Ketamine Therapy for Panic Disorder: What You Need to Know

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Ketamine Therapy for Panic Disorder: What You Need to Know

  • Written by

    Innerwell Team

  • Medical Review by

    Lawrence Tucker, MD


If you've tried medication after medication for panic disorder and nothing has worked, you've probably started searching for alternatives. Ketamine therapy keeps coming up in mental health discussions, and for good reason: it's helped many people with treatment-resistant depression find relief when nothing else did.

But here's what you need to know upfront: Ketamine therapy is not recommended for panic disorder. No clinical trials have specifically studied ketamine for panic attacks, and ketamine's side effects can feel identical to panic symptoms, making it impossible to tell if you're having treatment effects or an actual panic episode.

This guide explains why ketamine poses specific risks for people with panic disorder, what the research actually shows (and doesn't show), and which evidence-based treatments can help when first-line options aren't enough.

What Is Panic Disorder?

Panic disorder is a condition where people experience sudden, intense panic attacks: surges of overwhelming fear with physical symptoms like racing heart, chest tightness, sweating, and shortness of breath. But the disorder goes beyond the attacks themselves. It includes persistent worry about when the next one will strike and avoiding situations that might trigger them.

The condition affects 2.7% of U.S. adults annually, approximately 7 million Americans. And it rarely occurs alone: about half of people with panic disorder experience major depression at some point, which complicates treatment and often leads people to search for options beyond standard care.

What Treatments Actually Work for Panic Disorder?

Evidence-based treatments with established safety profiles exist for panic disorder. Most people respond to first-line options, and effective alternatives exist for those who don't.

First-Line Treatments

SSRIs (selective serotonin reuptake inhibitors) like sertraline (Zoloft), escitalopram (Lexapro), and paroxetine (Paxil) are typically the starting point. A 2022 analysis showed 66% remission rates. They take 4-6 weeks for full effect but provide sustained improvement with well-established safety profiles.

Cognitive Behavioral Therapy (CBT) teaches practical skills for managing panic attacks and reducing avoidance. Studies from 2022-2025 demonstrate 53-57% response rates with lasting benefits, and the tools you learn stay with you without ongoing medication side effects.

SNRIs (serotonin-norepinephrine reuptake inhibitors) like venlafaxine (Effexor) serve as an alternative for patients who don't respond to SSRIs. A 2006 study showed 75% response rates.

When Standard Treatments Aren't Enough

30-60% of patients don't respond adequately to initial treatments. Evidence-based next steps include medication optimization (adjusting doses, trying different medications), intensive CBT programs, addressing comorbid conditions like depression, and combination therapy using both SSRIs and CBT together, which produces superior outcomes compared to either approach alone.

What Conditions Can Ketamine Therapy Help With?

While ketamine isn't appropriate for panic disorder, it has established efficacy for specific conditions where traditional treatments have failed.

Ketamine therapy has shown strong results for:

  • Treatment-resistant depression: Positive response rates exceed 50%, with effects beginning within hours rather than weeks
  • Anxiety with depression: When depression is the primary driver of anxiety symptoms
  • PTSD: Helps process traumatic memories when other treatments haven't worked
  • Borderline personality disorder: Supports emotional regulation and stability

If you have one of these conditions and haven't found relief through standard care, ketamine therapy might offer the breakthrough you've been searching for.

Learn more about whether ketamine is right for you.

How Can Innerwell Support Your Mental Health Journey?

Innerwell provides at-home ketamine therapy for conditions where it's proven safe and effective, including treatment-resistant depression, PTSD, and borderline personality disorder. Every potential patient undergoes a comprehensive psychiatric evaluation to ensure safety and appropriateness.

Innerwell's eligibility criteria exclude patients with untreated panic disorder from ketamine treatment when panic is the primary concern. This isn't a limitation; it's a commitment to your safety and to treatments that actually work.

For People with Panic Disorder

If you have panic disorder, Innerwell offers comprehensive psychiatric care and specialized therapy using the same clinical rigor we apply to our ketamine programs:

  • Medication management with board-certified psychiatrists who can optimize SSRIs, SNRIs, and other FDA-approved medications
  • Specialized therapy with licensed therapists (Master's and Doctoral level) trained in panic-focused CBT and EMDR for trauma-related panic symptoms
  • Ongoing support through our secure platform, with direct clinician access and real-time treatment adjustments

For Caregivers and Family Members

Watching someone you love struggle with panic disorder takes a toll. If you're experiencing your own treatment-resistant depression or anxiety from the stress of supporting a family member, Innerwell's at-home ketamine therapy program may be appropriate for your mental health needs. We offer accessible pricing options to make treatment more affordable.

Take our free assessment to connect with Innerwell's clinical team about the right treatment path for your situation.

Frequently Asked Questions

Can ketamine ever be used safely for panic disorder?

No clinical trials have established safety or efficacy for ketamine in panic disorder specifically. The symptom overlap between ketamine's side effects (dissociation, racing heart, anxiety) and panic attack symptoms creates particular risks. No major psychiatric organization recommends ketamine for this condition.

Why does ketamine help depression but not panic disorder?

Ketamine's NMDA receptor mechanism promotes neuroplasticity, helping the brain form new neural connections that can reset depressed brain circuits. Panic disorder involves different neurobiological pathways, primarily dysregulation of the fear response system. The mechanisms that help depression don't address the core dysfunction in panic disorder, and ketamine's dissociative effects can actually trigger panic symptoms.

What should I try if SSRIs and therapy haven't worked?

Evidence-based next steps include trying different SSRIs or SNRIs, intensive outpatient CBT programs, combination therapy (medication plus CBT together), and addressing any comorbid conditions like depression. Innerwell's psychiatric team can guide you through these options systematically, ensuring you've explored evidence-based approaches thoroughly.

Are any psychedelic therapies being studied for panic disorder?

Current psychedelic research focuses primarily on depression, PTSD, and end-of-life anxiety. Studies specifically targeting panic disorder remain extremely limited, with no large-scale trials establishing safety or efficacy. Given that many psychedelics can induce anxiety or panic-like experiences, researchers have been cautious about this population.

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