guideofpills.com


   Home
   Viagra
   Tramadol
   Phentermine
   Propecia
   Nexium
   Prilosec
   Lipitor
   Xenical
   Zocor
   Celebrex
   Allegra
   Claritin
   Levitra
   Penis Pill
   Diet
   Pacerone
   Zoloft
   Lose Weight
   Healthy Diet
   Taxol
   Tamone
   Links
     
 
 Sponsored Links
Ketamine Info
Petamine : Huge Selection!
Find Ketamine



Ketamine

Ketamine chemical structure

Ketamine

IUPAC name:

2-(2-chlorophenyl)-
2-(methylamino)-cyclohexanone

CAS number
6740-88-1
ATC code
N01AX03
Chemical formula C13H16ClNO
Molecular weight 237.7
Bioavailability  ?
Metabolism liver
Elimination half life 2.5 hours
Excretion renal (>90%), urine
Pregnancy category  ?
Legal status DEA Schedule III (USA)
Delivery Insufflated, Injected, Taken Orally

10ml bottle of Ketamine
10ml bottle of Ketamine

Indicated for:
  • ?

Recreational uses:

Unethical uses:

  • ?

Other uses:

  • ?
Contraindications:
  • ?
Side effects:

Severe:

  • ?

Atypical sensations:

  • ?

Cardiovascular:

  • ?

Ear, nose, and throat:

  • ?

Endocrinal:

  • ?

Eye:

  • ?

Gastrointestinal:

  • ?

Hematological:

  • ?

Musculoskeletal:

  • ?

Neurological:

  • ?

Psychological:

  • ?

Respiratory:

  • Ketamine depresses the Respiratory System

Skin:

  • ?

Urogenital and reproductive:

  • ?

Miscellaneous:

  • ?

Ketamine is a general dissociative anesthetic for human and veterinary use. Its hydrochloride salt is sold as KetanestĀ®, KetasetĀ® and KetalarĀ®. Pharmacologically it is very similar to Dextromethorphan and phencyclidine (PCP).

Ketamine was first used on American soldiers during the Vietnam War, but is often avoided now because it can cause unpleasant out-of-body experiences. It is still used in human medicine as a first-choice anesthetic for victims with unknown medical history (e.g. from traffic accidents), in podiatry and other minor surgery, and occasionally for the treatment of migraine.

In veterinary medicine, ketamine is often used for its anaesthetic and analgesic affects on cats, dogs, rabbits, rats, and other small animals. Veterinarians often use ketamine with sedative drugs to produce balanced anaesthesia and analgesia and also use ketamine as a constant rate infusion to help prevent pain wind-up. Ketamine is often used with horses and other large animals, but it has less effect on bovines.

Ketamine may be used in small doses (0.1 - 0.5 mg/kg/hr) as an analgesic, particularly for the treatment of pain associated with movement and neuropathic pain. It has the added benefit of counter-acting spinal sensitization or wind-up phenomena experienced with chronic pain. At these doses, the psychotropic side effects are less apparent and well managed with benzodiazepines. It is a co-analgesic, requiring concomitant low-dose opioid to be effective.

Ketamine effects as a depressesent on the respiratory and circulatory are less than other anesthetics. When used in anesthetic doses, it sometimes stimulates the circulatory system rather than depresses it. It is sometimes possible to perform ketamine anesthesia without protective measures to the airways. Ketamine is also a potent analgesic and can be used in sub-anesthetic doses to relieve acute pain; however, its psychotropic properties must be taken into account.

There is research going on in its usefulness in pain therapy and for the treatment of alcoholism and heroin addiction.

Ketamine is a Schedule III drug in the United States, and is used in many other countries, such as Mexico. Patients sometimes reported going into other worlds or seeing God while anesthetized. These unwanted psychological side-effects made ketamine less used.

Psychopharmacologically it is a non-competitive glutamate inhibitor at the NMDA receptors. These occur mainly in the hippocampal formation and in the prefrontal cortex, which explains ketamine's profound effects on memory and thought.


Contents

History

Ketamine was first synthesized in 1962, as an attempt to find a safer alternative to PCP. The first psychedelic use of Ketamine was in 1965. Ketamine would increase in popularity in 1978, thanks to the publication of several books, including "The Scientist" by John Lilly, which documented his ketamine, LSD, and isolation tank experiments. Ketamine was placed in Schedule III of the United States Controlled Substance Act in August 1999.

Recreational Use

When used recreationally, it is known as K, Ket, Special K, Vitamin K (not to be confused with the true Vitamin K) and Kitty.

Ketamine produces effects similar to PCP, and DXM. Like other dissociative anesthetics in low- to upper-middle dosages, its hallucinogenic effects are only seen against a background lacking sensory stimulation, such as darkness. Users tout its trip as better than that of PCP or LSD because its overt hallucinatory effects are short-acting, lasting an hour or less, in most cases. Effects on the senses, judgment, and coordination, however, can last for 18 to 24 hours. Ketamine sold on the streets comes from diverted legitimate supplies, primarily veterinary clinics, in either powdered or liquid form. In powdered form its appearance is similar to that of pharmaceutical grade cocaine and can be insufflated (snorted, also known as "taking bumps"), placed in beverages, or smoked in combination with marijuana. Oral use usually requires more material, but has a longer duration. The liquid can be heated to drive off the solvent (usually saline), leaving powder, or it can be injected.

