Living with depression, anxiety, trauma, or chronic pain is tiring. It is not just tiring in the physical sense, but in the quiet, invisible way it wears you down over time. It makes daily life feel harder than it should be. You may still go to work, meet people, and manage responsibilities, but inside you may feel exhausted, restless, emotionally stuck, or unable to recover fully. For some people standard treatment may help, for others medication, therapy, lifestyle changes or pain management. There are cases though, where months, sometimes years pass by and even if the symptoms calm for a while, they just keep coming back. Pain comes back, sleep stays broken and mood stays low. When that pattern keeps repeating, it is worth asking what else is available.
Mental health conditions and chronic pain become harder to manage when they go on for months or years without real improvement. Depression can reduce motivation, focus, appetite, and daily energy. Anxiety makes ordinary tasks feel much harder than they should. Trauma-related stress can disturb sleep, emotional control, and personal relationships. Chronic pain limits movement, training, and daily quality of life. It also adds emotional strain on top of the physical discomfort. Pain and mood problems tend to feed each other. Poor sleep can increase stress. Stress can make pain feel worse which may reduce movement. Reduced movement affects mood. Over time, these cycles narrow what feels possible.
Book a consultation with our specialist team. We'll review your condition, run the diagnostics, and build a care plan designed specifically for you.
Ketamine therapy may be considered when depression symptoms continue despite standard care. Treatment-resistant depression usually means a patient has tried accepted treatments, such as medication or psychotherapy, but symptoms have not improved enough or keep returning.
Anxiety can affect your breathing, sleep, digestion, focus, and emotional control. Some patients describe constant background worry. Others experience panic-like feelings, muscle tension, or dread around ordinary situations. Ketamine therapy may be discussed when anxiety symptoms are part of a wider mental health concern and previous care has not worked well enough.
Trauma affects how the nervous system processes threat, memory, and emotional input. Some patients remain highly alert, easily triggered, or emotionally overwhelmed. Ketamine therapy may be suitable for selected patients after a careful clinical review. A safe plan should include proper assessment, clear monitoring, and follow-up support.
Ketamine therapy may be considered for certain chronic pain conditions where the nervous system continues generating strong pain signals. This may include nerve-related pain, long-term musculoskeletal pain, fibromyalgia-type symptoms, complex pain patterns, or pain that continues after injury or surgery.
Athletes, gym users, runners, and active professionals know how much persistent pain can slow progress. Pain may continue after ligament strain, tendon irritation, muscle injury, joint stress, or nerve sensitivity. When pain lasts too long, it can reduce strength, mobility, confidence, and performance.
Ketamine therapy is not a cure for autism or Alzheimer's disease, neither should it be presented as one. Autism and Alzheimer’s disease require specialist medical assessment. However, some patients or families may seek help for related concerns, such as anxiety, sleep disturbance, distress, mood changes, pain, agitation, or reduced quality of life.
Ketamine therapy should only be provided by qualified medical professionals in a safe healthcare environment. In Dubai, patients should feel comfortable to ask about the treating doctor's license, the treatment setting, monitoring process, emergency readiness and what follow-up involves.
You contact Brockwell Healthcare and request a ketamine therapy consultation in Dubai. The team helps you choose the correct appointment type based on your symptoms and health concerns.
A doctor reviews your medical history, current medications, previous treatments, mental health background, pain history, allergies, blood pressure, and relevant risk factors. The doctor explains whether ketamine therapy is suitable for you. Some patients may need another treatment first, such as a psychiatry review, physiotherapy, diagnostics, or a medication adjustment.
Your care plan includes the treatment setting, monitoring requirements, expected session structure, safety guidance, follow-up schedule, and recovery instructions. Treatment takes place under direct medical supervision. Your care team monitors your comfort, response, and vital signs throughout each session.
After treatment, the doctor reviews your response and gives clear next steps. Follow-up may include symptom tracking, mental wellness support, pain review, lifestyle guidance, or coordination with another specialist.
Comprehensive medical solutions tailored to your needs, delivered by specialists who genuinely care.
Yes, ketamine may be used in approved medical settings when prescribed and supervised by qualified healthcare professionals.
It can be safe when proper screening, supervision, and monitoring are in place. Though, it is not suitable for everyone and a consultation is necessary.
Ketamine therapy may help selected patients with treatment-resistant depression if it applies. It is usually considered when standard treatment has not given enough relief.
For some patients with anxiety-related symptoms where standard treatment has not worked well enough, it may help. It should always be part of a structured medical plan.
Ketamine therapy is not a cure for autism or Alzheimer’s disease. Patients with autism, Alzheimer’s, or neurological concerns need specialist assessment. A doctor may review related symptoms such as anxiety, sleep disturbance, pain, or distress and recommend the safest care option.