Regrets!

Regrets!

Ketamine is used in the medical and veterinary fields as an anesthetic, so there is always a risk of vomiting associated with use. If you eat or drink before using ketamine you have all the chances to vomit. Ketamines main effect is over the central nervous system, reducing the oxygen that goes to the brain and other vital organs.

Compared with other drugs, ketamine is relatively safe due to its use in medicine. Thanks to the numerous clinical tests and its long and short term effects, the action of ketamine over the human body is well documented and understood. Nevertheless, recreational drug use is not controlled medical use.

However, when purchasing ketamine on the street you never know what other substances it might be mixed with. You don’t know what or how much of the drug you are ingesting. Overdosing on a self-administered dose of ketamine is nearly impossible because it has a wide safety margin and you will pass out well before it can kill you.

That is why ketamine is not a good drug to take outside the home. You’re quite likely to fall down, get run over, or at least make a complete fool of yourself. Talking, moving or even going to the toilet is not easy, it’s important to be in a safe environment with, ideally, one non-participating friend. At high doses, ketamine can be physically incapacitating, even paralyzing. Make sure you extinguish all cigarettes, candles and anything flammable that could be knocked over.

Some emerging research suggests that heavy and prolonged ketamine use can cause brain damage, in the form of “Olney’s lesions” or “vacuoles.” However these vacuoles were found on rats injected with ketamine and experiments on monkeys have failed to produce similar results.

We strongly recommend to everyone reading this article to stay out of ketamine abuse, however, if you or someone close to you have problems with ketamine addiction, we suggest you to visit Drug Rehabilitation Centers Canada.

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