I was a ketamine user for over a decade. It really did work wonders for clinical depression, even brought me right out of suicidal hysteria and despair within moments, but it comes with severe drawbacks. It can ruin your bladder. It will sap the b vitamins out of your system, and could cause nerve damage. More importantly, it is VERY addictive psychologically. I'm not saying to stay away, but to be careful and disciplined.<p>Thoughts on the research: to the extent that the mind is already chemical in nature, yes depression can be a chemical issue. However, I think they are looking at it all wrong. I believe the reason ketamine (and nitrous oxide, they may soon find out) are so effective at attacking depression is because they are disassociative in nature. Looking at it as simply a chemical problem erroneously reduces what is likely a complex issue in a complex organ. What ketamine and other disassociatives do is they "loosen" one's attachment and identification with various parts of their cognitive minds, allowing thoughts and feelings to exist in their own space without having such a strong hold on a person's conscious self, or seat of awareness, or whatever. Its basically like induced meditation, and from my experience with both disassociatives and years of meditation, I will tell you that they are VERY similar and the ancient traditions of buddhism and yoga got the nature of the mind and depression more right than any of the shit I learned in university or this kind of research. Meditation WORKS, it just takes practice and discipline. Like brushing teeth, but for the mind. If you dont do it, you will get plaque and your mind will rot. A drug may help pull a person out of the depression temporarily, which is definitely useful in times when a person can't break out of the loop and is immobilized with despair, but to reduce the whole thing down to this chemical or that chemical will only continue to find chemical solutions, which are never ideal.