Friday, September 30, 2022
“Depression is a disorder of the spirit, if you will, the brain, but also the whole body. And that’s one of the reasons why it’s one of the most disabling conditions that we have in the world.”
— Dr. John Krystal
Dr. John Krystal is the Robert L. McNeil, Jr., Professor of Translational Research; Professor of Psychiatry, Neuroscience, and Psychology; Chair of the Department of Psychiatry at Yale University; and Chief of Psychiatry and Behavioral Health at Yale-New Haven Hospital.
Dr. Krystal is a leading expert in the areas of alcoholism, post-traumatic stress disorder, schizophrenia, and depression. His work links psychopharmacology, neuroimaging, molecular genetics, and computational neuroscience to study the neurobiology and treatment of these disorders. He is best known for leading the discovery of the rapid antidepressant effects of ketamine in depressed patients.
He directs/co-directs the Yale Center for Clinical Investigation (CTSA), NIAAA Center for the Translational Neuroscience of Alcoholism, and Clinical Neuroscience Division of the National Center for PTSD (VA).
Dr. Krystal is a member of the U.S. National Academy of Medicine; co-director of the Neuroscience Forum of the U.S. National Academies of Sciences, Engineering, and Medicine; Fellow of the American Association for the Advancement of Science (AAAS); and editor of Biological Psychiatry, one of the most selective and highly cited journals in the field of psychiatric neuroscience.
He is the co-founder and Chief Scientific Advisor of Freedom Biosciences, a clinical-stage biotechnology platform developing next-generation ketamine and psychedelic therapeutics that recently emerged from stealth in August 2022.
ONE VERY IMPORTANT DISCLAIMER: I’m not a doctor, nor do I play one on the Internet. None of the content in this podcast constitutes medical advice or should be construed as a recommendation to use ketamine or psychedelics. There are psychological, physical, and sometimes legal risks with such usage. Please consult your doctor before considering anything we discuss in this episode.
Please enjoy!
Listen to the episode on Apple Podcasts, Spotify, Overcast, Podcast Addict, Pocket Casts, Castbox, Google Podcasts, Stitcher, Amazon Music, or on your favorite podcast platform.
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#625: Dr. John Krystal — All Things Ketamine, The Most Comprehensive Podcast Episode Ever
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Want to hear another podcast episode with someone who’s exploring the beneficial properties of mind-altering compounds? Listen to my conversation with Dr. Suresh Muthukumaraswamy in which we discuss how ketamine differs from other psychedelics, the durability of antidepressant effects, obstacles to getting ketamine labeled as an antidepressant, avoiding another 50 years of psychedelic research darkness, where aspiring psychedelic researchers should focus their education, and much more.
#619: Dr. Suresh Muthukumaraswamy — LSD Microdosing, Classical Psychedelics vs. Ketamine, Science and Speed in New Zealand, Placebo Options, and The Infinite Possibilities of Studying Mind-Altering Compounds
What was your favorite quote or lesson from this episode? Please let me know in the comments.
