Safety and Tolerability of Ketamine Use in Treatment-Resistant Bipolar Depression Patients with Regard to Central Nervous System Symptomatology: Literature Review and Analysis.
Adam WlodarczykWiesław Jerzy CubałaPublished in: Medicina (Kaunas, Lithuania) (2020)
The current psychopharmacological treatment approaches for major depression focus on monoaminergic interventions, which are ineffective in a large proportion of patients. Globally, treatment-resistant bipolar depression (TRBD) affects up to 33% of depressive patients receiving treatment. Certain needs are still unmet and require new approaches. Many studies are in favor of treatments with ketamine, an N-methyl-D-aspartate (NMDA) receptor antagonist, even in single use, whose effects emerge in minutes to hours post administration. However, little data are available on ketamine performance in TRBD patients with somatic comorbidities, including highly prevalent ones, i.e., cardiovascular disease (heart failure, hypertension, post-myocardial infarct, arrhythmias, etc.) diabetes, and obesity, and depression-associated comorbidities such as stroke, epilepsy, as well as in the elderly population. The literature shows that treatment with ketamine is efficacious and safe, and the majority of adverse drug reactions are mild and tend to mostly disappear within 30 min to 2 h of ketamine administration.
Keyphrases
- cardiovascular disease
- heart failure
- pain management
- type diabetes
- depressive symptoms
- bipolar disorder
- blood pressure
- systematic review
- atrial fibrillation
- left ventricular
- metabolic syndrome
- randomized controlled trial
- emergency department
- sleep quality
- clinical trial
- ejection fraction
- weight loss
- physical activity
- copy number
- electronic health record
- dna methylation
- gene expression
- chronic kidney disease
- open label
- combination therapy
- skeletal muscle
- blood brain barrier
- brain injury
- weight gain
- middle aged
- cardiovascular risk factors
- cardiovascular events
- chronic pain
- drug induced
- cardiac resynchronization therapy