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Peter T Morgan

Department of Psychiatry, Yale University School of Medicine, New Haven, United States.

2 papers in the library · 28 citations · publishing 2024-2026

Papers

Ketamine induces multiple individually distinct whole-brain functional connectivity signatures.

eLife April 17, 2024 Flora Moujaes, Jie Lisa Ji, Masih Rahmati et al. 23 citations

Ketamine is a promising treatment for treatment-resistant depression, but why people respond differently is poorly understood. In a single-blind placebo-controlled study, 40 healthy participants received acute ketamine. Using data-driven global brain connectivity, the neural and behavioral effects of ketamine were found to be multi-dimensional, reflecting robust inter-individual variability. Ketamine's principal neural gradient matched somatostatin and parvalbumin cortical gene expression patterns, while the mean effect did not. Behavioral symptom variation mapped onto distinct neural gradients resolvable at the single-subject level. These results highlight the importance of individual variation for developing precise pharmacological biomarkers in psychiatry.

Sleep alterations in substance use disorders: a systematic review and meta-analysis.

EClinicalMedicine January 1, 2026 Henrique Nunes Pereira Oliva, Tiago Paiva Prudente, Alisson M Paredes Naveda et al. 5 citations

Sleep disturbances are common in people with substance use disorders and often persist after stopping use. This systematic review and meta-analysis of 43 studies with about 7500 participants examined sleep abnormalities linked to alcohol, benzodiazepine, cannabis, cocaine, methamphetamine, nicotine, and opioid use disorders. Total sleep time was reduced in alcohol, nicotine, and opioid use disorders. Slow-wave sleep was reduced in alcohol and cocaine use disorders. Sleep quality, measured by the Pittsburgh Sleep Quality Index, was poorer in alcohol, cocaine, and nicotine use disorders. No studies met criteria for benzodiazepine or methamphetamine use disorders. Results suggest specific substances relate to distinct sleep problems, highlighting areas for further research.