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Peer-reviewed veterinary case report

Synbiotic diet produces antidepressant-like effects but alters ketamine activity in an avian model of treatment-resistant depression.

Journal:
Behavioural pharmacology
Year:
2025
Authors:
White, Stephen W et al.
Affiliation:
Department of Psychology and Philosophy · United States
Species:
bird

Abstract

Pre- and probiotics promote a diverse and functional gut microbiota and have demonstrated both anxiolytic and antidepressant effects; however, how synbiotic diet interacts with antidepressant medications has not been fully investigated. This study sought to evaluate the potential anxiolytic or antidepressant effects of a synbiotic diet in an avian model that presents homologies with treatment-resistant depression. In addition, we sought to evaluate the potential interaction of a synbiotic diet combined with select doses of ketamine. Socially raised Black Australorp chicks were given either standard or synbiotic feed for 7 days. At 7 days posthatch, chicks from each feed condition were administered either 0, 5, or 10&#x2005;mg/kg/ml ketamine 15&#x2005;min before a 90-min isolation stressor, which elicits distress vocalizations (DVocs) that temporally represent a panic-like phase followed by a depression-like phase. Saline-treated chicks given the synbiotic diet displayed significantly higher DVoc rates in the depression-like phase compared with saline-treated animals in the standard feed condition, indicative of attenuation of behavioral despair [F(1,22)&#x2005;=&#x2005;5.45, P < 0.05]. Similarly, in the standard diet condition, ketamine 10&#x2005;mg/kg produced elevated DVoc rates; however, under the synbiotic diet, both doses of ketamine produced a suppression of DVoc rates in the depression-like phase. These findings suggest that a synbiotic diet produces antidepressant-like effects in the model and a possible negative interaction between synbiotics and ketamine. While preliminary, the findings suggest the concurrent use of pre- and probiotic supplements and ketamine may produce contradictory effects and warrant further investigation.

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Original publication: https://pubmed.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/40905354/