Objective: Ketamine was proven to have short-term antidepressant effects. There is a paucity of studies focused on the long-term outcomes of repeated infusions of ketamine. This study aimed to examine the long-term outcomes of repeated ketamine infusions in patients with unipolar and bipolar depression METHODS: One hundred and eight patients with unipolar and bipolar depression completed the repeated treatment phase (administered ketamine three times weekly over a 12-day) and entered a 9-month naturalistic follow-up phase. Assessments were obtained at week 2, month 6, and month 9 after the repeated treatment phase. The Patient Health Questionnaire-9 (PHQ-9) Scale and the Global Assessment of Functioning (GAF) Scale were used to assess depressive symptoms and global functional status, respectively.
Results: Seventy-one (65.7%) of patients completed the 9-month follow-up. On month 9, the response and remission rate were 80.3% and 78.9%, respectively. Among 56 patients who achieved response after the repeated treatment phase, 26 (46.4%) of patients sustained response during 9-month follow-up and their GAF score remained over 70. Sixteen patients relapsed during the 9-month follow-up and 14 (85.7%) of the relapse occurred during the first 2-week follow-up.
Limitation: The major limitation of this study is the open-label design.
Conclusions: This small sample study suggested that patients with unipolar and bipolar depression who response to repeated treatment with continued oral antidepressant may be a viable treatment option, and their global functional status improved with a follow-up. Relapse of depression tended to occur during the 2 weeks follow-up.
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http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/j.jad.2021.12.084 | DOI Listing |
Bipolar Disord
December 2024
Institute for Mental and Behavioral Health Research, Nationwide Children's Hospital, Division of Child and Family Psychiatry, The Ohio State University, Columbus, Ohio, USA.
Trials
December 2024
Department of Psychology, Philipps University Marburg, Schulstr. 12, 35037, Marburg/Lahn, Germany.
Background: Process-based therapy (PBT) is a new framework to intervention planning, based on the use of ecological momentary assessment (EMA) data and dynamic and idiographic network analyses. Support for its applicability has been reported from a single-case studies. Here, we examine the feasibility and effectiveness of PBT in a larger clinical sample.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFFront Psychiatry
December 2024
Service of Old Age Psychiatry, Department of Psychiatry, Lausanne University Hospital and University of Lausanne, Prilly, Switzerland.
Introduction: Major depressive disorder (MDD) exhibits heterogeneity in treatment response.
Objective: This exploratory analysis aims to evaluate the differential changes in individual items of the MADRS between melancholic MDD (M-MDD) and unspecified MDD (U-MDD) following electroconvulsive therapy (ECT).
Methods: The study included 23 patients with unipolar MDD who received ECT.
Introduction: Differences in predictability of ablation success for premature ventricular contractions (PVCs) between earliest isochronal map area (EIA), local activation time (LAT) differences on unipolar and bipolar electrograms (⊿LAT), LAT prematurity on bipolar electrograms (LAT), and unipolar morphology of QS or Q pattern remain unclear. We verified multiple statistical predictabilities of those indicators of ablation success on mapped cardiac surface.
Methods: Thirty-five patients with multiple PVCs underwent catheter ablation after LAT mapping using multipolar mapping catheters with unipolar-based annotation.
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