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Kangguang Lin

Department of Affective Disorders, The Affiliated Brain Hospital of Guangzhou Medical University, Guangzhou, China.

6 papers in the library · 162 citations · publishing 2020-2022

Papers

The effectiveness, safety and tolerability of ketamine for depression in adolescents and older adults: A systematic review.

Journal of Psychiatric Research March 1, 2021 Joshua D. Di Vincenzo, Ashley N. Siegel, Orly Lipsitz et al. 59 citations

Most antidepressant medication trials have focused on adults aged 18-65, leaving gaps in knowledge about older and younger populations. Ketamine shows promise for treatment-resistant depression, but its effects in adolescents and older adults are not well understood. This systematic review of 13 studies found that ketamine produced rapid antidepressant effects (within two weeks) in ten studies, with better results from larger, repeated doses and in open-label rather than blinded settings. Two case reports in adolescents noted rapid anti-suicidal effects. Ketamine appeared safe and well-tolerated in these age groups. However, the small number of studies, high heterogeneity, and generally low quality prevent firm conclusions, and rigorous randomized controlled trials are still needed.

Safety and tolerability of IV ketamine in adults with major depressive or bipolar disorder: results from the Canadian rapid treatment center of excellence

Expert Opinion on Drug Safety June 15, 2020 Nelson B Rodrigues, R. Mcintyre, Orly Lipsitz et al. 50 citations

Intravenous ketamine is safe and well-tolerated in community-based clinics for treatment-resistant depression. Among 203 patients, fewer than 5% withdrew due to tolerability concerns. Blood pressure increased significantly during infusion, with 44.3% meeting criteria for treatment-emergent hypertension (≥165/100 mmHg), and 12% of those with hypertension required medication. Common adverse events were drowsiness (56.4%), dizziness (45.2%), dissociation (35.6%), and nausea (13.3%). Dissociation severity lessened after the first infusion then plateaued. No patients developed psychosis, mania, or new onset suicidality.

Ketamine for psychotic depression: An overview of the glutamatergic system and ketamine's mechanisms associated with antidepressant and psychotomimetic effects.

Psychiatry Research October 1, 2021 Tuyen T. Le, Joshua D. Di Vincenzo, K. Teopiz et al. 26 citations

Psychotic depression, a severe form of major depression with hallucinations or delusions, affects 0.35-1% of people over a lifetime. Current treatments, such as antidepressants combined with antipsychotics or electroconvulsive therapy, often lead to relapse and side effects like tardive dyskinesia. Some case studies suggest ketamine may improve both mood and psychotic symptoms in treatment-resistant patients, but its safety is debated because ketamine can induce psychotomimetic effects. Most clinical trials have excluded these patients, so it remains unknown whether ketamine would worsen psychosis. Future research should include people with psychotic features to determine ketamine's safety and effectiveness.

A Research Domain Criteria (RDoC)-Guided Dashboard to Review Psilocybin Target Domains: A Systematic Review.

CNS drugs October 1, 2022 Niloufar Pouyan, Zahra Halvaei Khankahdani, Farnaz Younesi Sisi et al. 16 citations

A systematic review of psilocybin research organized by the Research Domain Criteria (RDoC) framework found that psilocybin has beneficial effects across multiple domains, particularly on positive valence systems, negative valence systems, and social processes. Short-term (23 assessments) and long-term (15 assessments) benefits were reported for positive valence systems. For the negative valence system, 12 outcome measures indicated increased fear, 19 showed no significant effect, and 7 parameters indicated lowered sustained threat over the long term. Thirty-four outcome measures revealed short-term alterations in social systems, including enhanced perception and understanding of others and affiliation. Cognitive systems findings mostly reported dyscognitive effects. Seven studies suggested transdiagnostic effects.

Frequency analysis of symptomatic worsening following ketamine infusions for treatment resistant depression in a real-world sample: Results from the canadian rapid treatment center of excellence.

Psychiatry research January 1, 2022 Joshua D Di Vincenzo, Orly Lipsitz, Nelson B Rodrigues et al. 11 citations

A small proportion of people with treatment-resistant depression experience clinically significant worsening of symptoms during a course of intravenous ketamine, but the rate is very low—between 1.83% and 5.49% across infusion time points—and similar to that seen with conventional antidepressants. In a retrospective analysis of 164 adults (142 with unipolar depression and 22 with bipolar depression) who received four ketamine infusions over two weeks, no individuals with bipolar depression reported worsening. The findings suggest that symptomatic worsening with ketamine is uncommon, though the study's uncontrolled, single-center design limits certainty.

A simplified 6-Item clinician administered dissociative symptom scale (CADSS-6) for monitoring dissociative effects of sub-anesthetic ketamine infusions.

Journal of Affective Disorders December 29, 2020 Nelson B Rodrigues, R. Mcintyre, Orly Lipsitz et al.

A 6-item short form of the Clinician-Administered Dissociative States Scale (CADSS-6) strongly correlates with the full 23-item version in patients with treatment-resistant depression receiving IV ketamine. Using retrospective data from 260 patients split into two groups, the CADSS-6 was derived from items most sensitive to ketamine-induced dissociation. Correlations between the short and full scale ranged from 0.91 to 0.95 across four infusions. The CADSS-6 offers a brief clinical assessment for dissociation, though it remains unvalidated in this population and requires prospective validation.