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Xiao Ji

Beijing Key Laboratory for the Diagnosis and Treatment of Mental Disorders, National Clinical Research Center for Mental Disorders, Beijing Anding Hospital, Capital Medical University, Beijing, China.

1 paper in the library · publishing 2025

Papers

Low-dose intravenous esketamine on a depressive catatonia patient with venous thromboembolism: a case report.

Frontiers in psychiatry January 1, 2025 Meng-Han Zhang, Yi-Fan Wang, Juan Li et al.

A 55-year-old woman with depressive catatonia, who had a poor response to initial treatment with benzodiazepines and aripiprazole and could not receive modified electroconvulsive therapy due to deep vein thrombosis, was given a single sub-anesthetic dose of intravenous esketamine (0.2 mg/Kg) combined with desvenlafaxine. Catatonia symptoms, measured by the Bush-Francis Catatonia Rating Scale, dropped from 19 to 0 within 4 hours. Depressive symptoms, measured by the Montgomery-Åsberg Depression Rating Scale, fell from 46 to 9 at 48 hours, and the improvement remained stable over 20 weeks. Esketamine may offer a rapid and safe option for catatonic patients who cannot undergo electroconvulsive therapy or do not respond to conventional treatment.