Daily Mail

Laughing gas lifts low mood in 2 hours

- By ROGER DOBSON

Laughing gas can ease symptoms of depression in just two hours, new research suggests. a pilot study involving 20 patients who’d previously not responded to up to 12 different antidepres­sants found they were significan­tly more likely to improve with ‘laughing gas’ treatment than those given a placebo gas. The benefits lasted several days.

now, in a new four-week study, 200 patients with depression will be treated with a mix of nitrous oxide (commonly known as laughing gas) and oxygen for an hour.

up to one in four people with depression shows no improvemen­t with standard therapies.

There is a major push to find alternativ­es. Some research has looked at a form of the party drug and anaestheti­c ketamine. nitrous oxide is being investigat­ed as it works in a similar way to ketamine.

Whereas antidepres­sants typically work by increasing levels of the feel-good brain chemicals serotonin or dopamine, ketamine and nitrous oxide act on a different brain chemical, glutamate.

it is thought that depression may result in part from an excess of glutamate, which may disrupt how brain cells communicat­e with one another.

Ketamine can block the negative effects of glutamate, but one drawback is that it also causes a number of unpleasant side-effects including hallucinat­ions and disturbed vision. a previous good health investigat­ion raised concerns about its use, not least because it can be addictive.

now researcher­s have discovered that nitrous oxide also acts on glutamate, but in a slightly different way, and it is hoped may have fewer side-effects. The pilot study, reported in the journal Biological Psychiatry, compared the effects of a nitrous oxide and oxygen mix against a placebo on patients with depression. The gas was inhaled for around one hour, at a dose level similar to that used by dentists as a sedative.

Results from the Washington university study in the u. S. showed that one in three patients, who had previously tried an average of eight antidepres­sants each without success, responded.

Symptoms improved in two hours — whereas convention­al antidepres­sants can take two months to have an effect — and there were no side-effects.

now more than 200 people with different types of depression are being recruited to take part in five clinical trials at the universiti­es of Washington and Chicago and other centres. Participan­ts will inhale either nitrous oxide or a placebo of an oxygen and air mixture once a week for one hour for four weeks. The group assigned the nitrous oxide will be randomly given a dose of 50 per cent nitrous oxide or 25 per cent nitrous oxide.

Carmine Pariante, a professor of biological psychiatry at King’s College London, said: ‘ The confirmati­on that nitrous oxide has rapid antidepres­sant effects is a positive developmen­t, as it confirms the importance of blocking glutamate as a way to treat depression. it offers another tool in the box for physicians.’

however, he added that nitrous oxide seemed to have some of the same side-effects as ketamine, including altered body sensations and dreamy states with altered perception of time. and he welcomed further research.

 ??  ??

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United Kingdom