Neuroscience of Ketamine
Ketamine is a breakthrough medicine of
the mind. It can rapidly —often within an hour or two— lift the symptoms of
anxiety, depression, PTSD, OCD, and other conditions.
For most people, the action of a single small dose of ketamine lasts for a week
and possibly longer; after a short series of repeated doses, this effect
typically extends out for weeks to months. In addition, the subjective effects
on consciousness and the psyche often lead to profound emotional and
psychological insights.
What does ketamine do in the brain to cause these changes?
Dr. Teddy Akiki is one of the leading research specialists in the neuroscience
of ketamine, the neural basis of stress-related and trauma-related psychiatric
disorders, and glutamatergic rapid-acting antidepressants (RAADs).
Currently conducting research at the Cleveland Clinic’s esteemed Neurological
Institute, Dr. Akiki started his neuroscience research as a Postdoctoral Fellow
at the Yale University Department of Psychiatry, where the antidepressant
effects of ketamine were first described over two decades ago.
According to Dr. Akiki, “In animal models, chronic stress leads to neuronal
changes consistent with reduced synaptic connectivity, notably in the
prefrontal cortex and the hippocampus. Using resting state functional MRI, a
reduction in prefrontal and hippocampal connectivity has been observed in
depression as well as multiple other psychiatric disorders involving chronic
stress (e.g., PTSD, generalized anxiety disorder, OCD). Ketamine has been shown
to rapidly resolve these abnormalities and lead to a normalization in the
connectivity pattern. The extent of connectivity changes after ketamine also
appears to be proportional to the clinical response to the treatment, which
further supports the idea that there is a causative link.”
To understand what this means and the remarkable effect of ketamine on anxiety
and depression, let’s start with how the neurons in your brain work.
Section 01
Neurons
The neuron is the fundamental cell of
the brain. Each neuron has a cell body (soma) that contains the nucleus, where
the cell’s DNA is located; the nucleus regulates all the processes in the
neuron. The cell body also contains other organelles, such as ribosomes, needed
to make proteins such as neurotransmitters, and mitochondria, the miniature
power plants that provide energy in the cell.
Leading off the cell body are two specialized extensions. At one end is the
axon, a single long, thin nerve fiber that transmits messages from the body of
the neuron to the dendrites of other neurons. Branching off from the neuron at
the other end are the dendrites, a dense, bushy cluster of nerve fibers that
receive messages from the axons of other neurons and send them on to the cell
body. The dendrites branch out to form a large surface area that connects with
many nearby neurons.
In the cerebral cortex alone, the most highly developed part of the brain, you
have somewhere between 14 and 16 billion neurons. Every moment of every day,
all those neurons are making billions of connections with each other, firing
together to form pathways involved in planning, learning, memory, speech, and
emotion.
Section 02
The Role of
Neurotransmitters
Neurons communicate with each other by
passing impulses (also called action potentials) from the axon of one neuron to
the dendrites of another. The junction where an axon meets a dendrite is called
the synapse. The axons and dendrites don’t actually touch, however—a tiny gap
called the synaptic cleft separates them.
Getting the nerve impulse across the synaptic cleft is the job of
neurotransmitters: chemicals that act as messengers between neurons.
Neurotransmitters are manufactured in the neurons and stored in tiny sacs
called vesicles at the tips of axons.
The cell membranes of neurons are studded with receptors that are binding
sites for specific neurotransmitters. Each receptor is a precise match for that
particular chemical messenger. The neurotransmitters attach to the receptors,
fitting like keys into locks and opening channels into the cell.
When a nerve impulse travels down the axon and reaches the very end, it makes
calcium channels in the cell open. The positively charged calcium ions flow in
and make the synaptic vesicles fuse with the cell membrane (exocytosis). The
neurotransmitters stored in the vesicles then pour into the synaptic cleft.
They diffuse across the gap and bind to their matching receptors in the
membrane of the postsynaptic neuron (the target neuron). The binding opens the
channels leading into the cell interior and calcium, sodium, magnesium, and
other ions flow in.
The flow of incoming ions such as calcium and sodium depolarizes the cell
membrane, creating less negative charge inside the cell. If the depolarization
threshold for making the neuron fire is reached, the impulse is transmitted
through the cell, down its axon, and on to the next neuron in the chain.
