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Special thanks to Britt Gott, MS, for her editorial input and assistance with the compilation of this chapter.
Fortunately, most individuals who suffer from major depressive disorder (MDD) respond to first-line antidepressant treatments [pharmacotherapy and psychotherapy; ( ; )]. Over the course of the past 20 years, there has been increasing awareness that a significant subset of patients suffer from a more virulent form of MDD that does not respond to a series of standard antidepressant treatments. These patients are said to suffer from “treatment-resistant major depression” (TRMD). Though the field of psychiatry has yet to agree upon how many failed treatments constitute TRMD, there is emerging consensus that failure to respond to two first-line treatments from different antidepressant classes of adequate dose and duration is a clinically useful definition, as the likelihood of responding to a third treatment is substantially lower ( ; ).
Though a relatively small subset (20%–30%) of MDD patients have TRMD, given the relatively high lifetime prevalence of MDD in the United States (10%–20%), approximately 7–20 million Americans suffer from TRMD, which represents a significant and increasingly prevalent public health concern ( ; ; ). Evidence supports that TRMD patients are at significantly higher risk for suicide attempts, have greater rates of hospitalization and health care utilization, and per patient are much more costly to treat than non-TRMD MDD patients ( ; ; ; ; ; ; ).
Over the course of the past 15 years, there have been important discoveries allowing the investigation and clinical application of novel approaches to the treatment of TRMD. One of these novel treatment classes explored is inhaled (gaseous) agents. This chapter reviews three emerging inhaled treatments which target TRMD: nitrous oxide (laughing gas), isoflurane, and xenon. We also briefly discuss the use of aromatic compounds in the treatment of mood disorders.
Colloquially referred to as “laughing gas,” nitrous oxide is a colorless, odorless anesthetic gas with a long history of medical use dating back 150 years ( ). The current clinical uses of nitrous oxide are primarily as an inhalational anesthetic agent or employed during short, painful procedures in dentistry, labor and delivery, and emergency medicine ( ; ; ). Most recently, nitrous oxide has emerged as a potential treatment for depression, suicidal ideation, and posttraumatic stress disorder.
Similar to ketamine, which has rapid efficacy for treatment-resistant depression, nitrous oxide is a highly potent N -methyl- d -aspartate receptor (NMDAR) antagonist. This knowledge, along with the well-established euphoric effects of nitrous oxide, prompted speculation that it may have clinical antidepressant effects.
conducted a proof-of-concept double-blind, prospective, cross-over trial of 20 TRMD patients using inhaled nitrous oxide. TRMD patients underwent serial treatments with an hour-long inhalation with either 50% nitrous oxide/50% oxygen (active treatment); or 50% nitrogen/50% oxygen (placebo). These sessions were randomized in order and separated by 1 week. To be eligible for the trial, patients had to have failed at least 2 adequate dose-duration antidepressant trials (confirmed by medical record review), and could not have recent history of substance abuse (past 12 months, except nicotine), any lifetime history of psychotic or bipolar illness, or severe personality disorder. Patients were allowed to maintain their existing antidepressant treatments but were requested not to start any new antidepressant treatment or modify their treatment dosage in the 4 weeks prior to trial entry. To avoid nitrous oxide’s potential euphoric effects being confounded with antidepressant effects, the group selected 24 h postinhalation as the primary endpoint for assessment of antidepressant effects. TRMD patients enrolled in the trial suffered from sustained and severe refractory MDD: patients had a mean of 19 years of lifetime MDD, history of 8 average failed antidepressant treatments, and 4 had a history of failing to respond to ECT.
The results of the pilot trial were promising. At 24 h postinhalation, there was a statistically significant reduction in depressive symptoms in those who had received nitrous oxide versus placebo. Those receiving nitrous oxide experienced a mean decrease of 5.5 points on the Hamilton Depression Rating Scale (HDRS; 95 CI − 2.5 to − 8.5 points) at 24 h. There were 4 TRMD patients achieving antidepressant response (≥ 50% reduction from baseline HDRS score) and one achieving remission at 24 h; whereas only one placebo patient achieved response, and no placebo patients achieved remission ( ).
