A Meta-Analysis of fMRI Activation Studies of Ketamine in Healthy Participants
J. H. Shepherd, A. Hickman, C. Baten, A. M. Klassen, G. Zamora, E. Johnson-Venegas, S. S. Madugula, E. Woo, J. A. Miller, M. D. Sacchet, D. W. Hedges, C. H. Miller

TL;DR
This study summarizes fMRI data to show how ketamine affects brain activity in healthy people, offering insights into its potential for treating mental health issues.
Contribution
The paper provides a comprehensive meta-analysis of ketamine's neural effects in healthy individuals using advanced statistical methods.
Findings
Ketamine significantly alters activation in multiple cortical and subcortical brain regions in healthy participants.
The study uses multilevel kernel density analysis and Monte Carlo simulations to correct for multiple comparisons.
Findings may inform therapeutic applications of ketamine for psychiatric and neurological conditions.
Abstract
There has been rapidly growing interest in understanding the pharmaceutical and clinical properties of psychedelic and dissociative drugs, with a particular focus on ketamine. This compound, long known for its anesthetic and dissociative properties, has garnered attention due to its potential to rapidly alleviate symptoms of depression, especially in individuals with treatment-resistant depression (TRD) or acute suicidal ideation or behavior. However, while ketamine’s psychopharmacological effects are increasingly well-documented, the specific patterns of its neural impact remain a subject of exploration and basic questions remain about its effects on functional activation in both clinical and healthy populations. This meta-analysis seeks to contribute to the evolving landscape of neuroscience research on dissociative drugs such as ketamine by comprehensively examining the effects of…
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Taxonomy
TopicsTreatment of Major Depression
