A new pill that slowly releases ketamine could treat people with severe depression without giving them the psychedelic side effects of the often-misused drug, early trial results suggest. First developed in the 1960s as an anesthetic, ketamine's hallucinogenic and dissociative effects led to it becoming a party drug dubbed "Special K". However, mounting research has demonstrated that ketamine is effective for the roughly quarter of people suffering from depression who see little benefit from common anti-depressant drugs.

In many countries, ketamine has been prescribed for depression for years. U.S.

billionaire Elon Musk told CNN in March that he regularly uses a small amount of prescribed ketamine because it is "helpful for getting one out of the negative frame of mind". The drug has long been administered intravenously in clinics, but more recently a nasal spray using a derivative called esketamine has increased in popularity. Both can cause patients to have side effects such as dissociation, high blood pressure and an elevated heart rate.

There are also fears that medical use of the drug could slide into abuse. The pill described in the journal Nature Medicine takes more than 10 hours to break down in the liver, lead study author Paul Glue told AFP. "The really interesting feedback from patients is the lack of side effects -- no euphoria, no dissociation," said the researcher at New Zealand's University of Otago.

"I don't think these tablets would appeal to people who are a.