SCROLL BELOW FOR LINKS AND SHOW NOTES…
SELECTED LINKS FROM THE EPISODE
- Freedom Biosciences
- John Krystal, MD | Yale School of Medicine
- A Prescription Nasal Spray | Spravato
- Interventional Psychiatry | Yale New Haven Psychiatric Hospital
- Robert Ostroff, MD Psychiatry | Yale New Haven Hospital
- Gerard Sanacora, MD,PhD Psychiatry | Yale New Haven Hospital
- Henry Krystal, Holocaust Trauma Expert, and Survivor, Dies at 90 | The New York Times
- Living With Terror, Working With Trauma: A Clinician’s Handbook: A Clinicians Handbook by Danielle Knafo et al. | Amazon
- Some Practical Thoughts on Suicide | Tim Ferriss
- Why Most People Misunderstand Depression | Arcadian Counseling
- Ketamine: A Paradigm Shift for Depression Research and Treatment | Cell
- Melancholy | Online Etymology Dictionary
- Outcome Measurement in Mental Health Services: Insights from Symptom Networks | BMC Psychiatry
- Health Insurers Still Don’t Adequately Cover Mental Health Treatment | National Alliance on Mental Illness
- ECT (Electroconvulsive Therapy): What It Is & Side Effects | Cleveland Clinic
- Rethinking Serotonin’s Role in Depression | Brain Facts
- Should People Taking MAOIs Follow a Tyramine-Free Diet? | Healthline
- From the Death of Libby Zion, Crucial Medical Reforms | The New York Times
- Ethnopharmacologic Search for Psychoactive Drugs | ESPD 50
- MAOI Contraindications Related to Ayahuasca | MAPS
- Top 10 Medical Inventions (2017): #7 Ketamine for Treatment-Resistant Depression | Cleveland Clinic Innovations
- Brain Scanning Techniques (CT, MRI, fMRI, PET, SPECT, DTI, DOT) | Cerebra
- Ptolemaic System | The Galileo Project
- Tryptophan-Depletion Challenge in Depressed Patients Treated with Desipramine or Fluoxetine: Implications for the Role of Serotonin in the Mechanism of Antidepressant Action | Biological Psychiatry
- Antidepressants ‘Work Immediately’ | Nursing Times
- Higher Serotonin 1A Binding in a Second Major Depression Cohort: Modeling and Reference Region Considerations | Biological Psychiatry
- Glutamate and GABA Systems as Targets for Novel Antidepressant and Mood-Stabilizing Treatments | Molecular Psychiatry
- A Randomized Trial of an N-Methyl-D-Aspartate Antagonist in Treatment-Resistant Major Depression | Archives of General Psychiatry
- Serotonin and Hallucinogens | Neuropsychopharmacology
- Signaling Pathways Underlying the Rapid Antidepressant Actions of Ketamine | Neuropharmacology
- Chronic Stress Alters Synaptic Terminal Structure in?Hippocampus | PNAS
- Ketamine: Just Say “Neigh!” | Max E, Twitter
- WHO Recommends Against International Control of Ketamine | IDPC
- Cell Proliferation in Adult Hippocampus is Decreased by Inescapable Stress: Reversal by Fluoxetine Treatment | Neuropsychopharmacology
- mTOR (Mechanistic Target of Rapamycin) | Wikipedia
- Study of a New Schizophrenomimetic Drug — Sernyl | Archives of Neurology & Psychiatry
- Lafayette Clinic / Woodward Academy | Detroiturbex.com
- Phencyclidine/Schizophrenia: One View Toward the Past, The Other to the Future | Schizophrenia Bulletin
- Domino by Van Morrison | Amazon Music
- The Domino Effect: Ed Domino’s Early Studies of Psychoactive Drugs | Journal of Psychoactive Drugs
- Crick, Watson, and Franklin: DNA Structure | Khan Academy
- Dissociative Anesthesia: Further Pharmacologic Studies and First Clinical Experience with the Phencyclidine Derivative Cl-581 | Anesthesia & Analgesia
- Taming the Ketamine Tiger | Anesthesiology
- Specific [3H]Phencyclidine Binding in Rat Central Nervous System | PNAS
- Clozapine Uses, Dosage, and Side Effects | Drugs.com
- Activation of Glutamatergic Neurotransmission by Ketamine: A Novel Step in the Pathway from NMDA Receptor Blockade to Dopaminergic and Cognitive Disruptions Associated with the Prefrontal Cortex | Journal of Neuroscience
- The Role Of Dissociation In Ketamine’s Antidepressant Effects | Nature Communications
- Positron Emission Tomography (PET) Center | Yale School of Medicine:
- First In Vivo Evaluations Of Synaptic Density Alterations In The Brain | Neuropsychopharmacology
- Glutamate Metabolism in Major Depressive Disorder | American Journal of Psychiatry
