Rising Ketamine Use Linked to Serious Health Issues and Poor Treatment Access

Paracelsus

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In a revealing new study published in Addiction, researchers shed unprecedented light on ketamine use disorder (KUD), a growing public health concern often overlooked amid the drug’s therapeutic hype. The study led by Rebecca E. Harding and colleagues from University College London and the University of Exeter, paints a stark portrait of the physical, psychological, and systemic challenges faced by ketamine users worldwide.

Drawing from an international sample of 274 individuals aged 18 to 67, the study reveals that chronic ketamine use is associated with a variety of debilitating symptoms. These include bladder dysfunction and nasal damage, both affecting around 60% of participants, and intense abdominal pains known as "K-cramps" reported by 56%. Alarmingly, while the majority experienced severe symptoms, more than half did not seek any form of treatment, citing barriers such as stigma, lack of tailored services, and inadequate medical understanding of KUD.

The research also highlights the emergence of a withdrawal syndrome tied to ketamine cessation, with cravings (71%), low mood (62%), anxiety (59%), and irritability (45%) being the most common symptoms. Participants described an abstinence experience resembling that of opioid withdrawal, a significant finding that challenges earlier assumptions about ketamine’s relatively benign addictive profile.

Treatment experiences were generally unsatisfactory. Only 36% of treatment-seeking individuals reported being content with the care received. Most services were described as ill-equipped to address ketamine-specific issues, and many patients encountered healthcare providers who underestimated the drug's addictive potential. Particularly striking was the sentiment that ketamine’s growing clinical use as a rapid-acting antidepressant has contributed to public underestimation of its dangers.

Among those who did pursue recovery, support groups and inpatient rehabilitation were reported as the most effective approaches, though many participants found personal strategies such as developing hobbies or quitting independently more helpful than formal treatment programs. The study identifies affordability, privacy, and targeted therapy addressing the unique psychological and physical aspects of KUD as critical features desired in treatment options.

The findings arrive amid a backdrop of surging ketamine use both recreationally and medically. UK government statistics indicate that ketamine use has more than doubled since 2016, particularly among people under 25. Similarly, US data reflect a 1116% increase in ketamine seizures between 2017 and 2022, illustrating its rising presence on the illicit market.

Harding and her team call for urgent reforms, advocating for specialized treatment services, greater public and professional education on the risks of ketamine misuse, and harm reduction initiatives tailored to the drug’s unique risk profile. They emphasize the need for future research to explore pharmacological treatments for KUD and to better understand its psychological sequelae.

The full study is available open access here: https://doi.org/10.1111/add.70073

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DieYoung

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As a regular user, I can say that I find it difficult in the days after consumption, which makes me more irritable and want to continue consuming, although that doesn't prevent me from living a normal life and going months without consuming it. I suppose that each person experiences it differently, but for me, my trips with K are small rays of hope that help me cope with depression.

(I apologize if anything is unclear)
 

miner21

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There is a case in wyoming where a prodiver prescribed retainer to a depressed mother. The retainer was a tablet that was to be taken at home. The mother murdered both her children and herself. The family is taking the providers practice to civil court
 

dnBQByvHb8Zkawbjpx

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I've gone through 205 grams of ketamine in my life. I've decided for IM as my RoA (95 % of the time) to avoid nasal damage and to benefit from a higher bioavailability which is basically a double of intranasal RoA bioavailability. It also minimizes the impact of norketamine on the bladder. With IM I need to take 1/2 of what I'd need to take intranasaly for the same psychoactive effect, resulting in 1/2 of norketamine and a half its damage. At least that's what I was able to put together through my research, feel free to correct me if that is not correct.

The biggest impact that I felt during the use was on my sleeping pattern, it would easily keep me up through the night, only to let me get few hours of sleep in the morning. Going cold turkey would leave me drained of energy but things got back to normal within a few days. One would think that an anesthetic is a downer but I've found it to be an upper, S way more than racemic.

I've never noticed any pain during urination, or discoloration of urine, even after a month of very heavy use, nor have I suffered from cramps, however I did notice some effect related to the bladder. I rarely ever to go the bathroom in the middle of the night, almost never, and when I do it's usually after drinking like 8 beers so it's not a great surprise. Following my last period of heavy K use I found myself going to the bathroom up to 4 times in a night, which was completely new and significant. Fortunately the damage, unless it's serious after chronic use, is reversible, at least to some extent. After three weeks of abstinence this symptom is gone (it disappeared earlier but I did not make a note of it) and my bathroom schedule is back to where it was.

Anyone who wants to chat or needs some support getting off K, feel free to hit me up. K is fun but the long term irreversible damage is real and it's not worth it.
 

PuzzlePeace

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Is S-Ketamine able to be smoked or vaporized that you are aware of? To relieve the negative effects on intranasal use? I have only used 3 times and have not gotten an experience that makes me want more. I did read somewhere on BB that it is poison to vaporize, just a comment by another user but have been told that people do add ketamine to other substances. I have looked all over and have not found a definitive answer.
 

Alcohtek

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Some people mix Ketamine-S with Cocaine or Speed, it gives a quite special effect,

Smoking ketamine?? yeah I've already seen that, only once, in a Free-Party in Europe, I was next to 3 guys who were smoking ketamine in a homemade water pipe, he was only doing one hit after another, in our opinion it must destroy the lungs of phew and you should feel almost nothing...
 

robby771

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Interesting study. The rise in ketamine use really shows how quick medical trends can turn risky when access to proper treatment doesn’t keep up.
 
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