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When Ketamine Is Not Appropriate: Medical and Psychiatric Contraindications

Understanding when ketamine treatment is unsuitable and why safe prescribing boundaries matter.

Dr. Ben Soffer
Physician
January 30, 2026
When Ketamine Is Not Appropriate: Medical and Psychiatric Contraindications

Ketamine can be a powerful treatment for depression, PTSD, anxiety, trauma, and chronic pain. Particularly for individuals who have not responded to traditional medications. When used responsibly, many patients experience relief, clarity, and renewed emotional flexibility.However, ketamine is not appropriate for every situation or every patient.

Safe, ethical ketamine treatment requires recognizing when to prescribe, and just as importantly, when not to.This guide explains the medical and psychiatric scenarios where I would not prescribe ketamine, and why those boundaries exist.1. Psychosis or History of SchizophreniaKetamine temporarily alters perception and internal-external boundaries.

For individuals with a history of psychosis or schizophrenia, ketamine can destabilize them and cause worsening hallucinations, paranoia, or disorganized thinking.2. Bipolar Disorder Without a Mood StabilizerKetamine can lift bipolar depression, but without a mood stabilizer, it may trigger:ManiaAgitationMixed states (which carry exceptionally high suicide risk)Bipolar patients must be on a mood stabilizer such as lithium, lamotrigine, or valproate. If there has been recent mania, ketamine is delayed until stable.3.

Acute Suicidality With Immediate Safety RiskKetamine often reduces suicidal thinking, but outpatient ketamine requires that the patient can stay safe between sessions.If there is:Active intentA plan or accessible meansInability to contract for safety→ Hospital-based or intensive support is the safer first step.Once safety stabilizes, outpatient ketamine may become appropriate.4.

Uncontrolled Hypertension or Cardiovascular InstabilityKetamine temporarily increases heart rate and blood pressure.Ketamine is not appropriate for patients with:Severe uncontrolled hypertensionRecent heart attack or cardiac eventUncontrolled arrhythmiasBlood pressure and heart must be stabilized first.5. Moderate to Severe Liver DysfunctionKetamine is processed in the liver.

When liver function is compromised, ketamine may accumulate unpredictably.Mild impairment → Possible with cautionModerate/severe impairment → Contraindicated6. Active Substance Use DisorderFor patients actively misusing alcohol, stimulants, opioids, or dissociatives, ketamine may:Reinforce addictive patternsIntensify emotional dysregulationIncrease relapse vulnerabilityStabilization comes first, then ketamine can be reconsidered safely.7.

Seeking Ketamine Only for “The Experience”Ketamine is not prescribed for:Curiosity or noveltyA psychedelic “trip”Recreational or spiritual tourismMedical ketamine is a treatment with clinical goals, not a sensation-seeking experience.A clear medical indication is required.8. Pregnancy or BreastfeedingOut of caution and due to possible transfer to the fetus or breastmilk, ketamine is avoided during pregnancy and breastfeeding unless the situation is urgent and medically necessary.9.

Lack of a Safe Home Environment or Peer Supervisor During TreatmentKetamine temporarily alters awareness, coordination, and sensory interpretation. During the dissociated phase, patients must not be alone.Ketamine is not prescribed when a patient does not have:A quiet, stable, and safe home environmentA peer supervisor physically present during dosingThe ability to rest after treatmentEmotional support between sessionsWhat the Peer Supervisor DoesA peer supervisor is a calm, trusted adult who stays in the room during the ketamine experience to ensure:Safety - Prevent walking, falling, or unsafe movements during dissociation Reassurance - Offer gentle grounding if the patient is confused or anxiousMonitoring - Observe for distress and contact the clinician if neededGrounding Support - Help the patient return to baseline after the experienceThey do not guide the experience or provide therapy — they ensure physical and emotional safety.When support is in place, ketamine sessions are safer, smoother, and more deeply therapeutic.10.

Medication ConflictsSome medications reduce ketamine’s therapeutic effect or increase cardiovascular risk.Benzodiazepines (Xanax, Klonopin, Ativan) — Can blunt ketamine’s antidepressant effects, concurrent use can increase risk of sedation and respiratory depressionHigh-dose stimulants — Can raise heart rate and blood pressure too highClozapine — Sedation and blood pressure instability riskRecent MAOIs — Risk of hypertensive reactionThese do not always prevent treatment, but they require careful evaluation and planning.11. Lack of Psychological Support or Integration ResourcesKetamine brings emotional material to the surface.

Patients need space and support to process what arises.If a patient has:No therapistNo support networkNo openness to reflectionWe build support first, then reconsider ketamine.12. Allergy or Hypersensitivity to KetamineRare, but an absolute contraindication.ConclusionKetamine can be transformative, but only in the right clinical context.

Safe care means recognizing when ketamine helps, and when the priority is stabilization first. When the foundation is in place, emotional support, safe environment, medication stability, readiness for integration, then ketamine becomes not only safe, but profoundly effective.

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