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Ashish K. Sahib

1 paper in the library · 1 citation · publishing 2023

Papers

Ketamine treatment modulates habenular and nucleus accumbens static and dynamic functional connectivity in major depression

medRxiv Preprint Server December 1, 2023 Brandon Taraku, Joana R. Loureiro, Ashish K. Sahib et al. 1 citation preprint

In major depressive disorder, ketamine infusions alter brain connectivity in networks involving the habenula and nucleus accumbens, regions central to reward processing. After four subanesthetic ketamine infusions given to 58 adults with depression, resting-state fMRI scans showed specific changes in static and dynamic functional connectivity between these regions and visual, parietal, and cerebellar areas. Decreased variability in connectivity between the left habenula and right precuneus and visual cortex, and between the right nucleus accumbens and right visual cortex, correlated with reduced depression severity. Reduced connectivity between the left habenula and visual/parietal cortices, and increased connectivity between the left nucleus accumbens and visual/parietal cortices, correlated with improvements in anhedonia. Ketamine appears to modulate overlapping habenula and nucleus accumbens functional pathways related to therapeutic response.