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Ketamine reduces suicidality in depressed patients

Reader Tom sends us news of amazing new potential for ketamine therapy.

Researchers have now explored ketamine's effects on suicidality in patients with treatment-resistant depression, and are publishing their results in the September 1st issue of Biological Psychiatry. Ketamine acutely reduced suicidal thoughts when patients were assessed 24 hours after a single infusion. This reduction in suicidality was maintained when patients received repeated doses over the next two weeks.

Corresponding author Rebecca Price commented on these encouraging findings: "If these findings hold up in larger samples of high-risk suicidal patients, IV ketamine could prove an attractive treatment option in situations where waiting for a conventional antidepressant treatment to take effect might endanger the patient's life."

Since this was a preliminary study in a small group of depressed patients, further research is needed to replicate these results. However, the findings are promising and could result in improved treatment for suicidal patients in the future.

Two years ago the NIMH announced that ketamine could be the key to a group of novel antidepressants. At the time I aked, "Why not just use ketamine?" Looks like someone listened.

Posted By jamesk at 2009-09-10 11:36:22 permalink | comments
Tags: ketamine
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jamesk : 2009-09-10 14:52:30
Suicidal depression has a lot to do with anxiety and the inability to escape specific anxiety spirals. Ketamine has the ability to knock people out of these spirals and see themselves and their problems from a more emotionally detached perspective. Chemically it is like putting the breaks on a runaway process of emotional turmoil, allowing the patient to experience the kind of peace they expect to find in death. This same treatment applies to people in chronic physical pain. Beyond McKenna's glib remark that Ketamine is like death, Karl Jansen spent many years studying how ketamine, and more specifically NMDA receptor antagonism, produces NDEs, or near-death-experiences, for his book "Ketamine: Dreams and Realities".
adam. : 2009-09-10 14:35:41
I was just listening to a discussion posted on the Psychedelic Salon podcast series and John Lilly was mentioned so the discussion went toward the subject of Ketamine, and Terence McKenna said chemically it was as close to being dead and you could get.
Maybe it's the experience of death itself, or at least something like it that is turning people away from suicide.

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