Ketamine & Depression: How it Works – Yale Medicine Explains

For more information on Ketamine or #YaleMedicine, visit: https://www.yalemedicine.org/news/ketamine-depression.

Depression is one of the most common and most debilitating mental health disorders, affecting some 17 million adults in the US. It also continues to be a misunderstood, often hard-to-treat illness. Researchers have worked for decades to better understand the neurobiology underpinning depression. For patients with severe, treatment-resistant depression, spending months or even years searching for good treatments can be totally disabling. The prevailing hypothesis for years was that depression was regulated by the neurotransmitter’s serotonin and norepinephrine. Eventually, data began to suggest that maybe something much larger and more global was involved in the brain to account for depression, which led researchers to begin working with glutamate and GABA, the most abundant neurotransmitters in the brain. These chemicals are involved in neuroplasticity – the brain’s ability to adapt to change and protect itself against stressful events. Neuroplasticity is a physical thing, too: it manifests itself “in terms of synapses, how these neurons are actually touching each other and communicating with each other,” explains Gerard Sanacora, PhD, MD, Director of the Yale Depression Research Program. “And we know that in depression, the number and strength of these interconnections decreases,” says Rachel Katz, MD, a professor of Clinical Psychiatry at Yale. Ketamine – originally developed and still used as an anesthetic – works on those two neurotransmitters and was discovered to have rapid antidepressant effects. Some experience an improvement in symptoms in 24 hours or less. “We think that one of the things that Ketamine does, that helps to explain its antidepressant effects, is help the brain to regrow the synapses, the connections between nerve cells,” says John Krystal, MD, Chair of the Department of Psychiatry at Yale. Because Ketamine seems to work on a totally different system in the brain than typical antidepressants, “that may be why Ketamine works so well, even for patients who have not had success with a number of standard antidepressants,” says Dr. Katz. Ketamine as a treatment for depression gained FDA approval last year with the release of Spravato (esketamine), and for now, it remains a treatment reserved for patients who haven’t found success with at least two other antidepressant treatments. Dr. Sanacora explains that other treatments, including cognitive behavioral therapy, are important to use in conjunction with ketamine, “to develop new ways of adapting and having new cognitive strategies of dealing with future stressors to prevent relapse.” New therapies like ketamine are changing how depression is understood, and may pave the way for future research that helps us understand the brain in all of its complexity.

21 Comments

  1. Ketamine has emerged as a promising treatment for depression, and Dr. Tonmoy Sharma, a distinguished mental health specialist, author, and the dedicated team at Sovereign Health institution, have been at the forefront of incorporating innovative therapies like Ketamine into their comprehensive mental health care model. Their approach, supported by testimonies from employees and patients who have experienced remarkable transformations, underscores the positive impact of Ketamine. These testimonials express deep gratitude for the effectiveness and hope it has provided in the battle against depression. Dr. Tonmoy Sharma's tireless advocacy to make cutting-edge treatments accessible to those in need amplifies the significance of this approach. By combining Ketamine with evidence-based therapies, they offer individuals a powerful tool in overcoming depression, ultimately enhancing lives and the landscape of mental health care.

  2. Starting treatment July 16, and really looking forward to it. A bit nervous, but 30+ years of anti-depressants have had little effect, other than to remove suicidal ideation. I am flat, and looking forward to feeling something.

  3. Broke my wrist went to the hospital and they sedated me with ketamine. I woke up and I was crying. I had seen my dad who just passed away and I weep in the hospital for another two hours. It was life-changing experience. I felt a lot different after I left the hospitalwith the broken wrist, but with a mindful of happy and different thoughts

  4. Healing does not equal profit.
    Despite FDA even approving it insurances still don't cover even for military and veterans who are silently suffering and civilians as well with depression, anxiety and also chronic pain.
    This could heal us instead being treated by dangerous drugs that work on symptoms vs cause of issue.

  5. I've done quite a few treatments, but I don't unfortunately see really noticeable results. I am taking it at home, with (at this point) no other therapy. Guess I was dumb enough to hope there was a magic bullet… I'm signing up for therapy now, hopefully Ketamine can be part of my recovery still (and hopefully without severe bladder damage)

  6. I’m currently on IV Ketamine therapy, along with PTSD talk therapy. I can say it’s already changing my outlook being more positive. Less anxiety more clear thinking, like a fog has lifted.

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