Nature Mental Health
October 19, 2023
Theresa R. Lii, Ashleigh Smith, Josephine R. Flohr et al.
94 citations
A single dose of intravenous ketamine given during surgical anesthesia was no more effective than placebo at reducing depressive symptoms in adults with major depressive disorder. The trial randomized 40 patients to receive either ketamine or saline while under anesthesia for routine surgery, ensuring that neither participants, investigators, nor staff knew which treatment was given. Depression severity was measured over three days after infusion. Only about 37% of participants correctly guessed their treatment, indicating successful masking. The results suggest that ketamine's antidepressant effect may be influenced by its psychoactive effects, which complicate placebo-controlled testing.
medRxiv Preprint Server
April 28, 2023
Theresa R. Lii, Ashleigh E. Smith, Josephine R. Flohr et al.
28 citations
preprint
Ketamine may have antidepressant properties, but its acute psychoactive effects make it difficult to successfully mask in placebo-controlled trials, complicating the interpretation of study results.
medRxiv
August 7, 2025
Ben Deverett, Duan Li, Theresa R. Lii et al.
preprint
Ketamine produces dissociative, analgesic, and antidepressant effects, but it is unclear whether its underlying neurophysiological signatures can be separated. In this observational cohort study, 52 participants (healthy volunteers, elective surgery patients, and patients with depression) received a subanesthetic infusion of ketamine or placebo, with or without general anesthesia. When ketamine was given under general anesthesia, its characteristic low-frequency brain wave augmentation was absent, while high-frequency power modulation was preserved. This selective modulation suggests a method for investigating the distinct roles of high- and low-frequency neural activity in ketamine's behavioral effects.