Interestingly, not all antidepressant symptoms improved equally, i.e., certain depressive symptoms appeared to be more responsive than others to nitrous oxide, including anxiety, depressed mood, suicidal ideation, and guilt, which has directed future studies (see “ Future studies of nitrous oxide ” section below). Similar to the observations of ketamine’s rapid antidepressant effects in TRMD, the effects of a single inhalation of nitrous oxide were frequently sustained; several patients who were randomized to receive nitrous oxide first showed sustained antidepressant effects on assessment at 1 week. Hence, this prompted future cross-over studies of nitrous oxide in TRMD having longer durations between exposures.
Also of importance, nitrous oxide was well-tolerated; the side effects were infrequent, minor, and short-lived. These included nausea and vomiting (15%), headache (10%), and paradoxical anxiety (10%) in a small subset of patients.
Most recently, conducted a double-blind, randomized, cross-over dose finding study of nitrous oxide. In this trial, 24 patients with severe TRD were randomly assigned to receive a one-hour inhalation with either (1) 50% nitrous oxide, (2) 25% nitrous oxide, or (3) placebo (air/oxygen). The primary outcome was the Hamilton Depression Rating Scale (HDRS-21). Both nitrous groups combined demonstrated significant improvement versus placebo (P = 0.01); however, there was no acute difference in antidepressant effects between 25% and 50% nitrous oxide (P = 0.58). However, adverse events (nausea, headache, dissociative feeling) were statistically higher in the 50% group (P < 0.001). There was a suggestion that 50% nitrous may have had more sustained antidepressant benefit. Further study of optimal dose finding is warranted.
Though limited in scope, this study (and our group’s continued studies in this area) support that nitrous oxide may have several advantages over ketamine as a rapid acting antidepressant. Unlike ketamine, existing data do not support emergence of psychosis as a common side effect, and nitrous oxide inhalation does not influence systemic blood pressure. Though nitrous oxide does have limited abuse potential (see " Abuse potential of nitrous oxide " section below), it has considerably less addictive potential than ketamine. Last, given that nitrous oxide is not hepatically or renally metabolized, it is rapidly cleared from the system, allowing patients to safely operate motor vehicles following treatments, whereas ketamine has a markedly longer recovery time and requires a driver postadministration.
From a regulatory standpoint, nitrous oxide is not regulated by the Drug Enforcement Agency. Occupational Safety and Health Administration (OSHA) does not have standards for nitrous exposure. The National Institute for Occupational Safety and Health, NIOSH, however, has a recommended exposure limit of 25 ppm in closed rooms.
Potential effects on psychomotor and cognitive function in health care workers leads to the need of minimizing leaks in gas delivery circuits and adequate exhaust through wall-suction waste gas scavenging systems. Closely fitting masks minimize leakage around the face. Even with a closed system, nitrous oxide is not effective as a single-agent general anesthetic.
Medical grade nitrous oxide can be acquired from gas distributors as E -cylinder tanks that can be dispensed through FDA-approved inhalation circuits or anesthesia ventilators. Nitrous oxide and oxygen/air flow meters allow accurate dispensing. Proportioning systems link the flows of oxygen and nitrous oxide to prevent the administration of mixtures that would induce hypoxia. Infrared spectroscopic gas analyzers and infrared pulse oximeters allow additional safety monitoring for detecting potential hypoxemia. Suction and airway equipment should be readily available. Staff trained in administering sedatives and airway support ensure safety, as per American Society of Anesthesia guidelines on sedation and analgesia by nonanesthesiologists.
Patient preparation and selection may minimize the risk of adverse events even for short inhalations. Fasting guidelines should be considered to minimize the possibility of aspiration events. A history of motion sickness or postoperative vomiting may portend susceptibility to the side effect of nausea. Respiratory depressant effects of narcotics and sedatives are augmented by nitrous oxide. As nitrous oxide accumulates in tissues with collected air, it is contraindicated in patients with pneumothorax, pneumomediastinum, or gastrointestinal distention. Patients with B12 deficiency or particular mutations in the methylenetetrahydrofolate reductase ( MTHFR ) gene should be reconsidered given the inhibition of methionine synthase by nitrous oxide.
With adherence to these considerations the clinical administration of nitrous oxide can be administered safely for TRMD.
