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M. Wallace

2 papers in the library · 66 citations · publishing 2023

Papers

Rapid neuroplasticity changes and response to intravenous ketamine: a randomized controlled trial in treatment-resistant depression

Translational Psychiatry May 9, 2023 Jared M. Kopelman, T. Keller, Benjamin Panny et al. 57 citations

A single intravenous infusion of ketamine (0.5 mg/kg) in 98 adults with unipolar depression who had not responded to at least one antidepressant was associated with rapid changes in gray matter microstructure measured by diffusion tensor imaging (DTI) 24 hours later. Greater decreases in DTI mean diffusivity, a marker of neuroplasticity enhancement, in several brain regions (left and right BA10, left amygdala) correlated with larger improvements in depression scores, particularly in the ketamine group. In the hippocampus, the relationship was reversed for one depression scale. The findings suggest that ketamine's acute antidepressant effects may involve rapid neuroplastic changes detectable with brain imaging.

One-Year Outcomes Following Intravenous Ketamine Plus Digital Training Among Patients with Treatment-Resistant Depression

JAMA Network Open May 1, 2023 R. Price, M. Wallace, S. Mathew et al. 9 citations

Automated self-association training may extend the antidepressant effect of a single ketamine infusion beyond one month in people with treatment-resistant depression. This secondary analysis of a randomized clinical trial tested whether a computerized task designed to strengthen positive self-associations could prolong the benefits of ketamine. The results suggest that combining ketamine with this training could help maintain mood improvement for a longer period than ketamine alone.