About ketamine
What is ketamine?
Research has proven that ketamine re-establishes and strengthens neural connections via dendrites—microscopic, spine-like structures that send and receive information.
What can ketamine do for you?
At lower doses, it helps guide you beyond the superficial layers of your everyday mind and heal unhealthy neural pathways. It enables you to achieve the clarity you want to live the life you deserve. Our nurses and therapists guide you along this journey. We are with you every step of the way.
Its healing power activates within hours, providing quick and effective relief for even the most stubborn mental challenges.
Why ketamine?
Research has shown intravenous ketamine to be a safe, extremely effective, and rapid solution for stubborn to-treat conditions.
It typically provides a pleasant experience with few to no negative after-effects. A large body of research shows its safe and effective for treating depression, anxiety, PTSD, chronic pain, and more.
What does ketamine feel like?
Ketamine produces a pleasant sense during the short 40-50 minute infusion. People describe it as dream-like or floating and most-often brings positive feelings and emotions during the treatment.
Ketamine experiences are unique and may induce or enhance feelings of creativity, purpose, perspective, serenity, insight, inspiration, gratitude, empathy, connection with others and the world, openness to new ideas, and psychological rebirth, among others. You may also experience visual, auditory, and other sensory effects.
Ketamine’s history
Today, ketamine is administered in safe doses by medical professionals for effective treatment. This brief overview showcases the highs and lows of its growth and development including how it is now being repurposed from anesthesia to a mental health medication.
Ketamine is created
Ketamine was first synthesized in 1962 by Calvin L. Stevens, professor of Organic Chemistry at Wayne State University in Michigan.
FDA approval
After promising trials, the FDA approved ketamine as a field anesthetic for soldiers during the Vietnam War.
Just a party drug?
The stigma of ketamine as a party drug begins to take root. Because of this, Its healing properties mainly went unnoticed by the broader medical community.
Controlled substance
In an effort to stop its illicit use, the U.S. made ketamine a federally controlled substance in 1999. Its use as a safe anesthesia medication increased.
Promising studies
Numerous studies showed ketamine to be a potent treatment for depression, a development many consider a monumental advance in antidepressant research.
Ketamine clinics
Today, thousands of ketamine clinics operate across the country. Clinical research and trials continue to provide evidence of intravenous ketamine's effectiveness in treating mood conditions.
Discuss your options
Chat with an expert
Experts at Northwest Ketamine Clinics are pioneering effective treatments to optimize ketamine's results and ensure it is provided in safe, therapeutic environments. Our knowledgeable staff is ready to talk with you about your options.
Ketamine research
Hundreds of studies attest to the effectiveness of ketamine for mental health and chronic pain. We’ve hand-picked and analyzed some of the most prominent.
Request your free consultation today
Talk to one of our experts to help you identify which program works best for you. We will reach out to you right away.