Skip to content

Danica Nogo

2 papers in the library · 41 citations · publishing 2022

Papers

Hallucinogen persisting perceptual disorder: a scoping review covering frequency, risk factors, prevention, and treatment

Expert Opinion on Drug Safety April 15, 2022 Marcus A. Doyle, Susan Ling, Leanna M.W. Lui et al. 24 citations

Hallucinogen persisting perception disorder (HPPD) is an uncommon but serious condition in which individuals repeatedly experience hallucinations and perceptual disturbances after prior hallucinogen use. As some hallucinogens are being developed to treat mental disorders, understanding HPPD becomes more important. A scoping review of the literature up to July 2021 covered treatments, prevalence, risk factors, and pathophysiology of HPPD. The renewed interest in psychedelics as potential treatments highlights the need to better characterize HPPD's frequency, risk and protective factors, key features, and clinical factors.

A review of potential neuropathological changes associated with ketamine

Expert Opinion on Drug Safety May 3, 2022 Danica Nogo, Hana Nazal, Yuetong Song et al. 17 citations

Ketamine is an established treatment for treatment-resistant depression, but long-term adverse effects from repeated doses are not well characterized. Animal models and studies of people with substance use disorder who use high daily doses of ketamine show clear neurotoxic effects, including potential brain lesions. No studies have specifically evaluated the effects of the lower, infrequent sub-anesthetic doses typically prescribed for depression. It is difficult to separate ketamine's direct effects from other factors like comorbidities and dose differences. It remains unknown whether repeated sub-anesthetic dosing in adults with depression causes brain lesions or other neuropathologies. Practitioners should remain vigilant, recognizing that depression itself is linked to neurodegenerative processes.