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David M. Lyons

VA Palo Alto Health Care System

1 paper in the library · 510 citations · publishing 2018

Papers

Attenuation of Antidepressant Effects of Ketamine by Opioid Receptor Antagonism

American Journal of Psychiatry August 29, 2018 Nolan Williams, Boris D. Heifets, Christine Blasey et al. 510 citations

Blocking opioid receptors with naltrexone dramatically reduced the antidepressant effect of ketamine in adults with treatment-resistant depression, while leaving ketamine's dissociative effects unchanged. In a double-blind crossover trial, 12 participants received either placebo or 50 mg of naltrexone before a ketamine infusion. Seven of 12 met the response criterion (≥50% reduction in depression scores) after ketamine plus placebo, but depression score reductions were significantly smaller when naltrexone was given. The trial was halted at an interim analysis because naltrexone blocked the antidepressant effect. The findings indicate that ketamine's acute antidepressant effect requires opioid system activation, while its dissociative effects do not.