Ketamine : Special K is originally manufactured in a liquid form. It is then packaged in 10- millimeter vials and shipped to veterinary clinics and hospitals. Once stolen or purchased on the street, the liquid ketamine is converted into a white powder form.
This is accomplished by either placing the liquid on a plate over boiling water or microwaving the liquid. The liquid then converts into a white crystallized powder that is packaged into clear plastic bags or clear glass vials. WHERE THE DRUG IS SOLD: Young people purchase Special K from other teenagers at “Raves” and clubs, as well as malls and shopping centers. Special K is a popular drug on both high school and college campuses. The drug can also be purchased through the Internet, if you know the “right people.”
METHODS OF USE: The majority of users will snort Special K as a powder. It can also be injected in its original liquid form. Users will ingest between 2 and 10 bags of Ketamine in a 24-hour period.
Ketamine is one of the hottest product over internet and in high demand. But one question asked by most of the users who are after ketamine. i.e Where to buy ketamine on the Internet?
If you have prescription you may try any Online Pharmacy. or if you are planning to import you can try India, China or Africa. There you may find couple of legit suppliers.
If you are trying to purchase within USA, you need to be very careful. USA is one of the biggest importer of ketamine and at same time its soft target for African guys as well. They have pick up’s in USA who pick money on their behalf – all old guys who are already out of money. and these african guys pretend to be in USA.
All you need to do is to ask who so ever your supplier is to provide you with clear photo with your name or email address writing on it
Using Ketamine to Treat Depression
- Ketamine depression treatment
- Types of Depression
- Natural Treatment for Depression
- Bipolar depression
- Postpartum Depression
- Chronic mild depression Dysthymia
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Ketamine depression treatment
Ketamine, an anesthetic used by veterinarians and whose consumption is spreading like a recreational drug, may hide the key to a new generation of antidepressants. Over the past decade, scientist have been investigating its properties, it is always injected in small doses under medical supervision, to combat sadness. The most surprising is that it acts much faster than standard treatments, and has now been discovered the brain mechanism that generates this fast response. “A dosage acts quickly and lasts seven to 10 days,” says Professor of Psychiatry and Pharmacology, Yale University (USA) Ronald Duman, whose study on rats has revealed that ketamine activates a brain protein called mTOR.
This process did not occur in
other antidepressant treatments, such as fluoxetine (Prozac) and imipramine
(Tofranil), so scientists have determined that it is the key to the immediate
effect of the substance. After being treated with mild doses of ketamine, rats
developed new neural connections, or synapses, in the cells of the frontal lobe
that had been damaged after prolonged exposure to stressful situations. But the
main advantage of ketamine over other antidepressants is acting fast, which is
important because current treatments can take weeks or even months to work
fully. Only one in three depressed patients respond favorably to the first drug
they are administered, so it may take months or even years trying different
options. And in some cases, no drug appears to work.
Ketamine, however, has achieved in previous studies that 70% of refractory patients within hours improved. Duman and colleagues, whose results were published in the journal ‘Science’, hope their description of the process that triggers this response allows new drugs that act quickly. So far, clinical use of ketamine as antidepressant experimental studies is limited because it may cause psychotic reactions. Moreover, the application for this use is complicated: it must be given intravenously and under medical supervision. For recreational use, the consequences are potentially severe and uncontrollable.
Ketamine is a dissociative anesthetic for use in human and veterinary medicine developed by Parke-Davis (1962).