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Cameron Castle

Department of Psychological Medicine, University of Otago, Dunedin, New Zealand

1 paper in the library · 20 citations · publishing 2017

Papers

Effect of ketamine dose on self-rated dissociation in patients with treatment refractory anxiety disorders

Journal of Psychopharmacology October 1, 2017 Cameron Castle, Andrew Gray, Shona Neehoff et al. 20 citations

Ketamine produces dose-dependent dissociative symptoms in patients with treatment-resistant anxiety, while midazolam does not. The Clinician-Administered Dissociative States Scale (CADSS) shows high internal consistency (Cronbach alpha = 0.937) for measuring these symptoms, though it does not capture thought disorder. Individual items varied in their sensitivity to ketamine dose and magnitude of change. Removing items did not meaningfully improve the scale's reliability, and acceptable consistency remained even after excluding items unresponsive at lower doses. The CADSS is an internally consistent tool for assessing ketamine-induced dissociation in clinical trials for anxiety.