Department of Psychological Medicine, Centre for Affective Disorders, Institute of Psychiatry, Psychology and Neuroscience, King's College London, London, UK.
2 papers in the library · 8 citations · publishing 2025-2026
Ketamine, a rapid-acting treatment for depression and other psychiatric conditions, has raised safety concerns because chronic recreational use can damage the bladder and urinary tract. This systematic review of 27 clinical studies, mostly in people with depression, found that 0% to 24.5% of patients receiving ketamine reported urological symptoms, which were usually mild or moderate. Objective measures of bladder and kidney function showed no significant changes from before to after treatment. The evidence suggests that therapeutic ketamine does not appear to increase the risk of urological problems, but most studies were short-term and did not systematically monitor symptoms, so more long-term research is needed.
A single dose of psilocybin, compared to an inert placebo, did not alter personality traits, psychiatric symptoms, or cognitive flexibility in healthy participants. However, both the 10 mg and 25 mg psilocybin groups reported greater changes in personal values at both short-term (day 8) and long-term follow-up (day 85). The acute psychedelic experience, particularly the feeling of oceanic boundlessness, partially explained these value changes, with auditory alterations also playing a role in one subscale. These exploratory findings are tentative and require replication in larger samples.