Empirical evidence for the neurocognitive effect of nitrous oxide as an adjunctive therapy in patients with treatment resistant depression: A randomized controlled study

•Nitrous oxide displays pro-cognitive effect on executive function for treatment-resistant depression.•The pro-cognitive effect of nitrous oxide might be independent from improvements in depressive symptoms.•No pro-cognitive effects of nitrous oxide in subjective cognitive function, processing speed...

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Veröffentlicht in:Psychiatry research 2023-08, Vol.326, p.115326-115326, Article 115326
Hauptverfasser: Liu, Jin, Zhao, Xiaotian, Wei, Xiyu, Yan, Danfeng, Ou, Wenwen, Liao, Mei, Ji, Shanling, Peng, Yan, Wu, Shibin, Wang, Mi, Ju, Yumeng, Zhang, Li, Li, Zexuan, Liu, Bangshan, Li, Lingjiang, Zhang, Yan
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Sprache:eng
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Zusammenfassung:•Nitrous oxide displays pro-cognitive effect on executive function for treatment-resistant depression.•The pro-cognitive effect of nitrous oxide might be independent from improvements in depressive symptoms.•No pro-cognitive effects of nitrous oxide in subjective cognitive function, processing speed, and attention. Nitrous oxide (N2O) has demonstrated an antidepressant effect for treatment-resistant depression (TRD), but no studies investigated the effects of N2O on different cognition domains. This study aimed to test whether N2O would display pro-cognitive effects. We conducted a double-blinded, placebo-controlled, randomized controlled trial, 44 patients with TRD were randomized to N2O group (one-hour inhalation of 50% N2O/50% oxygen) or placebo group (50% air/50% oxygen). Thirty-four patients completed cognitive tests at the pre-treatment phase, 1-week, and 2 weeks post-treatment including subjective cognitive function, processing speed, attention, and executive function. Although the antidepressant effect of N2O was not significant at 1 week, patients still showed better performance of executive function at 1 week after receiving N2O compared with the placebo. Moreover, this significant improvement still existed at 1 week after controlling for the change in depressive symptoms over-time. Additionally, no significant difference was observed in subjective cognitive function, processing speed, and attention between these two groups across the 2-week follow-up period. As the first study investigating the treatment effects of N2O on improving cognitive function in TRD patients, the current study indicated that N2O has a potential pro-cognitive effect on executive function and this effect might be independent from improvements in depressive symptoms.
ISSN:0165-1781
1872-7123
DOI:10.1016/j.psychres.2023.115326