Ketamine-induced pleasant but not unpleasant dissociation is linked to the functional connectivity profile of the posteromedial cortex
Zumrut Duygu Sen, Nitin Sharma, Lena Vera Danyeli et al. preprint
Ketamine causes temporary dissociative experiences alongside its rapid therapeutic effects. This study examined whether pleasant and unpleasant dissociations can be predicted by functional connectivity of the posteromedial cortex (PMC) in 35 male participants during ultrahigh-field MRI. Pleasant dissociation (oceanic boundlessness) was predicted by PMC connections with control network regions at baseline and during infusion, and additionally with default mode network regions during infusion. Unpleasant dissociation (anxious ego dissolution) could not be predicted by PMC connectivity. The findings suggest distinct brain mechanisms for pleasant versus unpleasant dissociations, and that PMC connectivity changes may be a shared neural feature of dissociation from both ketamine and psychedelics.