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Overcome Depression

What is Depression

Most patients with depression count on medications like antidepressants to improve their mood, yet antidepressants fail to help nearly one-third of all people with depression. Gino Ang, MD, and the experienced team at Ketamine Center of Connecticut offer ketamine infusions that rapidly improve your symptoms even if you didn’t respond to antidepressants. To learn more about ketamine for treating depression, schedule an appointment by calling our Milford or Westport office today.

Depression

What many patients experience as symptoms begin to lift

Many patients report a reduction in suicidal ideation within hours.

Overwhelming feelings of hopelessness begin to lighten.

The ability to feel interest, joy, or connection starts to come back.

Restlessness and racing thoughts often calm down alongside mood.

The cycle of doubt, checking, and repeating becomes less dominant.

Persistent rumination and self-criticism soften.

Patients often find it easier to take action, even in small steps.

Relief
Your struggles are real. So are the solutions we provide.

What can we help you with?

Overcome Depression

Most patients with depression count on medications like antidepressants to improve their mood, yet antidepressants fail to…

Conquer Anxiety

Nearly one-third of adolescents and adults have an anxiety disorder, yet only half of them improve with standard…

Heal from PTSD

Post-traumatic stress disorder (PTSD) has a devastating impact on people of all ages, including about 8% of adults and…

Break Free from OCD

Obsessive-compulsive disorder (OCD) causes unwanted but uncontrollable thoughts and behaviors that disrupt your…

Heal from Bipolar

Bipolar disorder often begins with an episode of major depression before you cycle to mania. In many patients, bipolar depression…

Overcome Suicidality

In 2017, Connecticut officials reported that suicide was the second leading cause of death for people between the ages of…

Learn more about what to expect on your journey.

Frequently Asked Questions

 

Everyone has the blues now and again, and they know that their mood eventually improves and they feel better. Many people believe that depression goes away just as easily as the blues, but it doesn’t.

Depression is a deeply rooted problem that affects your energy and doesn’t simply disappear on its own. When you’re depressed, you:
  • Feel worthless and hopeless
  • Lack energy nearly every day
  • Have no interest in your activities or friends
  • Eat too little or too much
  • Sleep too little or too much
  • Find it hard to concentrate
  • Feel restless
  • Think about suicide or death
If you have several of these symptoms for at least two weeks, it’s a sign you have major depressive disorder.

 

Postpartum depression is not just the baby blues. It’s a type of major depression that occurs during pregnancy or after childbirth and, like major depression, it doesn’t improve on its own.

Women who have postpartum depression often struggle to bond with and care for their new baby. They tend to withdraw from family and friends. They also experience the same symptoms as major depression.

Your depression is treatment-resistant when your symptoms don’t improve after at least two trials of antidepressant medications. Many patients with depression don’t feel better even after taking four different types of antidepressants.

 

Ketamine has been safely used for decades as an anesthetic during surgical procedures. In a low dose, however, ketamine has a different effect: It relieves the symptoms of depression, even in patients with treatment-resistant depression.

 
Ketamine rapidly improves your symptoms because it directly balances glutamate, a brain chemical that’s associated with depression. The medication also helps regenerative nerve connections in your brain.
 
If you respond to ketamine, you may feel your depression lift within several to 24 hours of your treatment. By comparison, antidepressants don’t take effect for weeks to months because they target different brain chemicals.

 

The anesthesiologists at Ketamine Center of Connecticut give you an intravenous (IV) infusion of ketamine using a pump that precisely delivers the right dose. They also continuously monitor your heart rate and blood pressure using a wireless device called Caretaker®.

 
Your entire procedure takes about 90 minutes, which includes time in recovery. If your depression improves, your provider schedules a series six total infusions over 12 days to produce longer-lasting results.
 
If you suffer with major depression, postpartum depression, or treatment-resistant depression, call Ketamine Center of Connecticut to schedule an appointment.

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