around it matters, and what long-term risks (including possible misuse) might be.

Key findings

  • Ketamine can reduce depression symptoms very fast, sometimes within hours, and effects often peak around 24 hours after a single infusion. 10152 10149 15070
  • The antidepressant effect after one ketamine infusion usually lasts days to about two weeks, so many studies use repeated doses to keep benefits going. 12152 10149
  • Esketamine (a nasal spray) is approved for treatment-resistant depression and for depression with acute suicidal thoughts, and it must be given in a clinic with two-hour monitoring and blood-pressure checks. 10144 12156 15070
  • A common research method is an intravenous infusion of about 0.5 mg per kg over roughly 40 minutes; studies also test other routes like intranasal, subcutaneous, or intramuscular dosing. 10149 10159 12156 12152
  • Beyond depression, ketamine has shown early signs of helping with suicidal thoughts, PTSD, anxiety disorders, and some substance-use problems, but the evidence outside depression is smaller or less certain. 12152 9521 15068
  • Common short-term side effects include dissociation (a strange or detached feeling), sedation, higher blood pressure, dizziness, and brief psychosis-like sensations; these usually go away within a few hours. 12152 10159 10151 12156
  • Studies done under medical supervision report only a few clear cases of tolerance or dependence, so the addiction risk in clinical use seems low, but researchers say long-term risk is still uncertain. 8828 12152 12365
  • Scientists have evidence about how ketamine works, such as blocking NMDA receptors and boosting AMPA signaling, BDNF, and mTOR pathways that support brain plasticity, but the exact chain of events is still being worked out. 10147 10146 10148 9521 15070
  • Many published ketamine studies are small or have risks of bias, so experts call for larger, longer trials to answer questions about long-term safety, optimal dosing plans, and which patients will benefit most. 12152 10153 15129

Synthesizing the Evidence for Ketamine and Esketamine in Treatment-Resistant Depression: An International Expert Opinion on the Available Evidence and Implementation

Roger S. McIntyre, Joshua D. Rosenblat, Charles B. Nemeroff, Gerard Sanacora, James W. Murrough, Michael Berk, et al.
American Journal of Psychiatry Summary & key facts 2021 646 citations

A group of international mood-disorder experts reviewed the research on ketamine and esketamine for adults whose depression did not get better with usual antidepressants. They found that these drugs work differently from standard antidepressants and can lift symptoms more quickly for some people with treatment-resistant depression. However, the experts also…

Mental Health Research Topics Treatment of Major Depression Tryptophan and brain disorders Ketamine

Efficacy and safety of a 4-week course of repeated subcutaneous ketamine injections for treatment-resistant depression (KADS study): randomised double-blind active-controlled trial

Colleen Loo, Nick Glozier, Dávid Barton, Bernhard T. Baune, Natalie Mills, Paul B. Fitzgerald, et al.

Researchers tested repeated subcutaneous (under-the-skin) injections of racemic ketamine in people whose depression had not improved after at least two antidepressant trials. People got injections twice a week for 4 weeks and neither participants nor the raters knew which drug they were getting. When the study allowed higher, response-guided ketamine…

Mental Health Research Topics Treatment of Major Depression Tryptophan and brain disorders Ketamine

RETRACTED ARTICLE: ArticleNoteRapid and sustained antidepressant effects of intravenous ketamine in treatment-resistant major depressive disorder and suicidal ideation: a randomized clinical trial

Ahmad Zolghadriha, Afagh Anjomshoaa, Mohammad Jamshidi, Farnaz Taherkhani
BMC Psychiatry Summary & key facts 2024 20 citations

This paper reported a small, randomized trial of 64 people with treatment-resistant major depression who were given a single intravenous dose of ketamine or a saline placebo. The authors said depression and suicidal thoughts dropped quickly — within an hour — and that benefits lasted up to two months, but…

Mental Health Research Topics Treatment of Major Depression Tryptophan and brain disorders Ketamine

Is there a risk of addiction to ketamine during the treatment of depression? A systematic review of available literature

Gianmarco Ingrosso, Anthony J. Cleare, Mário F. Juruena
PubMed Summary & key facts 2025 13 citations

This systematic review looked at 16 studies of ketamine used to treat adults with depression, covering 2,174 patients. The authors found few clear cases of tolerance or dependence (four patients) and conclude that, overall, ketamine appears relatively safe for depression when given under medical supervision, with careful monitoring and dosing.…

Mental Health Research Topics Treatment of Major Depression Tryptophan and brain disorders Ketamine
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