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Prescriptions for ketamine have soared in recent years, driven by for-profit clinics and telehealth services offering the medication as a treatment for pain, depression, anxiety and other conditions. With its recent adoption for pain, patients are increasingly encountering those same effects. Ketamine targets a brain chemical messenger called glutamate, which is thought to play a role in both pain and depression. “We want patients to disassociate or feel separate from their pain, depression or anxiety,” said Dr. David Mahjoubi, owner of Ketamine Healing Clinic in Los Angeles. But the experts found “weak or no evidence” for ketamine in many more conditions, including back pain, migraines, fibromyalgia and cancer pain.
Persons: , , Padma Gulur, Gulur, Daniel Bass, Bass, ” Bass, David Mahjoubi, they’re, Eric Schwenk, Thomas, “ There’s, Johnson, Samuel Wilkinson, Caleb Alexander, Matthew Perrone Organizations: WASHINGTON, Duke University, Duke, Food and Drug Administration, FDA, Thomas Jefferson University, Epic Research, Johnson, Drug Enforcement, Yale University, Johns Hopkins University, Twitter, Associated Press Health, Science Department, Howard Hughes Medical Institute’s Science, Educational Media Group, AP Locations: As, U.S, Southgate , Kentucky, Los Angeles, anesthesiology, Massachusetts
Small icons of scientific papers are lined up in a grid, each representing a study of medication abortion. Studies of abortion pills Each icon represents one study that reported serious complications after medication abortion. For pregnant women considering medication abortion, the alternatives would be childbirth or procedural abortion. Almost all patients will experience bleeding and pain during a medication abortion, because the pills essentially trigger a miscarriage. But the study itself notes that bleeding is expected, serious complications are rare and medication abortion is safe.
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