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Ketamine Therapy in Eudora, Arkansas

Compare 2 Ketamine Therapy clinics in Eudora, Arkansas that offer care for treatment-resistant depression, anxiety, and PTSD. Review services, ratings, and contact details to find the right provider near you.
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Clinics

2 clinics shown

  • Mainline Health Eudora Clinic

    Mainline Health operates a community health center on East Beouff Street in Eudora, serving residents of Chicot County with primary care and general medical services. The clinic functions as a federally qualified health center, providing care on a sliding fee scale based on income for uninsured and underinsured patients. Psychiatric services, TMS therapy, esketamine, or ketamine treatments are not mentioned in available listings; patients seeking specialized mental health interventions should contact the clinic to confirm whether those services are offered or if referrals to regional providers are available.

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  • Mainline Health Eudora Elementary School Health Center

    This community health center operates within Eudora Elementary School on South Mabry Street, providing primary care services to students and families in Chicot County. Mainline Health's school-based clinic model focuses on pediatric medical care, preventive health services, and chronic disease management rather than specialized psychiatric treatments. Patients seeking TMS therapy, esketamine, or ketamine-assisted treatment for depression would need referrals to psychiatric facilities outside the Eudora area, as this location does not offer procedural mental health interventions.

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About Ketamine Therapy

Ketamine therapy is the broader category of clinical ketamine use for mental health conditions including treatment-resistant depression, anxiety, PTSD, OCD, and chronic suicidal ideation. Unlike Spravato (which is the FDA-approved esketamine nasal spray), most ketamine therapy is provided off-label using racemic ketamine — typically through IV infusion, intramuscular injection, or sublingual lozenges.

Treatment is administered in a clinical setting with continuous medical supervision. A typical IV protocol involves six infusions over two to three weeks, with each infusion lasting 40 to 60 minutes. Patients are monitored throughout for blood pressure changes, dissociative effects, and emotional response. Many clinics provide a calm, dimly lit room with eye masks and music to support a contemplative experience during dosing.

Ketamine acts on the brain's NMDA receptors and glutamate system, which is fundamentally different from how SSRIs and other traditional antidepressants work. Many patients report significant improvement within hours to days of their first session — among the fastest-acting antidepressant effects in clinical use.

Because most ketamine therapy is off-label, insurance coverage is limited and most patients pay out of pocket. Clinics in our directory range from anesthesiology-led infusion centers to integrated psychiatric practices offering ketamine alongside therapy.