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by blobwalker 3046 days ago
It's a huge problem for recreational use. Some individuals have trouble with it even with prescription ketamine, but it's not nearly as common. Last time I asked him, my doctor hasn't had any patients who were forced to discontinue treatment because of it.

n=1, but I've been receiving ketamine therapy for about 6 years and have not developed ketamine cystitis.

1 comments

Are recreational doses significantly higher than prescription doses? Why the difference?
Yes. "Recreational" users rarely suffer from ket bladder - it's people with serious addictions who are ending up in urology clinics. Users are reporting taking anything from 5 to 15 grams per day; even assuming that it's of very low purity, that's still orders of magnitude more than the doses being used to treat depression.
Ketamine is toxic to the bladder at any dose. I haven't found any long term research on this topic.
The research for depression used much lower doses of ketamine than recreational use. One UK clinic was using about 80 mg as a max dose. https://www.oxfordhealth.nhs.uk/news/first-uk-study-of-ketam...

A large recreational dose may be 250 mg.

This is partly because the recreational dose is looking for different effects, so they use more. And because people build up a tolerance.

It’s also a result of ketamine typically being used in the context of other drugs, especially stimulants.