Ketamine Cystitis Following Ketamine Therapy for Treatment Resistant Depression – Case Report
BJPsych Open June 1, 2025 Minna Chang, Allan Young, Mario Juruena
A 28-year-old woman receiving ketamine for depression developed ulcerative cystitis, a complication previously seen only in recreational users. Ketamine-induced cystitis (KIC) causes lower urinary tract symptoms—dysuria, urgency, nocturia, frequency—and can progress to incontinence, hematuria, bladder fibrosis, and kidney damage. The exact cause is unknown, but theories include direct toxicity from ketamine metabolites, an IgE-mediated allergic response, and other inflammatory pathways. Early diagnosis and stopping ketamine can reverse symptoms and prevent further harm. This is the first reported case of KIC from therapeutic-dose ketamine for depression.