About Ketamine
What was the initial use of ketamine?
Ketamine is a medication that was initially developed for use as an anesthetic. In the 1960s, the drug was used to sedate animals during surgery and other procedures. Ketamine received FDA approval for use in humans in 1970 and was instrumental in treating battlefield injuries during the Vietnam War.
How was Ketamine discovered for mental health and pain conditions?
Over time, physicians who administered ketamine to patients began to notice that the drug appeared to help lift severe depression and even gave patients a reprieve from suicidal thoughts. After extensive research, ketamine and its derivative S-ketamine (phoneticized as "esketamine" and marketed under the brand name Spravato™) are now recognized as an evidence-based treatment in patients for whom other depression therapies have proven ineffective or insufficient. To simplify things, the majority of this page will refer to both ketamine and S-ketamine as just "ketamine."
How does ketamine work in people with depression?
While most depression medications work on brain chemicals such as serotonin, norepinephrine, or dopamine; ketamine works on the brain systems that involve glutamate, a neurotransmitter that plays key roles in learning, memory, and brain function. Ketamine's actions at glutamate receptors can help nerve cells activate and communicate in new ways.
Ketamine is a dissociative drug that can create immediate results. Unlike most medications for depression, which require weeks to build up and deliver results, ketamine can create noticeable improvements in depressive symptoms within just a few hours of treatment; though, most patients get full benefits after multiple successive treatments.
What can I expect during ketamine therapy?
Ketamine often creates a temporary distortion in perception (many call it an out-of-body feeling) for a few hours after treatment, so it is only administered in a clinical setting by practitioners trained in how to deliver the medication, monitor for side effects, and guide you through the process. You’ll relax in the clinic while the medication takes effect and you are cared for by our trained staff.
How quickly can I resume normal activities?
Once any potential side effects have faded away, you can resume the rest of your day. Our experienced providers will work with you to determine if this treatment approach is delivering the desired improvements and will advise you on the treatment timing moving forward.
How do I choose between Ketamine and S-Ketamine?
Both ketamine and S-ketamine are effective in treating major depressive disorder, so the difference comes down to accessibility and affordability. Because ketamine's FDA approval only lists anesthesia as its intended use, nearly all payors consider ketamine used to treat depression as "experimental," even though there is significant research to prove it works, and they deny coverage.
However, because the FDA approved S-ketamine under the brand name Spravato specifically to treat depression, almost all insurance plans will cover S-ketamine treatment, and available savings programs allow some patients to pay as little as $10 per treatment. These factors make S-ketamine available to a broader range of patients.