What happens to the neurotransmitters once they’ve done their job of opening
the channels? Your body is frugal and efficient. Reuptake receptors on the
presynaptic (sending) cell membrane capture the used neurotransmitters and
carry them back into the cell, where they can be repackaged into new synaptic
vesicles to await another cycle.
When the neurotransmitters are re-absorbed, the synapse turns off. The
whole process of shuttling an impulse through one neuron and on to the next
takes only about seven milliseconds. It’s happening in your brain billions of
times every second, around the clock.
Section 03
Types of Neurotransmitters
Different neurotransmitters affect
neurons in different ways. Excitatory transmitters excite the postsynaptic
neurons, making the neuron more likely to fire an impulse. Inhibitory
transmitters slow the neuron, making it less likely to fire an impulse. And
just to confuse things, the neurotransmitter dopamine can be both excitatory
and inhibitory, depending on which receptors are present.
In the brain, the neurotransmitters glutamate and dopamine are excitatory. The
inhibitory neurotransmitters are GABA (gamma-aminobutyric acid), serotonin, and
dopamine (sometimes).
The release, removal, and reuptake of neurotransmitters is tightly regulated.
Too much or too little of any excitatory or inhibitory neurotransmitter, or
being too sensitive or insensitive to them, can disrupt the balance.
Glutamate is the most common excitatory neurotransmitter in the brain. It plays
a particularly important role in neuroplasticity (the brain’s ability to form
new synapses and neural connections over a lifetime), learning, and forming
memories. When there’s too much glutamate in the brain, the postsynaptic
neurons can become hyperexcited; when there’s way too much glutamate in the
brain, it can damage neurons or even cause neuron death.
Section 04
Stress, Glutamate, and
Damaged Neurons
Long-lasting stress takes a toll on
the neurons of the cortex. Constant high levels of the stress hormone cortisol
can make neurons atrophy—they shrivel and shrink. The dendrites go from large
numbers of dense, spreading branches to smaller numbers of shorter, stubby
branches that make fewer connections to other neurons. The axons shrink and get
thinner. Intense stress can also change glutamate signaling and make the
neurons less responsive and less able to connect with other neurons. Brain
imaging shows that in depressed people, the prefrontal cortex is reduced in
size. Shriveled connections in the cortex mean the neural pathways that control
memory, decision-making, emotions, and attention don’t work as well.
The end result of all these glutamate-related neuronal changes is a brain much
more predisposed to manifesting the constellation of subjective phenomena we
call depression and anxiety.
This is where ketamine comes in. The drug company researchers who developed
ketamine as an anesthetic in the 1960s knew it worked by triggering glutamate
release into the synapse. Later researchers studying the roots of depression
discovered that in people with depression, something was going wrong in the
glutamate receptors.
By the 1990s, they knew enough to start looking for a drug that would target
the glutamate system. They didn’t have to look far. Ketamine, well studied by
that point for its effects on neurons, had already been accidentally found to
lift depression. Researchers at Yale began using very small doses of ketamine
to treat people with severe depression who weren’t helped by standard
antidepressant drugs. The results were startlingly successful.
Section 05
Ketamine and Glutamate
Research into the full pharmacological
action of ketamine is revealing just how complex the response to this drug is.
We know that ketamine also modulates additional receptor types, but the
glutamate receptors seem to play the most important role.
Neurons have a number of different binding sites for glutamate, but when it
comes to ketamine, two are of particular interest: the NMDA
(N-methyl-D-aspartate) receptor and the AMPA
(α-amino-3-hydroxy-5-methyl-4-isoxazolepropionic acid) receptor.
Glutamate activates the ion channels in both NMDA and AMPA receptors. When
glutamate binds NMDA receptors, they open up to allow calcium ions into the
cell. When glutamate binds AMPA receptors, they open up to allow sodium ions
into, and potassium ions out of, the cell. No matter what type of ion enters
the cell, the neuron is depolarized and the action potential “jumps” from the
presynaptic cell to the postsynaptic cell. What happens after the propagation
of the action potential depends on whether the neuron inhibits or excites
downstream targets and the function of the neural circuit it’s in.
