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Elizabeth D. Ballard

National Institute of Mental Health

5 papers in the library · 1,123 citations · publishing 2014-2025

Papers

The effect of a single dose of intravenous ketamine on suicidal ideation: a systematic review and individual participant data meta-analysis

American Journal of Psychiatry October 3, 2017 S. Wilkinson, Elizabeth D. Ballard, M. Bloch et al. 680 citations

A single dose of ketamine rapidly reduces suicidal thoughts within one day and for up to one week in depressed patients with suicidal ideation. The effect is moderate to large and partially independent of changes in depressive symptoms. The analysis combined data from 167 participants across 10 studies comparing ketamine to a placebo (saline or midazolam). Ketamine significantly improved clinician-rated and self-reported suicidal ideation, though not on one self-report measure (the Beck Depression Inventory). The authors call for further research on long-term safety and suicide risk reduction before clinical use.

Ketamine Has Distinct Electrophysiological and Behavioral Effects in Depressed and Healthy Subjects

Molecular Psychiatry February 27, 2018 A. Nugent, Elizabeth D. Ballard, T. Gould et al. 254 citations

In a double-blind, placebo-controlled, randomized cross-over trial with 35 unmedicated people with major depressive disorder (MDD) and 25 healthy controls, ketamine (0.5 mg/kg) improved depressive symptoms in MDD subjects but caused modest, temporary increases in depressive symptoms in healthy controls. Both groups showed increased resting gamma power measured by magnetoencephalography. Among MDD subjects, gamma power did not directly predict the size of the antidepressant effect. However, baseline gamma power moderated the link between post-ketamine gamma and response: higher post-ketamine gamma was tied to better response in those with low baseline gamma, but the opposite pattern appeared in those with high baseline gamma. This suggests biological subtypes based on homeostatic dysregulation and cautions against inferring ketamine's mechanism solely from studies of healthy controls.

Features of Dissociation Differentially Predict Antidepressant Response to Ketamine in Treatment-Resistant Depression

Journal of Affective Disorders February 17, 2018 M. Niciu, Bridget J. Shovestul, Brittany A. Jaso et al. 134 citations

Depersonalization—a feeling of detachment from one's own body or thoughts—was the dissociative symptom most strongly linked to ketamine's antidepressant effect in patients with treatment-resistant depression. Analyzing data from 126 patients with major depressive or bipolar disorder who received a single ketamine infusion, researchers found that higher scores on the depersonalization subscale of the Clinician-Administered Dissociative States Scale consistently predicted greater improvement in depression ratings across multiple time points. Derealization (feeling the world is unreal) showed a weaker and less consistent association, while amnesia was unrelated to antidepressant response. The finding suggests that depersonalization and antidepressant response may share neurobiological mechanisms, though off-target effects cannot be ruled out.

Ketamine’s Antidepressant Efficacy is Extended for at Least Four Weeks in Subjects with a Family History of an Alcohol Use Disorder

The International Journal of Neuropsychopharmacology December 19, 2014 Mark J. Niciu, David A. Luckenbaugh, Dawn F. Ionescu et al. 55 citations

A single low-dose infusion of the anesthetic ketamine produces rapid antidepressant effects in people with treatment-resistant major depressive disorder. In this trial, depressed individuals with a family history of alcohol use disorder showed a longer-lasting antidepressant response to ketamine compared to those without such a family history. Adding the drug riluzole did not extend or enhance ketamine's antidepressant durability. The findings suggest that family history of alcohol use disorder may predict a more durable ketamine response, which should be accounted for in future ketamine depression studies.

Effects of Psychedelic Drug Use on Neurocognitive Function and Psychological and Social Quality of Life Domains: An International Online Study

medRxiv August 28, 2025 Franziska Stadler, Johan Saelens, Ioline D. Henter et al. preprint

An international online study of 759 people examined how psychedelic drug use affects cognitive performance and mental health in the short and long term. Participants completed tasks measuring working memory, selective attention, and visual/spatial perception, plus questionnaires on mental health and quality of life. Recent users showed significantly lower accuracy on all cognitive tasks and reported more depressive and dissociative symptoms. Lifetime users had the highest task accuracy without slower reaction times, and their use was not linked to long-term cognitive decline. However, lifetime users scored lower on psychological and social quality of life domains, suggesting possible long-term psychosocial effects.