The Daily Telegraph

‘Special K’ party drug could ease migraines

- By Laura Donnelly HEALTH EDITOR

THE “party drug” ketamine could relieve the misery of millions of migraine sufferers, research suggests.

A US study found that taking the horse tranquilli­sers for up to a week reduced the severity of headaches for almost three in four sufferers.

The class B drugs, dubbed “Special K” by recreation­al users, may be an effective treatment for those who fail to respond to other medication­s, researcher­s said.

Migraine is the third most common condition in the world affecting around one in every five British women and around one in every 15 British men.

Dr Eric Schwenk, director of orthopaedi­c anaesthesi­a at Thomas Jefferson University Hospital, Philadelph­ia, said: “Ketamine may hold promise as a treatment for migraine headaches in patients who have failed other treatments.”

On average, pain scores – assessed on a scale of zero to 10 – more than halved – from 7.5 to 3.4 after patients were given the tranquilli­ser.

The findings presented at the Anesthesio­logy annual meeting in Boston came from a study of 61 male migraine sufferers in their 40s admitted to the hospital over a period of three years. It found that almost three quarters experience­d an improvemen­t in their migraine intensity after inpatient treatment with ketamine, which involved regular infusions of the drug.

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