4.7 Article

Synaptic Potentiation Is Critical for Rapid Antidepressant Response to Ketamine in Treatment-Resistant Major Depression

期刊

BIOLOGICAL PSYCHIATRY
卷 72, 期 7, 页码 555-561

出版社

ELSEVIER SCIENCE INC
DOI: 10.1016/j.biopsych.2012.03.029

关键词

Cortical excitability; gamma oscillation; ketamine; magnetoencephalography; major depression; NMDA antagonist

资金

  1. National Institute of Mental Health
  2. National Alliance for Research on Schizophrenia and Depression

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Background: Clinical evidence that ketamine, a nonselective N-methyl-D-aspartate receptor (NMDAR) antagonist, has therapeutic effects within hours in people suffering from depression suggests that modulating glutamatergic neurotransmission is a fundamental step in alleviating the debilitating symptoms of mood disorders. Acutely, ketamine increases extracellular glutamate levels, neuronal excitability, and spontaneous gamma oscillations, but it is unknown whether these effects are key to the mechanism of antidepressant action of ketamine. Methods: Twenty drug-free major depressive disorder patients received a single, open-label intravenous infusion of ketamine hydrochloride (.5 mg/kg). Magnetoencephalographic recordings were made approximately 3 days before and approximately 6.5 hours after the infusion, whereas patients passively received tactile stimulation to the right and left index fingers and also while they rested (eyes-closed). Antidepressant response was assessed by percentage change in Montgomery-Asberg Depression Rating Scale scores. Results: Patients with robust improvements in depressive symptoms 230 min after infusion (responders) exhibited increased cortical excitability within this antidepressant response window. Specifically, we found that stimulus-evoked somatosensory cortical responses increase after infusion, relative to pretreatment responses in responders but not in treatment nonresponders. Spontaneous somatosensory cortical gamma-band activity during rest did not change within the same timeframe after ketamine in either responders or nonresponders. Conclusions: These findings suggest NMDAR antagonism does not lead directly to increased cortical excitability hours later and thus might not be sufficient for therapeutic effects of ketamine to take hold. Rather, increased cortical excitability as depressive symptoms improve is consistent with the hypothesis that enhanced non-NMDAR-mediated glutamatergic neurotransmission via synaptic potentiation is central to the antidepressant effect of ketamine.

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