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R. Pietrzak

2 papers in the library · 304 citations · publishing 2014-2021

Papers

A Randomized Controlled Trial of Repeated Ketamine Administration for Chronic Posttraumatic Stress Disorder.

American Journal of Psychiatry January 5, 2021 A. Feder, Sara Costi, S. Rutter et al. 239 citations

Repeated intravenous infusions of ketamine, given over two weeks, significantly reduced symptom severity in chronic PTSD compared to a psychoactive placebo (midazolam). At two weeks, the ketamine group scored nearly 12 points lower on the Clinician-Administered PTSD Scale, and 67% of participants responded to treatment versus 20% in the placebo group. Among responders, the median time to loss of response was 27.5 days after the infusion course. Ketamine was well tolerated with no serious adverse events. This is the first randomized controlled trial to show efficacy of repeated ketamine infusions for chronic PTSD.

Preliminary analysis of positive and negative syndrome scale in ketamine-associated psychosis in comparison with schizophrenia

Journal of Psychiatric Research December 24, 2014 Ke Xu, J. Krystal, Y. Ning et al. 65 citations

Ketamine, a drug that blocks NMDA glutamate receptors, produces symptoms resembling schizophrenia. Analyzing the Positive and Negative Syndrome Scale (PANSS) in four groups—135 healthy people given ketamine or saline, 187 chronic ketamine abusers, 154 early-course schizophrenia patients, and 522 chronic schizophrenia patients—revealed five similar symptom dimensions (positive, negative, cognitive, depressed, excitement/dissociation) across all groups. The chronic ketamine group's symptom structure more closely matched the schizophrenia groups than the acute ketamine group did. Symptoms were milder in ketamine users than in schizophrenia patients (Cohen's d = 0.7). The findings suggest ketamine-induced psychosis shares symptom dimensions with schizophrenia, though confounding factors warrant caution.