Prevention and Management of Common Adverse Effects of Ketamine and Esketamine in Patients with Mood Disorders.
Felicia CebanJoshua D RosenblatKevin KratiukYena LeeNelson B RodriguesHartej GillMehala SubramaniapillaiFlora NasriLeanna M W LuiOrly LipsitzAnil KumarJung Goo LeeEdmond H ChauBing CaoKangguang LinRoger C HoRodrigo B MansurJennifer SwainsonRoger S McIntyrePublished in: CNS drugs (2021)
The emerging roles of ketamine and esketamine as effective rapid-acting antidepressants hold promise for patients suffering from treatment-resistant depression and/or major depressive disorder with suicidality. Practitioner familiarity with common tolerability/safety concerns along with pragmatic prevention and management strategies are needed to reduce patient burden and improve the acceptability and accessibility of these treatments. The most common treatment-emergent adverse events associated with ketamine/esketamine are dissociation, anxiety, nausea, increased blood pressure, and headache. The majority of side effects are mild, transient, dose dependent, and attenuate with subsequent treatments. Patient selection, baseline physical and psychiatric assessments, and an appropriate setting are critical first steps in the prevention and mitigation of adverse events. Patient education and supportive interventions play central roles in the prevention and management of select adverse events. Severe and/or clinically significant adverse effects may necessitate the judicious use of adjunctive medications. Moreover, practitioners must remain vigilant to the potential for abuse liability and long-term adverse events, for which there are insufficient data. This article succinctly reviews common treatment-emergent adverse events of ketamine and esketamine within the context of mood disorders, and provides practical suggestions for prevention and management at point-of-care.
Keyphrases
- major depressive disorder
- bipolar disorder
- blood pressure
- mental health
- physical activity
- end stage renal disease
- pain management
- sleep quality
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- climate change
- newly diagnosed
- chronic kidney disease
- risk assessment
- type diabetes
- ejection fraction
- risk factors
- open label
- study protocol
- randomized controlled trial
- blood glucose
- human health
- weight loss
- metabolic syndrome
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- chronic pain
- machine learning