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KETAMINE ABUSE
The street terms used for Ketamine include: Special K, Ketalar, Ketaject, Ketaset,
Super-K, "K", Ket Kat, Cat Valium, Vitamin K
Ketamine is a short-acting "dissociative" anesthetic due to its ability
to separate perception from sensation. It also has hallucinogenic and painkilling
qualities that seem to affect people in very different ways. . Ketamine is chemically
related to PCP ('Angel Dust'). Ketamine is occasionally administered to people
but, more commonly, is used by vets for pet surgery. Generally street K is most
often diverted in liquid form from vets' offices or medical suppliers.
Special K is prepared by evaporating the liquid from the legitimate pharmaceutical
injectable product and grinding the residue into a powder. Drying of the liquid
has been reported to be accomplished by placing the liquid on warming trays,
pancake griddles, or cast-iron skillets placed on low heat. More recent reports
describe the use of microwaves to achieve a fast boiling-off of the liquid to
dry crystals. There has been no reported clandestine manufacture of ketamine
(which would be a difficult process). All of the ketamine encountered by law
enforcement to date has been diverted from licit sources, burglaries of veterinary
clinics being the most frequently reported source.
Special-K is usually snorted or swallowed as a powder or injected as a liquid
intramuscularly. Sometimes, it is put on tobacco or marijuana and smoked. It
is distributed as powder in small "personal use" cocaine-like bottles,
ziplock bags, capsules, or paper, glassine or aluminum 'folds', or as a liquid
in small vials or bottles. Specialized "puff pumpers", small bottles
with a small inhaler screw-on top designed to deliver approx. 40 mg of ketamine
crystals, have been sold in "Rave" clubs. A 10 ml vial of veterinary
product containing one gram of ketamine sells, on average, for $100 on the street.
A typical street package of powder (100 - 200 mg) sells for about $20. In the
past, other drugs were not usually mixed with ketamine, now however, MDMA, amphetamine,
methamphetamine, cocaine, carisoprodol, and flunitrazepam have been encountered.
Ketamine as "Special K" or "K" has become a staple at 'rave'
parties. It produces a dose-related progression of effects from a state of dreamy
intoxication to delirium accompanied by the inability to move, feel pain or
remember what has occurred while under the drug's influence.
I.M. (intra-muscular injection) Ketamine generally takes 1-5 minutes to take
effect. Snorted ketamine takes a little longer at 5-15 minutes. Depending on
how much and how recently one has eaten, oral ketamine can take between 5 and
30 minutes to take effect. The primary effects of ketamine last approximately
an 30-45 minutes if injected, 45-60 minutes when snorted, and 1-2 hours if used
orally. The Drug Enforcement Administration reports that the drug can still
affect the body for up to 24 hours.
- Hallucinations- it blocks chemical messengers in the brain that carry sensory
input; the brain fills the resulting void with visions, dreams, memories,
whatever
- Visual distortions
- Lost sense of time, senses, and identity
- Euphoria
- Confusion
- Smells and tastes seem muted
- Visual perception and sense of touch are amplified
- May feel floaty- slightly or far away from your body
- Numbness in your extremities
- K Hole- comparatively similar to a near death experience, with the sensation
of rising above one's body, inner peace, and radiant light.
The use of Ketamine can result in profound physical and mental problems including
delirium, amnesia, impaired motor function and potentially fatal respiratory
problems. Panic, rage and paranoia may also occur. Some people feel paralyzed
by the drug, unable to speak without slurring, while others either feel sick
or actually throw up. While using Ketamine one is less likely to feel pain and
in turn could end up inflicting injury or harm to themselves without even knowing
it. In addition, one can be submerged in their hallucinations without realizing
that they are hallucinating. Eating or drinking before taking the drug can cause
vomiting.
Information regarding the long-term effects of Ketamine is mainly anecdotal.
Flashbacks of experiences and hallucinations while under the influence of the
drug have been reported. There have also been suggestions that long-term use
of Ketamine can damage the memory and eyesight of the user, as well as reducing
attention span. Frequent use can cause disruptions in consciousness and lead
to neuroses or other mental disorders.
A BBC report in May 2000 claimed that medical research had shown that controlled
tests on Ketamine users had revealed impaired memory and mild schizophrenia
several days after taking the drug.
Two psychological difficulties which seem to come up for those who use Ketamine
regularly are paranoia and egocentrism. There are many reports of regular users
starting to see patterns and coincidences (synchronicities) in the world around
them which seem to indicate that they are somehow more important or integral
to the world than others. This same sense of the world focusing on the user
can also feed into a sense of paranoia.
- A main characteristic of Ketamine is a stupor similar to extreme drunkenness.
This is commonly known as "being in the K-hole."
- increase heart rate
- slurred speech
- paralyzed feeling
- nausea
- unable to move
- hallucination
- numbness
- impaired attention, memory and learning ability
- delirium, amnesia, impaired motor function, high blood pressure, depression
and potentially fatal respiratory problems at higher doses
An overdose of Ketamine will knock you out as if in an operating room. If repeatedly
taken in large doses, Ketamine can induce unconsciousness and failure of the
cardiovascular system, leading to death. There are at least seven Ketamine related
deaths known nationally. Ketamine can cause a tremendous psychological dependence
and may be physically addicting as well. The dissociation from one's consciousness
experienced with Special K (the entrance to "K-Land") can be highly
seductive, and there are many cases of Ketamine addiction. If used regularly,
users of Special K can quickly build a tolerance to the drugs effects. Special
K is illegal and possession can result in long prison terms.
Abuse of Ketamine (pronounced Kee-ta-meen) goes hand in hand with gamma hydroxy
butyrate (GHB) and MDMA (Ecstasy). Where you find one, you will likely find
the others. All three are very popular with the RAVE party crowd. Ketamine hcl,
a cat tranquilizer and the most commonly used anesthetic in the Vietnam War.
It was popular in the 70's. Ketamine is a psychedelic anesthetic classified
medically as a dissociative anesthetic, discovered by Dr. Cal Stevens of Wayne
State University in 1961. Heavily used on the battlefields of Vietnam, it is
used today for short-term surgical procedures in both animals and humans. It
is sold only to hospitals and physicians. Since it does not depress critical
body vitals, it is often used in procedures with burn victims for example.
Special K has exploded in the past few months onto the suburban drug scene.
In February, the U.S. Drug Enforcement Administration warned that use is increasing
at teen "rave" parties, the marathon dances that have spawned a new
youth subculture. Anti-drug czar Barry McCaffrey's office added K to its list
of "emerging drugs" in 1995; the office's latest "pulse check"
of the nation found K "all over." St. Louis, Mo., Tampa, Fla., and
suburban New Jersey have seen a rash of animal-hospital break-ins by thieves
hunting for Ketamine.