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Calvin K. Young

University of Otago

2 papers in the library · publishing 2021-2026

Papers

Ketamine effects on EEG and their links to therapy differ across treatment-resistant major depression, post-traumatic stress disorder, and obsessive-compulsive disorder

The International Journal of Neuropsychopharmacology July 6, 2026 Shabah M. Shadli, Neda Nasrollahi, Calvin K. Young et al.

Ketamine at low doses (0.5-1.0 mg/kg I.M.) quickly reduces symptoms in treatment-resistant major depressive disorder (TR-MDD), post-traumatic stress disorder (TR-PTSD), and obsessive-compulsive disorder (TR-OCD), but its neural effects differ by diagnosis. EEG recordings of resting frontal activity before and after ketamine or fentanyl showed that TR-PTSD patients had dose- and band-frequency-dependent power changes (especially alpha at 0.5 mg/kg), while TR-MDD patients showed no such changes. TR-OCD responses differed qualitatively from both. Correlations between EEG power changes and symptom scale improvements varied by band and electrode across different disorder-specific scales. Ketamine's effects and their therapeutic links vary by brain site and frequency band depending on the DSM diagnosis, suggesting disorder-specific systems require a ketamine-sensitive factor to generate the disorder.

Interaction between perineuronal nets and ketamine in antidepressant action

bioRxiv Preprint Server May 30, 2021 Calvin K. Young, Kachina G. Kinley, Neil McNaughton preprint

Depression is the leading cause of disability worldwide, yet its biological mechanisms remain poorly understood. This study investigated whether scaffolding proteins in the medial frontal cortex contribute to antidepressant effects. The researchers injected chABC into the infralimbic cortex of animals to remove perineuronal nets and then tested for antidepressant effects using the forced swim test. They also tested whether systemic ketamine injections added to the effect. Preliminary data indicate that neither removing the scaffolding proteins nor ketamine alone decreased depression-like behavior, but the two treatments may interact synergistically to decrease immobility time in the forced swim test.