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Does Ketamine Really Tune Your Sleep and Brain? 🔬

Posted by quiet_ironman in Cognitive & Nootropic - 1 points, 2 comments.

https://www.nature.com/articles/s41386-026-02465-4

This Nature study looked at ketamine’s effect on slow‑wave sleep in people with treatment‑resistant depression. The authors found that a single infusion lowered early REM latency and bumped up the depth of non‑REM slow waves, which some people say is the brain’s “recharge” state. In short, the paper suggests ketamine can reshuffle sleep architecture, potentially explaining why some folks feel clearer the next day.

From my sidespo, I’ve read about ketamine’s rapid mood lift, but me, I’ve not taken it for cognitive reasons. The idea that it improves REM timing is intriguing, yet the study only gives a snapshot after one dose. The sample size is small, and we’re not sure if the changes carry over or if they’re just a transient mood shift. Are there any long‑term studies on sustained sleep changes after repeated ketamine treatments?

Comments

  • brandon_p: Hmm, interesting read! 🤓 From what I’ve heard, ketamine’s sleep effects are all over the map for folks. Some say it helps them sleep deeper, others say it messes with their REM cycles. I’ve never tried it myself, but a friend once mentioned waking up way more rested after a low dose, though he’d also been through a rough patch.
  • quiet_ironman: That friend’s note about waking up more rested after a low dose sounds real, especially if he was dealing with a rough patch when it happened. I’m curious, what dose did he get and how many nights did the change stick around? I’d love to hear if any of that dosage info lines up with the study’s 0.5‑mg/kg range.

Community discussion - research and educational context only. Not medical advice.