Author:
Kundert Carolyn F.,Sobule Robert M.,Ithman Muaid
Abstract
ABSTRACT
Esketamine, the s(+) enantiomer of ketamine, was approved in 2019 as the first rapid-acting intranasal spray medication for treatment-resistant depression; the drug is given in combination with an antidepressant. The treatment is self-administered in a clinical setting under the supervision of a healthcare provider and usually is well tolerated. Many of its adverse reactions are mild, temporary, and dose-dependent, and they improve with subsequent treatments. Although the prescribing information lists difficulty remembering or thinking as possible adverse reactions, a neurocognitive evaluation is not part of the initial patient evaluation. This case report focuses on a patient whose neurocognitive symptoms worsened with esketamine treatment, necessitating treatment discontinuation.
Publisher
Ovid Technologies (Wolters Kluwer Health)