Couldn't find what you looking for?

TRY OUR SEARCH!

Table of Contents

Depression is notoriously difficult to treat, and pharmaceutical interventions often take weeks to offer relief. The anesthetic ketamine, however, sometimes lifts depression in hours.

Johnson & Johnson has been developing a drug called esketamine that will be taken through the nose. Right now, the clinical trials are using intravenous (IV) esketamine, but the final form of the drug will be administered as a nose drop.

The Johnson & Johnson researchers hope that the nasal formula will minimize some of the more prominent side effects of ketamine, such as hallucinations and anxiety. But for both ketamine and the new drug esketamine there remain some serious, unanswered questions.

As an update, as of 2022, eskamine is widely prescribed to patients suffering from treatment-resistant depression. When other antidepressants fail to improve a person's symptoms of depression, and even when depressed patients suffer from acute suicidal thoughts, esketamine is now prescribed routinely, with good results.

Are ketamine and esketamine appropriate treatments for patients at risk for suicide?

Doctors hope that the fast-acting nature of ketamine and esketamine may make them especially appropriate for sufferers of major depressive disorders who are identified as at-risk for suicide. The major problem for profoundly depressed people seeking relief with ketamine now is that since the drug is used off-label, it is not covered by insurance plans, and each treatment costs thousands of dollars that the patient has to pay out of pocket. Because the drug wears off in a few days to a few weeks, the expensive treatment has to be repeated over and over again. Catastrophic medical bills are also depressing.

What are the long-term effects of ketamine and esketamine?

Another unanswered question for ketamine and esketamine researchers is how these medications affect the course of depressive illnesses over the long-term. Are users of the medication at greater risk for relapse? For "highs" or hypomanic episodes as they rebound from depression? Is it possible to become habituated to the drug so that it loses its effectiveness over time? When the need is immediate and desperate, the doctor may use ketamine anyway, but the wisdom of long-term use is not established,.

Can ketamine or esketamine used to treat depression induce the dreaded "K-hole" side effect?

When taken in large doses, ketamine can induce an out-of-body experience commonly called the "K-hole," in which the user has a sensation of floating, separation from the body, or being dead. There is no way to resist this experience with mental effort, and there are no medications that can stop the experience before the drugs wear off. Whether there is a risk for this side effect when the drugs are used for treating depression remains to be determined.

A more recent study at the Baylor School of Medicine in Houston and the Mt. Sinai School of Medicine in New York City, however, produced even more excitiing results. In this study, most participants in the study experienced complete relief from depression after just one 40-minute IV, and 46% were depression-free a week later.

Just remember that the effects of ketamine are unpredictable. Drug pushers who sell special K at parties don't pay careful attention to dosing, expiration dates, or purity of the drug, and it is far too easy to overdose when taking the drug in an illicit setting.

  • Duncan WC Jr, Zarate CA Jr. Ketamine, sleep, and depression: current status and new questions. Curr Psychiatry Rep. 2013 Sep. 15(9):394. doi: 10.1007/s11920-013-0394-z.
  • Rasmussen KG, Lineberry TW, Galardy CW, Kung S, Lapid MI, Palmer BA, Ritter MJ, Schak KM, Sola CL, Hanson AJ, Frye MA. Serial infusions of low-dose ketamine for major depression. J Psychopharmacol. 2013 May. 27(5):444-50. doi: 10.1177/0269881113478283. Epub 2013 Feb 20. PMID: 23428794.
  • Photo courtesy of Dudu Viana by Flickr : www.flickr.com/photos/dudumvf/2687382977/
  • Photo courtesy of Schlonz by Wikimedia Commons : commons.wikimedia.org/wiki/File:Ketamine_10ml_bottle.jpg

Your thoughts on this

User avatar Guest
Captcha