Call For Immediate Help 800-915-1270 Who Answers?

What is a K-hole?

When asking what is a K-hole, the first thing that you need to know is that K-hole is a slang term for a state of severe detachment from the world induced by ingesting a moderate to large amounts of the dissociative sedative called ketamine. Ketamine is a prescription general anesthetic used mainly by veterinarians, doctors, and farriers for sedation. It has been in use since the 1970s. According to the Drug Enforcement Administration, on the street it is called special K, K, cat valium, and Kit Cat. They call the effects of ketamine K-land, K-hole, and God. To describe exactly what a k-hole is, it is important to understand how to create one, what the side effects are, what the dangers are, and what the experience is like.

If you or someone you love abuses ketamine, call 800-915-1270 (Who Answers?) now to find treatment help. 

How a K-hole is created

A k-hole is created when certain actions of the brain are interrupted or disrupted, specifically the chemical glutamate. According to the National Institute on Drug Abuse’s publication “Hallucinogens and Dissociative Drugs,” glutamate has a role in understanding, learning, memory, the perception of pain, and emotion. By disrupting glutamate at N-methyl-D-aspartate receptors, ketamine creates a dissociative feeling. The drug binds to the receptors that glutamate normally uses. This interruption is what causes the feeling of disconnection from the body and the world around the user that is a K-hole and why Ketamine is a paralytic and a form of anesthesia.

The K-hole is more intense and longer lasting when a user takes ketamine with other drugs. Using ketamine in combination with other drugs is extremely dangerous and often causes permanent damage. Ketamine has a variety of dangerous side effects on its own.

Side effects of using enough Ketamine to achieve a K-hole

The main side effects of ketamine vary from very mild to intense, disturbing, and dangerous. A larger than average amount of ketamine is needed to achieve the state known as a K-hole. The side effects of larger unsafe dosages are:

k-hole

Hallucinations or terrors can occur during a k-hole experience.

  • disassociation or the feeling of being disconnected from everything including your own body
  • delirium
  • hallucinations or terrors
  • loss of coordination and eventual loss of the ability to move on your own
  • muscle rigidity
  • violent behavior
  • sedation
  • respiratory depression
  • tachycardia
  • amnesia
  • seizures
  • coma
  • eventual death

When a doctor administers ketamine, most of these side effects are rare. Overdose is responsible for many of the adverse side effects. A user has to come close to overdose on ketamine to achieve the k-hole. There are other dangers associated with the k-hole.

The dangers of the K-hole

A K-hole creates a feeling of disassociation and disconnection from the body and world. It is named a hole because a user stops taking in information from the world around them and starts looking inward. This causes wild hallucinations, paranoia, possible panic, and other potential mental effects. The major danger of a k-hole is when these effects may not stop. It can be difficult for the user to come out of the state of disassociation and back into the real world. A user can remain disconnected from his or her life, the world, and the body. When this happens, psychosis develops afterwards. The mind cannot handle this disconnection on a permanent basis.

Another danger of the k-hole is overdose. Drug tolerances range in different people, because a user takes a larger than recommended amount to achieve these feelings, overdose is a real possibility. It can:

  • stop the heart
  • cause the body to seize which can cause brain damage
  • can leave the user in a coma
  • can stop the user from breathing

With the dangers of entering the k-hole, it is a wonder why anyone would do it. To understand why people continue to use ketamine to enter this state, you have to understand what they experience.

Did you know Hallucinations are Possible with Ketamine Overdose?

Experiences with the K-hole

Many people feel the need to write after experiencing the K-hole. They usually say the same things about that experience. Although some experiences are bad and others are good, they are very similar. The commonalities in the experiences are:

  • A feeling of connection to the world and everything in it while forgetting who and what they are.
  • They describe a fuzzy recollection of their lives and the lives of those close to them.
  • They experience brilliant displays of color or light, the feeling of being music, laughter, words, or other sounds around them.
  • They describe knowing the universe and time and the feeling of it folding out before them or flowing around them.
  • As they are coming down, they feel as if they are in an alternate reality or the things around them feel less real than they did before.
  • Some people get depressed, some get physically sick, and others get suicidal after they come down. Most feel disconnected for the next few days.

Although the hallucinations and feelings of disassociation are intense, many find they cannot remember the revelations they had during the trip. Most of those who describe the experience are ambivalent about doing it again.

What a K-hole is exactly

The question what is a K-hole can be answered as a physical state where glutamate reception is being blocked. It is answered by the mental and physical effects it has on the body such as hallucinations, disconnection, the inability to move, and the possibility of never getting out of it. It can also be answered by the similar experiences people have while taking it. To form a complete answer to what a k-hole is, you need to understand all of these things. It is dangerous; it could result in psychosis, permanent disability, and mental issues. It is very easy to overdose on and sometimes difficult to stop.

You can overcome the need to use ketmaine! Call 800-915-1270 (Who Answers?) to get help today.

  • Use This Format Only: (###) ###-####
  • This field is for validation purposes and should be left unchanged.
Find Treatment Near YouFind Treatment Near You800-915-1270Response time about 1 min | Response rate 100%
Who Answers?

Where do calls go?

Calls to numbers on a specific treatment center listing will be routed to that treatment center. Calls to any general helpline will be answered or returned by one of the treatment providers listed, each of which is a paid advertiser: ARK Behavioral Health, Recovery Helpline, Alli Addiction Services.

By calling the helpline you agree to the terms of use. We do not receive any commission or fee that is dependent upon which treatment provider a caller chooses. There is no obligation to enter treatment.