- Synaptic Potentiation Is Critical for Rapid Antidepressant Response to Ketamine in Treatment-Resistant Major Depression | Psychiatry Research: Neuroimaging
- Medications Besides Statins for Lowering Cholesterol | GoodRx
- Ketamine vs. S-Ketamine — What’s the Difference? | Principium Psychiatry
- Samuel Wilkinson
- Cognitive Behavioral Therapy to Sustain the Antidepressant Effects of Ketamine in Treatment-Resistant Depression: A Randomized Clinical Trial | Psychotherapy and Psychosomatics
- Modulating Amygdala Activation to Traumatic Memories with a Single Ketamine Infusion | ResearchGate
- Ketamine Can Reduce Harmful Drinking by Pharmacologically Rewriting Drinking Memories | Nature Communications
- Dose-Related Effects of Ketamine for Antidepressant-Resistant Symptoms of Posttraumatic Stress Disorder in Veterans and Active Duty Military: A Double-Blind, Randomized, Placebo-Controlled Multi-Center Clinical Trial | Neuropsychopharmacology
- Bolus Definition & Meaning | Merriam-Webster
- Ketamine Infusions vs. Intramuscular Ketamine Injections | SKI
- Side Effects Mild, Brief with Single Antidepressant Dose of Intravenous Ketamine | National Institutes of Health
- Zofran Uses, Dosage, and Side Effects | Drugs.com
- Burning Man
- Psychedelic Peer Support | Zendo Project
- Pirates of the Caribbean Ride | Walt Disney World Resort
- Ketamine Addiction | Verywell Mind
- The Health Effects of the Abuse of Ketamine | ClinMed Journals
- Lord of the Rings by J.R.R. Tolkien | Amazon
- Enantiomers | Chemistry LibreTexts
- What Are the Three Types of Ketamine, and Which One Is Right for You? | Healing Maps
- Manji Develops Novel Treatment for Major Depressive Disorder | NIH Record
- R (-)-Ketamine Shows Greater Potency and Longer Lasting Antidepressant Effects than S (+)-Ketamine | Pharmacology Biochemistry and Behavior
- The Etymology of Trivia: A Place Where Three Roads Meet | Useless Etymology
- How the Drunken Monkey Hypothesis Explains Our Taste for Liquor | The Atlantic
- Inhibition of Opiate Tolerance by Non-Competitive N-Methyl-D-Aspartate Receptor Antagonists | Brain Research
- Ketamine for Chronic Pain: Risks and Benefits | British Journal of Clinical Pharmacology
- Chronic Pain Is Surprisingly Treatable — When Patients Focus on the Brain | The Washington Post
- Esmethadone: A Novel, Rapidly Effective Treatment for Depression | MGH Psychiatry News
- Salvinorin A | Wikipedia
- Naltrexone | Wikipedia
- Naltrexone in the Treatment of Alcohol Dependence | The New England Journal of Medicine
- What Is Anhedonia? | Healthline
- Legal High Craze Hits Iinternet | On Demand News
- Modulation of the Antidepressant Effects of Ketamine by the mTORC1 Inhibitor Rapamycin | Neuropsychopharmacology
- Microglia | Wikipedia
- Microglia in Neurological Diseases: A Road Map to Brain-Disease Dependent-Inflammatory Response | Frontiers in Cellular Neuroscience
- Study Confirms Rapid Antidepressant Effect of Ketamine Extends to Taiwanese Patients | PsyPost
- My Life Extension Pilgrimage to Easter Island | The Tim Ferriss Show #193
- Glial Cells | 2-Minute Neuroscience
- The Usual Suspects | Prime Video
- How Does Ketamine Work Differently from Other Psychedelics? | Psychology Today
- The Thalamus as a Monitor of Motor Outputs | The Royal Society
- Bridging the Gap? Altered Thalamocortical Connectivity in Psychotic and Psychedelic States | Frontiers in Psychiatry
- BDNF Impact on Synaptic Dynamics: Extra or Intracellular Long-Term Release Differently Regulates Cultured Hippocampal Synapses | Molecular Brain
- Vascular Endothelial Growth Factor (VEGF) | Wikipedia
- Spark: The Revolutionary New Science of Exercise and the Brain by John J. Ratey and Eric Hagerman | Amazon
- Exercise Promotes the Expression of Brain Derived Neurotrophic Factor (BDNF) Through the Action of the Ketone Body ß-Hydroxybutyrate | eLife
- Dom D’Agostino on Disease Prevention, Cancer, and Living Longer | The Tim Ferriss Show #188
- R 1,3 Ethanol-Free Alcohol by Hard Ketones | KetoneAid
- Will Ketamine Help Sleep? | Healing Maps
- Exercise Linked to Improved Mental Health, but More May Not Always Be Better | Yale School of Medicine
SHOW NOTES
- [07:30] The challenges faced by John’s late father, Henry Krystal.
