Neuroscience and biobehavioral reviews

How ketamine may change brain prediction processes to reduce depression

Updated

Abstract

Ketamine may produce fast-acting antidepressant effects within hours after a single subanesthetic dose.

  • Ketamine is associated with transient dissociative symptoms that resolve within hours after administration.
  • The brain's predictive processing may be disrupted by ketamine, impairing top-down predictions and enhancing prediction errors.
  • Major depressive disorder may involve over-rigid predictions that hinder the updating of information, leading to negative feedback loops.
  • Ketamine could enhance delayed neural plasticity pathways through the potentiation of AMPA receptors, potentially prolonging antidepressant effects up to seven days.
  • The distinct timeframes of ketamine's antidepressant and dissociative effects may be key to its therapeutic properties.

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