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Matthew Perry was getting ketamine treatment for depression. What is this and what are the risks?

Perry had been undergoing ketamine infusion treatment to treat depression and anxiety, but became dependent on the substance.

Matthew Perry posing at the premiere of "Ride".
Five people were arrested for conspiring to supply ketamine to Matthew Perry. The actor was taking the drug for depression but became dependent on it. AP Photo by Rich Fury

Federal prosecutors announced they charged five people with providing actor Matthew Perry with the ketamine that led to his death last October.

Perry’s assistant, two doctors, an acquaintance and an alleged dealer known as the “ketamine queen” were charged Thursday with conspiring to provide the “Friends” actor with ketamine. Perry was receiving ketamine infusions for depression, but allegedly began using it outside of his supervised treatment, sometimes taking it as often as six times a day. He developed what prosecutors described as an “out of control” dependence on the drug.

Ketamine has long been used by medical professionals as an anesthetic, says Allison Bauer, an associate professor of public health and health sciences at Northeastern University. But it’s also been prescribed recently to people with treatment-resistant depression.

Robert Leeman, professor and chair of the Department of Public Health and Health Sciences at Northeastern University, says using ketamine infusions or injections on patients for whom medications like selective serotonin reuptake inhibitors, or SSRIs, don’t work has shown some success.

Bauer, the former director of the Bureau of Substance Addiction Services of the Massachusetts Department of Public Health, says Perry’s death illustrates some of the cons of this treatment.

“It hasn’t been studied that deeply,” Bauer says. “One of the long-term effects (researchers) are worried about is that it can lead to a path of addiction. And since you often wind up with a dual mental health and addiction diagnosis, it’s a dangerous course to take.”

Ketamine treatment for depression is usually given via infusion or injection in a doctor’s office, Bauer says. The drug’s effects only last for several hours. Too much of the drug can cause respiratory and cardiac distress and Leeman says doctors will administer it in a way that users don’t build up too much of a tolerance.

“It’s done in a careful, controlled way, typically in (doctor’s) offices,” says Leeman, whose research focuses on addictive behaviors. “There are some schools of thought about allowing at-home dosing in some cases, but speculatively, Matthew Perry probably wouldn’t have been a candidate for that given his history.”

Prosecutors say Perry’s last treatment was more than a week before his death, meaning the ketamine found in his system was not from that treatment.

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