At the very low dose shown to have an antidepressant effect, ketamine appears
to increase the release of glutamate from the presynaptic neuron into the
synaptic cleft. The ketamine then preferentially blocks glutamate at the NMDA
receptors of the postsynaptic cell but doesn’t block glutamate binding to
adjacent AMPA receptors. The net effect is to increase AMPA activation. The
effect is magnified by the way ketamine induces the neuron to make additional
AMPA receptors and move them into the membrane of the synapse area.
Section 06
Fertilizing the Brain
By increasing the level of glutamate
transmission while also shifting the balance of glutamate activation from NMDA
to AMPA receptors, ketamine rapidly upregulates neuronal production and release
of BDNF (brain-derived neurotrophic factor). Aptly called fertilizer for the
brain, BDNF is a protein that helps promote the growth, maintenance, and
survival of neurons—in other words, it enhances neuroplasticity.
At the same time, ketamine stimulates a central cell pathway called mTOR
(mammalian target of rapamycin), which regulates many processes involved in
cell growth, including synthesizing the proteins needed for long-term memory.
In combination with increased BDNF production, mTOR stimulation improves
synaptic connectivity in the prefrontal cortex and hippocampus, key areas of
the brain associated with emotional regulation, and reverses the synaptic
damage that occurs in these areas when the brain is subjected to chronic
stress. Owing to these neuroplastic effects, regrowth of dendritic spines can
happen within a few hours of a therapeutic ketamine dose. When the atrophied
neurons can repair the damage and regrow their connections with other neurons,
symptoms of depression and anxiety improve.
At higher doses, ketamine appears to lose its discriminating effect and instead
blocks both NMDA and AMPA receptors. When both receptor types are blocked,
upregulation of BDNF and enhanced neuroplasticity stops. This could explain why
it took so long to recognize the antidepressant effect of ketamine. It has been
used as a surgical anesthetic since the 1970s, but it was only when researchers
at Yale started using it in much lower doses as a psychiatric treatment that
the antidepressant effect was serendipitously discovered.
Section 07
Other Mechanisms
Evolving research is revealing more
about the mechanism of action for ketamine. One additional potential mechanism
for ketamine is the NMDA receptors on a type of neuron called the parvalbumin
interneuron. These neurons are small and relatively rare in the brain, but
they’re key to synchronizing electrical activity in the brain. They work by
inhibiting activity in the neurons around them. When a subunit of the NMDA
receptors on these neurons is blocked by ketamine, the cells don’t get as much
glutamate, and their inhibitory effect is reduced. The parvalbumin interneurons
act like a brake on brain activity. Ease up on the brake and all the brain
circuits become more active. The brain wakes up and becomes more responsive.
While ketamine binds strongly to NMDA and AMPA receptors, it’s also taken up,
to a much smaller degree, by other neuroreceptors. Ketamine can trigger
increased release of the neuromodulators dopamine and noradrenaline; it also
binds weakly to nicotinic and opioid receptors. Exactly what role these
receptors play in the antidepressant effect is still largely unknown and even
contradictory. For example, some studies seem to show that ketamine binds to
opiate receptors in a way that could create addiction; other studies show that
the potential for addiction is very low.
Another possible mechanism for ketamine is its action on structures within the
neuron. Some studies suggest that ketamine accumulates in lysosomes (organelles
that contains digestive enzymes) and synaptic vesicles, which might then
trigger mTOR signaling. Ketamine could also affect the endoplasmic reticulum
(tubules within the cell that are involved with protein and lipid synthesis)
and the Golgi bodies (organelles that sort, process, and transport proteins).
The mechanisms are complex and still being unraveled.
Section 08
Ketamine and Connectivity
The impacts of stress and depression
on the brain aren’t just at the molecular and cellular level. Depression
impacts connectivity at the brain macro level as well. By using functional
magnetic resonance imaging (fMRI), researchers have been able to see how people
with depression seem to have weaker connections within larger neural networks,
such as the prefrontal cortex. This portion of the brain is the seat of
higher-level cognitive processes, including executive function —the ability to
control short-term behaviors in favor of self control, planning, decision
making, problem solving, and long-term goals. When the subregions of the
prefrontal cortex aren’t communicating well, as is the case in depression,
executive function can be dysfunctional. Ketamine seems to help improve global
connectivity in this portion of the brain and improve the linkages among the
subregions.
Casey Paleos, MD
Dr. Casey Paleos is a board certified
psychiatrist with over a decade of experience working with ketamine and other
psychedelic medicines in both research and clinical settings...
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