Also, a typo that I noticed: "Ketamine however, is an agonist of this receptor, in this case it stops the NMDA receptor from firing."
It is actually a selective antagonist, which as you state reduces the excitability of the neuron.
Also, a typo that I noticed: "Ketamine however, is an agonist of this receptor, in this case it stops the NMDA receptor from firing."
It is actually a selective antagonist, which as you state reduces the excitability of the neuron.
It's always nice to know they're looking into how these things actually work, may see more targeted drugs in the future come from this research, although there aren't that many negative side-effects it seems from paired ketamine/therapy sessions.
But what does cinnamon toast crunch cure?
Whoops! Thanks for pointing that out. :)