OMG, I found this article in today's paper! What a laugh!
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Here's the link,
http://www.tbo.com/news/metro/MGB31HOLPQE.html
Here's the article:
TBO.com > News > Metro
Researchers Find Drug Gives Quick Depression Relief
Skip directly to the full story.
The Washington Post
Published: Aug 11, 2006
WASHINGTON - Government researchers announced this week that they have had striking success in treating depression in a matter of hours, using an experimental injectable drug that acts much more quickly than conventional antidepressants.
The study, based on a small sample, is part of a push by researchers to develop treatments that can bring quick relief to patients with mental disorders. Patients and their doctors report that it often takes weeks or months for most available medications to improve symptoms.
Much more work needs to be done before patients can see benefits from the breakthrough, the researchers said. Among the unanswered questions are whether patients will be able to tolerate the drug for long periods, and whether it will continue to be effective. Researchers said they hope the finding will prompt the pharmaceutical industry to develop similar compounds with fewer side effects that then can be tested on a large scale.
"Psychiatrists have gotten used to the idea we have to wait weeks or months, but we can break the sound barrier and get an antidepressant effect within hours," said Carlos Zarate Jr., chief of the mood disorders research unit at the National Institute of Mental Health.
Zarate and his colleagues wrote about their findings in the current issue of the Archives of General Psychiatry.
In the study, 18 patients were injected with a drug called ketamine, which has been used for a long time as an anesthetic. Patients briefly experienced a well-known side effect of the drug - a mild feeling of dissociation, where they felt disconnected or found it difficult to put thoughts into words.
Ketamine is a controlled substance and can produce mild euphoria.
The dissociative symptoms disappeared within hours, and shortly afterward, patients and physicians reported a dramatic improvement in mood. Half the patients had a 50 percent decline in depression symptoms, and by the end of the first day, 71 percent reported a similar improvement.
LMAO -> Special K being used to treat depression!
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