Illegal party drug may drive away the blues within 40 minutes
September 14th, 2010 - 1:41 pm ICT by ANILondon, Sept 14 (ANI): The fastest treatment for depression may lie in a horse tranquilliser, according to a new study, which demonstrated the benefits of the drug within 40 minutes.
This compares with the weeks, even months, it takes with traditional antidepressants, reports the Daily Mail.
Two small studies have found that 70 per cent of patients with manic depression responded positively to the horse drug ketamine, with the effects lasting for at least three days.
A number of clinical trials are under way, investigating the benefits of the drug.
Manic depression - also known as bipolar disorder - is characterised by mood swings ranging from extreme happiness to extreme sadness. These episodes of highs and lows can often last for several weeks or more - they may be interspersed by periods of normal mood.
Many people can also suffer episodes of recurrent depression without the extreme highs. The condition is thought to be a result of imbalances in brain chemicals such as norepinephrine, serotonin and dopamine.
Ketamine has a reputation as an illegal party drug but it has also long been used as an anaesthetic. It works in a different way from traditional medicine for treating depression.
The drug targets the activity of the brain chemical glutamate. One of glutamate’s jobs is to boost the electrical flow among brain cells.
Studies have shown that when this is interrupted, depression can result. Ketamine helps by blocking a brain protein, which affects glutamate signals.
It also improves the working of another brain protein, which is involved in regulating brain cells’ electrical flow. (ANI)
- Foods to Help You Sleep, Fight Depression - Aug 28, 2010
- Gene therapy to brain may treat major depression - Oct 21, 2010
- New mouse model to probe how antidepressants work - Feb 19, 2011
- Now, 'magic' drug that treats severe depression in just few hours - Aug 20, 2010
- Enzyme behind baby blues found - Jun 17, 2010
- Neurological protein may hold the key to novel depression treatments - Nov 30, 2010
- Antidepressant use linked to thicker arteries - Apr 03, 2011
- Diabetes linked to schizophrenia - Jun 09, 2010
- Poor brain connectivity behind many faces of depression - Feb 28, 2012
- Depression cure with little side-effects found - Dec 01, 2010
- Ketamine -- a magic drug for snapping out of blues - Aug 20, 2010
- Blood test to tell whether anti-depressants work - Dec 16, 2011
- Stress linked to cocaine relapse - Oct 31, 2009
- New brain research could lead to schizophrenia treatment - Oct 01, 2010
- New target for antidepressants revealed - Jun 01, 2010
Tags: brain cells, brain chemical, brain chemicals, brain protein, daily mail, drug ketamine, electrical flow, extreme happiness, extreme highs, extreme sadness, highs and lows, illegal party, least three days, manic depression, mood swings, norepinephrine, recurrent depression, traditional medicine, treating depression, treatment for depression