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C. Reynolds

2 papers in the library · 46 citations · publishing 2022-2023

Papers

Intravenous Ketamine for Late-Life Treatment-Resistant Depression: A Pilot Study of Tolerability, Safety, Clinical Benefits, and Effect on Cognition

The American journal of geriatric psychiatry December 1, 2022 H. Oughli, M. A. Gebara, A. Ciarleglio et al. 33 citations

Repeated intravenous ketamine infusions are well-tolerated and associated with improvements in depression and executive function in older adults aged 60 and older with treatment-resistant depression. In a pilot trial, 25 participants received ketamine twice weekly for four weeks, with partial responders continuing weekly infusions for four more weeks. Completion rates were high (88% acute, 100% continuation), with no serious adverse events or discontinuations due to side effects. Transient blood pressure elevation, dissociation, and craving occurred but were manageable. Depressive symptoms improved significantly, with 48% of participants responding. Executive function and overall fluid cognition also improved (Cohen's d = 0.61) and were sustained.

Change in patient‐centered outcomes of psychological well‐being, sleep, and suicidality following treatment with intravenous ketamine for late‐life treatment‐resistant depression

International Journal of Geriatric Psychiatry July 1, 2023 Benjamin Vanderschelden, M. A. Gebara, H. Oughli et al. 13 citations

Among older adults with treatment-resistant depression, intravenous ketamine treatment was associated with improvements in psychological well-being and sleep, but not in suicidality. The findings suggest that ketamine may enhance aspects of mental health beyond depressive symptoms in this population, though its effect on suicidal thoughts remains unclear.