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585414 tn?1288941302

Ketamine in Clinical Study for Bipolar Depression

http://www.nytimes.com/2010/08/10/health/10depress.html

"Anesthetic Said to Aid Depression"
"A new study suggests that a 50-year-old drug commonly used as an anesthetic for humans and animals" —
"may deliver almost instant relief in some of the most troublesome cases of bipolar depression.
It has been known for several years that small doses of the drug, ketamine, can relieve major depression. But this study, done by researchers at the National Institute of Mental Health, is the first to demonstrate efficacy in patients with treatment-resistant bipolar depression.
Indeed, the researchers said, the effect on this group appeared to be even stronger. Although the study was small, with just 18 patients, it was conducted under the highest standards for a drug study: it was randomized, placebo-controlled and double-blinded.
In bipolar disorder, sometimes called manic-depressive illness, patients cycle between periods of elation and severe depression, and the depressive phase carries a high risk of suicide. It is commonly treated with mood stabilizers, including lithium, anticonvulsants and some antipsychotics, often in complex combinations.
Both mania and depression usually improve on these drugs. But when the depression remains, it is notoriously difficult to treat, so a fast-acting medicine with lasting effects would have obvious advantages. Ketamine probably acts by limiting the action of one type of brain receptor that moves nerve signals between neurons."
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585414 tn?1288941302
Yes I am somewhat familiar with that. For example Namenda which is used to treat dementia is in clinical study as a mood stabilizer and to treat tardive dyskinesia. However as those medications specifically effect those receptors by mitigating their activity they work in an opposite manner to glycine and the NMDA receptor modulates. For that reason although my neurologist considered it I was not allowed to take Namenda for its usage on tardive because it would act against the glycine and make it less effective as they work in an opposite manner. The glutamate receptors are new as regards a specific clinical understanding and depending on the specific effect as regards treatment, medications that both mitigate their activity as is discussed in the article and enhance their activity (such as glycine) are being studied and as is always true treatments are being studied for further uses than they were originally developed for.
Helpful - 0
1042487 tn?1275279899
It must be the case for most NDMA receptor antagonists... Even with the co-agonist glycine.
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