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Seyed Hamdollah Mosavat

Research Center for Traditional Medicine and History of Medicine, Department of Persian Medicine, School of Medicine, Shiraz University of Medical Sciences, Shiraz, Iran. hamdi_88114@yahoo.com.

1 paper in the library · 4 citations · publishing 2025

Papers

Adjunctive ketamine vs. buprenorphine in co-occurring major depressive disorder and opioid use disorder: a randomized, double-blind clinical trial assessing anxiety symptom severity and craving intensity.

Trials April 17, 2025 Arash Mansoori, Amir Bazrafshan, Jamshid Ahmadi et al. 4 citations

For people with both major depressive disorder and opioid use disorder, a randomized clinical trial compared the effects of adding either ketamine or buprenorphine to standard treatments. Ketamine produced a rapid and substantial reduction in anxiety symptoms within hours, along with a pronounced decline in opioid craving. Buprenorphine led to a more gradual but sustained improvement in anxiety over several days, with a modest initial reduction in craving that persisted afterward. Both drugs reduced anxiety and craving, but through different time courses.