Progress in neuro-psychopharmacology & biological psychiatry

Cognitive and psychotic effects of short- versus long-term ketamine treatment in depressed rats: Changes in a memory-related brain signaling pathway

Updated

Abstract

Essence

Ketamine improved depressive-like behavior in stressed rats, but longer treatment raised cognitive and psychotic-behavior concerns.

Evidence

Preclinical CUS rat experiments compared short- and long-term 10 mg/kg ketamine across behavioral tests, HPA markers, and hippocampal BDNF/TrkB/Akt/GSK-3beta/mTOR/autophagy signals.

Caveat

The safety signal comes from a rat model and behavioral proxies, so it does not establish long-term cognitive or psychotic effects in patients.

Simplified

Full Text

Full text is available at the source.

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