Time‐Dependent Therapeutic Effect of S ‐Ketamine on PTSD Mediated by VTA‐OFC Dopaminergic Neurocircuit
Advanced Science – September 25, 2025
Source: OpenAlex
Summary
Early administration of S-Ketamine significantly alleviates PTSD symptoms, especially fear extinction, compared to late treatment. In rodent models, early intervention restored the firing rates of dopamine neurons in the ventral tegmental area (VTA), which were impaired after PTSD modeling. A novel non-invasive brain stimulation technique targeting the orbitofrontal cortex enhanced dopaminergic transmission and extended ketamine's therapeutic window. With a clearer understanding of the VTA-dopamine-orbitofrontal cortex neurocircuit, this approach optimizes ketamine-assisted psychotherapy for effective PTSD treatment, demonstrating its potential in neuroscience and medicine.
Abstract
Current pharmacotherapies for post-traumatic stress disorder (PTSD) are limited by delayed onset and side effects. Despite ketamine exhibiting rapid relief of the core symptoms of PTSD, its clinical efficacy varies considerably depending on the timing of drug delivery. However, the underlying mechanism remains unclear. In this study, the therapeutic effects of early (day 1) and late (day 7) administration of S-Ketamine on behavioral phenotypes in rodent's models of PTSD are compared. It is observed that early rather than late administration of S-Ketamine significantly ameliorates PTSD symptoms, especially impaired fear extinction. The firing and burst rates of VTADA neurons consecutively decrease following PTSD modeling and are restored by early S-Ketamine intervention. In particular, VTADA neurons respond to the conditioned stimuli, mediating the replacement of aversive memory encoding during fear extinction. The inhibition of VTADA-OFC interrupts the PTSD treatment induced by S-Ketamine. A non-invasive temporally interfering brain stimulation targeting the OFC is further developed, sensitizing cortical dopaminergic transmission and extending the effective time window of S-Ketamine for anti-PTSD. Overall, a neural mechanism for the heterogeneous VTADA-OFC neurocircuit-mediated time-dependent therapeutic effect of S-Ketamine is illustrated. In addition, a novel technique is developed to optimize the strategy of ketamine-assisted psychotherapy for PTSD treatment.