- [14:44] Was Henry’s work discussed around the Krystal dinner table?
- [18:10] What people frequently misunderstand about depression.
- [25:53] Why partial response and non-response occur commonly in psychiatry.
- [32:15] From the serotonin hypothesis to “what’s really exciting” about antidepression research.
- [35:08] How monoamine oxidase inhibitors reduce symptoms of depression.
- [36:41] MAOI Side effects and risks.
- [40:14] When Western medicine duplicates centuries-old shamanic wisdom.
- [43:13] How pre-imaging neuroscience of the ’80s was like Ptolemaic astronomy.
- [47:24] The reason for depression isn’t as simple as a lack of serotonin.
- [49:42] The change in perspective that illustrated ketamine as a potential therapy.
- [54:35] From first studies to overcoming skepticism.
- [1:02:39] How ketamine went from “horse tranquilizer” to antidepressant candidate.
- [1:18:46] The dose makes the difference.
- [1:23:02] What is dissociation, and is it an essential part of ketamine’s healing process?
- [1:37:32] Recommendations for optimal treatment of a close friend (frequency, duration, psychotherapy, etc.).
- [1:50:42] Reducing the potency of maladaptive memories.
- [1:56:15] Best dosage practices.
- [2:03:23] I.M. vs. I.V.
- [2:04:55] Common in-session side-effects (and remedies).
- [2:09:19] What my ketamine experience was like.
- [2:12:41] Optimal settings.
- [2:18:05] Ketamine risks.
- [2:30:22] Decreasing the opportunities for abuse and addiction.
- [2:37:28] Enantiomers: r-ketamine vs. s-ketamine
- [2:44:19] How effective is ketamine for chronic pain relief?
- [2:52:28] Why might the durability of relief outlast the presence of ketamine in the body?
- [2:56:12] What is s-methadone?
- [2:57:31] Does s-ketamine have the same abuse potential as r-ketamine?
- [3:00:46] Opiate receptor interaction with ketamine and other compounds.
- [3:05:56] What is Salvinorin A?
- [3:07:05] Exploring the ups and downs of optimizing ketamine with rapamycin.
- [3:23:28] Ketamine doesn’t have a lot in common with other psychedelics.
- [3:26:47] The effect of ketamine and other hallucinogens on the thalamus.
- [3:29:57] How important is the role of brain-derived neurotrophic factor (BDNF)?
- [3:32:20] BHB, ethanol-free alcohol, and exercise vs. depression.
- [3:35:31] Ketamine’s impact on sleep, and the potential dangers of too much exercise.
- [3:37:27] What John anticipates for the future of ketamine research and application.
- [3:41:51] Giving credit to the pioneers of the field.
- [3:43:21] Parting thoughts.
MORE GUEST QUOTES FROM THE INTERVIEW
“Depression is a disorder of the spirit, if you will, the brain, but also the whole body. And that’s one of the reasons why it’s one of the most disabling conditions that we have in the world.”
— Dr. John Krystal
“The ideal antidepressant would be a drug that acted rapidly and lasted forever. We would call that, basically, cure. And we never use the word ‘cure’ in psychiatry. We don’t even think of the idea of cure. And that’s partly because we don’t really understand the brain well enough to really know how to completely undo the changes that we see there.”
— Dr. John Krystal
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