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Owen M Wolkowitz

University of California San Francisco, San Francisco, California.

2 papers in the library · 436 citations · publishing 2011-2025

Papers

Intensive meditation training, immune cell telomerase activity, and psychological mediators.

Psychoneuroendocrinology June 1, 2011 Tonya L Jacobs, Elissa S Epel, Jue Lin et al. 435 citations

After a 3-month meditation retreat with about 6 hours of daily practice, retreat participants showed greater telomerase activity—an indicator of cellular longevity—compared to a matched wait-list control group. Retreat participants also reported increased Perceived Control, Mindfulness, and Purpose in Life, and decreased Neuroticism. Statistical mediation analyses suggested that the retreat's effect on telomerase activity was explained by increases in Perceived Control and decreases in Neuroticism. These changes in perceived control and neuroticism were themselves partially explained by increased Mindfulness and Purpose in Life. Purpose in Life also directly mediated the group difference in telomerase activity, whereas Mindfulness did not. The findings suggest that meditation may influence cellular health through psychological changes.

High Baseline Plasma Anthranilic Acid Predicts Remission Upon Acute-Series Ketamine Infusion for Treatment-Resistant Depression.

Biological psychiatry global open science July 1, 2025 Stephen A Murata, Zachary B Madaj, Colt D Capan et al. 1 citation

Higher baseline levels of anthranilic acid (AA), a metabolite in the kynurenine pathway, predicted remission in patients with treatment-resistant depression receiving intravenous ketamine. In an open-label trial of 74 patients, 52% achieved remission after three infusions. Composite ratios of AA to intercellular adhesion molecule-1 and AA to tryptophan improved predictive accuracy over AA alone. The findings suggest that immunometabolic biomarkers could guide personalized ketamine treatment.