• Neuropsychopharmacology · Nov 2003

    Randomized Controlled Trial Comparative Study Clinical Trial

    Subdissociative dose ketamine produces a deficit in manipulation but not maintenance of the contents of working memory.

    • Rebekah A E Honey, Danielle C Turner, Garry D Honey, Sam R Sharar, D Kumaran, E Pomarol-Clotet, P McKenna, B J Sahakian, T W Robbins, and P C Fletcher.
    • Department of Psychiatry, University of Cambridge, Cambridge, UK.
    • Neuropsychopharmacology. 2003 Nov 1; 28 (11): 2037-44.

    AbstractWe investigated the effects of subdissociative dose ketamine on executive processes during a working memory task. A total of 11 healthy volunteers participated in a double-blind, placebo-controlled, randomized, within-subjects study. They attended on three occasions, receiving intravenous infusions of placebo, a lower ketamine dose, and a higher ketamine dose. On each occasion, they underwent a series of tasks engaging working memory function in verbal and visuo-spatial domains. Further tasks explored aspects of long-term memory, planning, attention, and perceptual processing. With respect to working memory/executive function, a highly specific pattern of impairment was observed. Impairments were seen only at the higher dose of ketamine and restricted to a subgroup of the verbal working memory tasks: While visuo-spatial working memory showed no evidence of impairment, and while simple maintenance processes during verbal working memory were also unimpaired, higher dose ketamine produced a significant impairment in the manipulation of information within working memory. This process-specific effect of ketamine was reflected in a drug-by-task interaction. The specificity of this ketamine effect suggests that the earliest effect of NMDA receptor blockade is in higher order control of executive function rather than in more basic maintenance processes.

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