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Anesthetics as Treatments for Depression: Clinical Insights and Underlying Mechanisms

Macauley Smith Breault, Sirma Orguc, Ohyoon Kwon, Gloria H. Kang, Bryan Tseng, David R. Schreier, Emery N. Brown

2025Annual Review of Neuroscience13 citationsDOIOpen Access PDF

Abstract

Major depressive disorder and treatment-resistant depression are significant worldwide health problems that need new therapies. The success of the anesthetic ketamine as an antidepressant is well known. It is less widely known that several other anesthetic agents have also shown antidepressant effects. These include nitrous oxide, propofol, isoflurane, sevoflurane, dexmedetomidine, and xenon. We review clinical and basic science investigations that have studied the therapeutic value of these anesthetics for treating depression. We propose potential neurophysiological mechanisms underlying the antidepressant effects of anesthetics by combining our understanding of how anesthetics modulate brain dynamics to alter arousal states, current theories of depression pathophysiology, and findings from other depression treatment modalities.

Topics & Concepts

AntidepressantAnestheticKetamineDepression (economics)PropofolMajor depressive disorderSevofluraneElectroconvulsive therapyNeuroscienceTreatment-resistant depressionArousalMedicinePsychologyAnesthesiaHippocampusCognitionEconomicsMacroeconomicsAnesthesia and Neurotoxicity ResearchTreatment of Major DepressionAnesthesia and Sedative Agents
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