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Ketamine: A Parents Worst Nightmare

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Discovered by Dr. Cal Stevens of Wayne State University in 1961. ... It is sold only to hospitals and physicians. What are the slang terms used for Ketamine? ... – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: Ketamine: A Parents Worst Nightmare


1
Ketamine A Parents Worst Nightmare
  • Audience Teenagers
  • By Becki Leonard

2
What is the history behind Ketamine?
  • Ketamine is a general anesthetic for human and
    veterinary use.
  • Discovered by Dr. Cal Stevens of Wayne State
    University in 1961.
  • Heavily used on the battlefields of Vietnam.
  • Used for short-term surgical procedures in both
    animals and humans.
  • It is sold only to hospitals and physicians.

3
What are the slang terms used for Ketamine?
  • Special K
  • Ketalar
  • Ketaject
  • Ketaset
  • Super-K
  • The chemical or brand name for Ketamine is
    Ketamine Hydrochloride.
  • K"
  • Ket Kat
  • Cat Valium
  • Vitamin K

4
  • Special K exploded onto the suburban drug
    scene.
  • U.S. DEA states use is at teen "rave" parties.
  • In 1995 added K to its list of "emerging
    drugs.
  • St. Louis, Tampa Bay, and suburban N.J. have had
    a rash of thieves hunting for Ketamine at animal
    hospitals.

5
  • Ketamine was first produced in 1962
  • in an attempt to find a safer anesthetic
  • alternative to PCP.
  • The drug was first used on American
  • Soldiers during the Vietnam War.
  • Is often avoided now because it can cause
  • unpleasant out-of-body experiences.
  • It is still used widely in veterinary
  • medicine and for select human applications.

6
  • The incidence of recreational ketamine use
  • increased through the end of the century,
  • especially in the context of raves and other
  • parties.
  • The increase in illicit use prompted
  • ketamine's placement in Schedule III of the
  • United States Controlled Substance Act in
  • August 1999.

7
  • Ketamine suppresses breathing much
  • less than most other available anesthetics.
  • Ketamine still used in human medicine.
  • Ketamine is 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.

8
How is Ketamine Used?
  • Special K is prepared by evaporating the liquid
  • and grinding the residue into a powder.
  • Drying of the liquid 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.

9
  • 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.

10
  • 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.
  • Also in 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.

11
  • Ketamine 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.

12
  • 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.

13
  • What are the effects of Ketamine?
  • I.M. (intra-muscular injection) takes 1-5 minutes
  • to take effect.
  • Snorted ketamine takes 5-15 minutes.
  • Depending on how much and recently one
  • has eaten, oral ketamine takes 5-30 minutes to
  • take effect.
  • The primary effects of ketamine lasts 30-45
  • minutes if injected, 45-60 minutes when
    snorted,
  • and 1-2 hours if used orally.
  • The DEA reports that ketamine still affects the
  • body for up to 24 hours.

14
What are the side effects of Ketamine?
Infrequent side effects
15
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16
Rare side effects
17
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18
  • 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, have
    slurred
  • speech, others feel sick or throw up.
  • While using Ketamine one could injure themselves
  • without even knowing it.
  • Hallucinations occur without realizing it.
  • Eating or drinking before taking the drug can
    cause
  • vomiting.

19
Two psychological difficulties for Ketamine
  • Paranoia
  • Egocentrism.

20
  • increase heart rate

Main characteristics of Ketamine is a stupor
similar to extreme drunkenness. This is commonly
known as "being in the K-hole."
  • slurred speech
  • paralyzed feeling
  • nausea
  • unable to move
  • numbness
  • hallucination
  • impaired attention, memory and learning ability
  • delirium, amnesia, impaired motor function, high
  • blood pressure, depression and potentially fatal
  • respiratory problems at higher doses

21
  • 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.

22
Can you overdose on Ketamine?
  • Yes, 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.

23
Is Ketamine addictive?
  • Yes, Ketamine can cause a tremendous
    psychological
  • dependence and may be physically addicting as
    well.
  • Special K is illegal and possession can result in
  • long prison terms.
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