Despite over 150 years of clinical use for analgesia and anesthesia, how nitrous oxide brings about its effects is not fully understood. Below we discuss possible mechanisms of action.
Extensive research over the past 20 years has conclusively demonstrated that nitrous oxide acts as a noncompetitive inhibitor of NMDARs by blocking NMDAR responses at approximately a half-maximal effective concentration of 30%–40%; however, nitrous oxide is only a partial NMDAR antagonist at concentrations up to 80% ( ; ; ; ). The effects of nitrous oxide do not alter the decay of NMDAR-mediated currents, and are weakly voltage dependent ( ). Additionally, work in animal models provides supporting evidence that nitrous acts in vivo via NMDAR-antagonistic behavioral effects ( ; ). Further, nitrous oxide also acts as a weak inhibitor of AMPA/kainite-type glutamate receptors.
In addition to acting on the NMDAR, nitrous oxide is known to act on numerous other receptors, including GABA-A, GABA-C, serotonin-3, potassium and calcium channel receptors, nicotinic acetylcholine receptors, alpha-adrenergic receptors, and opioid receptors.
Nitrous oxide, unlike many other anesthetic agents, has weak potentiating effects at the GABA-A receptor ( ), while weakly inhibiting the GABA-C receptors ( ). Nitrous oxide inhibits low voltage activated (LVA, T-type) calcium channels, producing depression of LVA currents at 80% nitrous oxide ( ), without having an effect on the high voltage activated (L-type) calcium currents ( ). Further, nitrous oxide is a weak antagonist of serotonin-type 3 receptors, and partially inhibits a subtype of nicotinic acetylcholine receptors ( ). Nitrous oxide is an agonist at the two-pore domain potassium channel (TREK-1), which is expressed throughout the central nervous system ( ), as well as activating alpha-adrenergic receptors associated with antinociceptive effects in the brainstem and spinal cord in rat models ( ; ).
Finally, nitrous oxide appears to have modulatory effects on the endogenous opioid system, which could be linked to both analgesia and psychotropic effects ( ; ; ; ). This is potentially highly relevant in TRMD, as evidence suggests that ketamine has diminished antidepressant effects when combined with an opioid antagonist ( ). Existing evidence supports that nitrous oxide may preferentially act on kappa-type opiate receptors over mu-type receptors ( ; ).
There is currently limited understanding of the effects of nitrous oxide on brain pathways. Animal models suggest that nitrous oxide significantly impacts the hippocampus: nitrous oxide brings about disinhibition of network-driven hippocampal spike firing ( ). Another study demonstrated that nitrous oxide can increase cellular proliferation in dentate gyrus, possibly via neurogenesis ( ).
Limited electroencephalography studies in humans demonstrated that nitrous oxide decreases functional connectivity in superficial parietal networks ( ) and leads to an increase in theta activity and a decrease in frontal slow wave activity (delta) with drug discontinuation ( ). How these changes are associated with proposed behavioral changes is not yet understood.
There is longstanding history of recreational use of nitrous oxide, with descriptions of “laughing gas parties” during the Victorian era ( ), and recreational use which continues to the present. Currently, recreational nitrous oxide use typically involves inhalation with either bulbs or balloons and is primarily limited to teens and young adults, with an estimated prevalence of 20% in this age group ( ). Contributing to the sustained popularity of recreational nitrous oxide is its wide availability, low cost, and relative safety. Though there are reports of psychological dependence and tolerance ( ), such cases are relatively rare, with most recreational users not developing physical or psychological dependence: over 90% report using once per month or less frequently ( ).
Acute effects include rapid onset of euphoria, excitement, and dissociation, typically resolving within minutes. Though relatively rare, long-term abuse of nitrous oxide can be associated with permanent neurological damage, including spinal cord degeneration ( ), which is thought to be brought about in part by nitrous oxide-induced vitamin B12 inactivation ( ). Other known safety concerns previously associated with nitrous oxide use include dyspnea, headache, impaired judgment, and even impaired fertility with repeated exposure ( ). Further, high concentration inhaled nitrous oxide (> 70%) can lead to hypoxia and associated sequalae. As the use of nitrous oxide expands for the TRMD indication, greater awareness of this abuse potential and associated dangers will be necessary.
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