In therapeutic and psychedelic use, the liquid is injected intra-muscularly, though for all intents and purposes, intravenous self-injection is impossible, as well as dangerous, as the user would be so quickly numbed as to be unable to finish the injection. The incidence of recreational ketamine use is increasing, and accounts of recreational ketamine use appear in reports of rave parties attended by teenagers and young adults. This lead to the scheduling of the drug in 1999.

Like the other dissociative anesthics DXM and PCP, hallucinations caused by ketamine are fundamentally different than those caused by tryptamines and phenethylamines. While at low doses the user must be in a dark room or have his eyes closed in order to see any hallucinations, at medium to high doses the effects are far more intense and obvious and include changes in the perception of distances and durations, and the visual system being slow to update what the user is seeing. There are reports of high dosage users who tell about being able to see their surroundings in two sharp images, as if the brain is unable to merge the images each eye is sending.

Ketamine puts the user in a dissociated state, meaning that they are not connected to a sense of self, or to reality around them. If a large enough amount is taken, the user may go through a "K-hole" and experience other worlds or dimensions that are impossible to describe in our language, while being completely unaware of their individual identity or the outside world. A user may feel as though her perception is located so deep inside his/her mind that the real world seems distant (hence the use of a "hole" to describe the experience). Often users do not remember this part of the experience after regaining consciousness. The "re-integration" process is slow, and the user gradually becomes aware of things around them. At first they may not remember their own name, or even know that they are human, or what that means. Movement is extremely difficult, and users may not be aware that they have a body at all. It may be possible to use this state therapeutically, taking advantage of the dissociation and removing associations from the user's brain. After the experience is over, some of these changes may remain.

Some drug users' first contact with ketamine is accidental, often from a pill sold as something else (commonly Ecstasy). Ketamine is also commonly combined with other drugs to enhance their effects.

See also

External links



  • Blind search dot net

  • Fun search

  • On casino

  • Toolhost.com

  • GuideofCasinos dot Com

  • Pillscatalog dot Net

  • CatalogofCasinos dot com

  • All of Finance dot com


  • .


    Try search at Google | Yahoo
        ketamine Info      
        Get Info on ketamine from 14 search engines in 1.
       
         http://web.info.com 
       
     
        ketamine Info      
        Get info on ketamine from 14 search engines in 1.
       
         http://www.info.com 
       
     
        Find ketamine      
        Shop and compare great deals on ketamine and other related products
       
         http://www.MonsterMarketplace.com 
       
     
        ketamine Websites      
        Search for ketamine and more and get relevant results.
       
         http://www.bediddle.com//// 
       
     
        New Laughs Daily      
        Check out a new joke every day. The daily joke. On crackle.com
       
         http://www.crackle.com/c/Daily_Joke 
       
     
        Blinkx Video Search      
        World's largest video search engine. Over 26 million hours of video.
       
         www.blinkx.com 
       
     
        Blinkx Video Search      
        World's largest video search engine. Over 26 million hours of video. Watch it all!
       
         http://www.blinkx.com 
       
     
        Need Health Information?      
        Your Complete Heath Directory Resource. Find What You Need Now!
       
         http://www.AreaConnect.com 
       
     
        Search Jobs on Yahoo! HotJobs      
        Search Jobs by Location, Industry or Keyword
       
         http://www.hotjobs.com 
       
     
        Sweep the Leg      
        Watch the Karate Kid Free Online. Exclusively on Crackle.
       
         http://crackle.com/c/The_Karate_Kid_I 
       
     
        ketamine      
        Search for ketamine and more and get relevant results.
       
         http://ww.bediddle.com/ 
       
     
        ketamine      
        Find Local Health Providers Near You. View Top Results.
       
         http://www.FindLinks.com 
       
     
        ketamine Search Results      
        Search for ketamine and more and get relevant results.
       
         http://www.bediddle.com/ketamine// 
       
     
        Watching You, Watching Me...      
        The video takeover. Heavy is heavy. Hot chicks, the best crashes, hardest hits and viral flicks. The Sumo has landed.
       
         http://www.heavy.com 
       
     
        Gamer News, Videos, Screenshots & Reviews      
        Independent Journalism Has Arrived At Crispy Gamer. Credible Reviews Without Publishers Ads. For Serious Gamers Only.
       
         www.CrispyGamer.com 
       
     
        Video News & Entertainment      
        Get breaking news stories in streaming video. Today's top stories in Entertainment, Health and More. Always Free!
       
         www.ivillage.com 
       
     
        5 G.w. Bush Comedy Interviews      
        The soon-to-be ex-President Bush is a blundering moron in 5 hilarious mock interviews. Despite eight years in the Oval Office, we still have so much to learn about the 43rd President of the United States.
       
         ATOM.com 
       
     
        Ed N Red Games      
        A party in the jacuzzi and hot chicks beating up on Miller and Mullet. Check it out!!!
       
         www.RipeTV.com 
       
     
        Movie Reviews Done Right      
        If it's crap, we'll tell you. Spill.com movie reviews and community
       
         www.spill.com 
       
     
        1000's Of Free Coupon Codes      
        Thousands of free coupon codes to save money while shopping at all of your favorite online stores.
       
         http://MyCoupons.com 
       
     
         2000-2005 guideofpills.com