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Contents
- Abstract
- Method and Materials
- Animals
- Early Life Stress Induction and Drug Injections
- Pharmacology
- Behavioral Testing
- Aggression Test
- Sociability Test
- Mobility Test
- Contextual Fear Memory Test
- Light/Dark Box
- Sucrose Preference Test
- Statistical Analysis
- Transparency and Openness
- Results
- Ketamine Enhances Aggression, but Not Nonaggressive Social Behavior, After Early Life Stress
- Ketamine Does Not Affect Mobility, Fear, Anxiety-Like Behavior, or Depression-Like Behavior
- Discussion
- Ketamine Has Mixed Effects on Aggression, Anxiety, Depression, and Fear in Humans and Rodents
- Contrasting Effects of Ketamine With Different NMDAR Antagonists
- Concluding Remarks
Figures and Tables
Abstract
Ketamine is a dissociative anesthetic that has been shown to have antidepressant effects in humans and has been proposed as a potential treatment for mood disorders such as posttraumatic stress disorder and aggression. However, previous studies from our lab and others have demonstrated that ketamine’s effects are highly context- and dose-dependent. In a recent study, we found that 10 mg/kg ketamine could exacerbate the effects of early life stress on excessive aggression in mice. To further investigate, the effect of ketamine on moods, such as fear, anxiety, depression, and aggression, we used a mouse model of early life stress, involving chronic social isolation followed by acute traumatic stress in the form of noncontingent, unpredictable foot shock during adolescence. We find this is necessary to induce long-lasting excessive aggression in a novel environment. Seven- to eight-week-old socially isolated mice were given IP injections of 10 mg/kg ketamine 30 min before being subjected to foot shock and then assessed 7 days later for changes in sociability, aggression, mobility, anxiety-like behavior, and depression-like behavior. The results show that ketamine selectively increases long-lasting aggression in mice exposed to foot shock, but does not affect mood-related behaviors or locomotion. These findings suggest that during early life stress, ketamine may exert its effects by specifically targeting aggression brain circuitry that is distinct from brain circuits responsible for nonaggressive social or emotional behaviors. Therefore, while ketamine may be a promising treatment for various mood disorders, caution should be exercised when using ketamine to treat disorders associated with early life stress.
Posttraumatic stress disorder (PTSD), depression, anxiety, fear, and aggression are debilitating mental health conditions that...