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Lin Zhu

Department of Anesthesiology, The First Affiliated Hospital, Hengyang Medical School, University of South China, No. 69 West Chuanshan Road, Hengyang, Hunan Province 421001, P. R. China.

2 papers in the library · 44 citations · publishing 2022-2025

Papers

Mind–Body Exercises for PTSD Symptoms, Depression, and Anxiety in Patients With PTSD: A Systematic Review and Meta-Analysis

Frontiers in Psychology January 18, 2022 Lin Zhu, Long Li, Xiaozhi Li et al. 43 citations

Mind-body exercises such as yoga and mindfulness significantly reduce PTSD symptoms, depression, and anxiety in people with PTSD. A meta-analysis of 16 randomized controlled trials found a moderate effect on PTSD symptoms (standard mean difference = -0.41), depression (-0.35), and anxiety (-0.31). The most effective regimen for PTSD symptoms in patients under 45 was 60-150 minutes of mindfulness per session for 8-16 weeks. For depression, 150-180 minutes of yoga once weekly was effective. The optimal type, frequency, and duration for anxiety could not be determined due to limited trials. Mind-body exercises are recommended as an adjunct treatment, but more rigorous trials are needed.

Exploring Esketamine's Therapeutic Role for Perinatal Depression via TASK-1 Tandem Pore Potassium Channels.

ACS chemical neuroscience July 29, 2025 Lin Zhu, Ji Chen, Yuan Liu et al. 1 citation

Esketamine significantly lowers depression scores in new mothers with perinatal depression, as shown in a clinical trial with 298 full-term pregnant women. The antidepressant effect is linked to modulation of TASK-1 potassium channels, which reduces neuroinflammation and depressive-like symptoms. Studies in mouse models and cultured neurons confirm that esketamine acts through these channels to alter synaptic plasticity proteins. This work identifies a specific neural pathway for esketamine's rapid action, offering a promising therapeutic avenue for perinatal depression.