Erowid References Database
Krupitsky EM, Grinenko AY.
“Ketamine psychedelic therapy KPT: a review of the results of ten years of research”.
J Psychoactive Drugs. 1997 Apr-Jun 25;29(2):165-83.
|
Abstract
Ketamine is a prescription drug used for general anesthesia. In subanesthetic doses, it induces profound psychedelic experiences and hallucinations. The subanesthetic effect of ketamine was the hypothesized therapeutic mechanism in the authors' use of ketamine-assisted psychotherapy for alcoholism. The results of a controlled clinical trial demonstrated a considerable increase in efficacy of the authors' standard alcoholism treatment when supplemented by ketamine psychedelic therapy KPT. Total abstinence for more than one year was observed in 73 out of 111 65.8 alcoholic patients in the KPT group, compared to 24 24 out of 100 patients of the conventional treatment control group p < 0.01. The authors' studies of the underlying psychological mechanisms of KPT have indicated that ketamine-assisted psychedelic therapy of alcoholic patients induces a harmonization of the Minnesota Multiphasic Personality Inventory MMPI personality profile, positive transformation of nonverbalized mostly unconscious self-concept and emotional attitudes to various aspects of self and other people, positive changes in life values and purposes, important insights into the meaning of life and an increase in the level of spiritual development. Most importantly, these psychological changes were shown to favor a sober lifestyle. The data from biochemical investigations showed that pharmacological action of KPT affects both monoaminergic and opioidergic neurotransmitter metabolism, i.e., those neurochemical systems which are involved in the pathogenesis of alcohol dependence. The data from EEG computer-assisted analysis demonstrated that ketamine increases theta activity in cerebrocortical regions of alcoholic patients. This is evidence of the reinforcement of limbic cortex interaction during KPT session.
|
# |
Submit Comment |
|
[
Cite HTML ]