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Chaoli Huang

Department of Anesthesiology, The First Affiliated Hospital of Nanjing Medical University, Nanjing 210029, China.

1 paper in the library · 4 citations · publishing 2025

Papers

Myelin Repair as a Novel Mechanism for Ketamine's Sustained Antidepressant Effects.

Current neuropharmacology January 16, 2025 Sen Wang, Chaoli Huang, Mengyu Wang et al. 4 citations

Depression affects about 300 million people worldwide, and its underlying mechanisms remain unclear. Changes in oligodendrocytes and myelin are implicated in depression pathology. Conventional antidepressants take weeks to work and fail for about one-third of patients. Ketamine provides rapid, sustained antidepressant effects in treatment-resistant patients. Reduced myelination is linked to depression, so repairing myelin damage may be a key mechanism behind ketamine's prolonged effects. This review summarizes the relationship between demyelination and depression and discusses how ketamine might exert antidepressant effects by repairing myelin, offering new insights into the role of myelination in antidepressant mechanisms.