Effect of Acute Ketamine Treatment on Sympathetic Regulation Indexed by Electrodermal Activity in Adolescent Major Depression.
Veronika KovacovaAndrea MacejovaIngrid TonhajzerovaZuzana VisnovcovaNikola SekaninovaZuzana MlyncekovaTomas KukuckaIvan FarskySlavomir NosalIgor OndrejkaPublished in: Pharmaceuticals (Basel, Switzerland) (2024)
Ketamine is a potential rapid-onset antidepressant characterized by sympathomimetic effects. However, the question of ketamine's use in treating adolescents' major depressive disorder (MDD) is still discussed. Thus, we aimed to study the acute effect of ketamine infusion treatment on sympathetic regulation using electrodermal activity (EDA) in addition to an assessment of depressive symptomatology in MDD adolescents. Twenty hospitalized adolescent girls with MDD (average age: 15.0 ± 1.46 yrs.) were examined before and two hours after a single intravenous infusion of ketamine. EDA was continuously recorded for 6 min, and depressive symptoms were assessed before and two hours after ketamine administration. The evaluated parameters included skin conductance level (SCL), nonspecific electrodermal responses (NS-SCRs), MADRS (questions no. 1-10, total score), and CDI (items A-E, total score). EDA parameters showed no significant changes after the ketamine treatment, and depressive symptoms were significantly reduced after the ketamine infusion. The analysis revealed a significant negative correlation between index SCL and CDI-A, CDI-E, and the total CDI score and between index NS-SCRs and MADRS no. 4 before the ketamine treatment. In conclusion, ketamine improved depressive symptomatology without a significant effect on EDA, indicating its potential safety and efficiency as an acute antidepressant intervention in adolescent MDD.
Keyphrases
- major depressive disorder
- pain management
- bipolar disorder
- depressive symptoms
- young adults
- mental health
- physical activity
- drug induced
- respiratory failure
- social support
- climate change
- replacement therapy
- combination therapy
- zika virus
- hepatitis b virus
- intensive care unit
- chronic pain
- human health
- smoking cessation