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Surgery is a trauma that wrecks sleep, and for vulnerable patients, Post-Operative Sleep Disturbance (PSD) is a serious complication linked to delirium, increased pain, and slowed recovery. In this episode, we dive into a fascinating study that connects three seemingly unrelated dots: ketamine, sleep, and the oral microbiome.
Researchers treated 130 high-risk surgical patients with a continuous low-dose infusion of esketamine. The clinical results were striking: the rate of PSD dropped from 65% in the control group to just 43% in the esketamine group. Patients reported significantly better sleep quality and required far fewer opioids like hydromorphone.
But the real surprise was found in their saliva. The study revealed that esketamine treatment actively reshaped the oral microbial community—boosting beneficial bacteria like Streptococcus while suppressing groups like Bacteroidota that were linked to poor sleep. Why would an IV anesthetic change mouth bacteria?
We explore the leading theories:
This research challenges us to rethink how psychiatric drugs work—not just by hitting receptors in the brain, but by restoring ecological balance to the nerves, immune system, and the trillions of microbes that live within us.
Reference:
Li, X.-Y., Qiu, D., Du, N., Hashimoto, K., Wang, X.-M., & Yang, J.-J. (2025). Esketamine prevents postoperative sleep disturbance in patients with preoperative sleep disorders: A role for oral microbiota. Translational Psychiatry, 15(1), 501. https://doi.org/10.1038/s41398-025-03705-9
The post Ketamine, Sleep, and Oral Bacteria – A Microbial Mystery appeared first on Talking Ketamine Podcast.
By Talking Ketamine4.3
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Surgery is a trauma that wrecks sleep, and for vulnerable patients, Post-Operative Sleep Disturbance (PSD) is a serious complication linked to delirium, increased pain, and slowed recovery. In this episode, we dive into a fascinating study that connects three seemingly unrelated dots: ketamine, sleep, and the oral microbiome.
Researchers treated 130 high-risk surgical patients with a continuous low-dose infusion of esketamine. The clinical results were striking: the rate of PSD dropped from 65% in the control group to just 43% in the esketamine group. Patients reported significantly better sleep quality and required far fewer opioids like hydromorphone.
But the real surprise was found in their saliva. The study revealed that esketamine treatment actively reshaped the oral microbial community—boosting beneficial bacteria like Streptococcus while suppressing groups like Bacteroidota that were linked to poor sleep. Why would an IV anesthetic change mouth bacteria?
We explore the leading theories:
This research challenges us to rethink how psychiatric drugs work—not just by hitting receptors in the brain, but by restoring ecological balance to the nerves, immune system, and the trillions of microbes that live within us.
Reference:
Li, X.-Y., Qiu, D., Du, N., Hashimoto, K., Wang, X.-M., & Yang, J.-J. (2025). Esketamine prevents postoperative sleep disturbance in patients with preoperative sleep disorders: A role for oral microbiota. Translational Psychiatry, 15(1), 501. https://doi.org/10.1038/s41398-025-03705-9
The post Ketamine, Sleep, and Oral Bacteria – A Microbial Mystery appeared first on Talking Ketamine Podcast.

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