• Biological psychiatry · Jan 2000

    Dissociation of ketamine effects on rule acquisition and rule implementation: possible relevance to NMDA receptor contributions to executive cognitive functions.

    • J H Krystal, A Bennett, D Abi-Saab, A Belger, L P Karper, D C D'Souza, D Lipschitz, A Abi-Dargham, and D S Charney.
    • Department of Psychiatry, Yale University School of Medicine, New Haven, CT 06519, USA.
    • Biol. Psychiatry. 2000 Jan 15; 47 (2): 137-43.

    BackgroundThe demands of the Wisconsin Card Sorting Test (WCST) change with experience. This report contains two studies designed to examine N-methyl-D-aspartate (NMDA) receptor contributions to the executive components of WCST performance. These aspects of WCST performance figure more prominently in the initial completion of this task than in subsequent task repetitions in healthy populations.MethodsIn the first study, healthy subjects (n = 15) completed the WCST on two occasions separated by 1 week. In the second study, healthy subjects (n = 22) completed two test days spaced by approximately 1 week, during which, they completed the WCST and other assessments after administration of the NMDA antagonist ketamine (intravenous bolus 0.26 mg/kg followed by infusion of 0.65 mg/kg/hour) or matched placebo.ResultsIn the first study, subjects reduced the number of total and perseverative errors with a single repetition of the WCST. In the second study, ketamine significantly increased the number of total errors and the number and percent of perseverative errors on the first, but not the second test day. Similarly, it reduced the number of category criteria met on the first, but not second test day. Ketamine also increased distractibility, impaired recall, produced psychosis, altered perception, and had effects resembling the negative symptoms of schizophrenia. However, only WCST performance showed order dependency.ConclusionsThis order dependency further implicates NMDA receptors in executive cognitive functions associated with the frontal cortex.

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