80 results on '"Amanda Feilding"'
Search Results
2. Inter-individual variability in neural response to low doses of LSD
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Nadia R. P. W. Hutten, Conny W. E. M. Quaedflieg, Natasha L. Mason, Eef L. Theunissen, Matthias E. Liechti, Urs Duthaler, Kim P. C. Kuypers, Valerie Bonnelle, Amanda Feilding, and Johannes G. Ramaekers
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Neurosciences. Biological psychiatry. Neuropsychiatry ,RC321-571 - Abstract
Abstract The repeated use of small doses of psychedelics (also referred to as “microdosing”) to facilitate benefits in mental health, cognition, and mood is a trending practice. Placebo-controlled studies however have largely failed to demonstrate strong benefits, possibly because of large inter-individual response variability. The current study tested the hypothesis that effects of low doses of LSD on arousal, attention and memory depend on an individual’s cognitive state at baseline. Healthy participants (N = 53) were randomly assigned to receive repeated doses of LSD (15 mcg) or placebo on 4 occasions divided over 2 weeks. Each treatment condition also consisted of a baseline and a 1-week follow-up visit. Neurophysiological measures of arousal (resting state EEG), pre-attentive processing (auditory oddball task), and perceptual learning and memory (visual long-term potentiation (LTP) paradigm) were assessed at baseline, dosing session 1 and 4, and follow-up. LSD produced stimulatory effects as reflected by a reduction in resting state EEG delta, theta, and alpha power, and enhanced pre-attentive processing during the acute dosing sessions. LSD also blunted the induction of LTP on dosing session 4. Stimulatory effects of LSD were strongest in individuals with low arousal and attention at baseline, while inhibitory effects were strongest in high memory performers at baseline. Decrements in delta EEG power and enhanced pre-attentive processing in the LSD treatment condition were still present during the 1-week follow-up. The current study demonstrates across three cognitive domains, that acute responses to low doses of LSD depend on the baseline state and provides some support for LSD induced neuroadaptations that sustain beyond treatment.
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- 2024
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3. Cortical Correlates of Psychedelic-Induced Shaking Behavior Revealed by Voltage Imaging
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Tobias Buchborn, Taylor Lyons, Chenchen Song, Amanda Feilding, and Thomas Knöpfel
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voltage imaging ,pyramidal cells ,psychedelic ,5-HT2A receptor ,wet dog shakes ,hemodynamics ,Biology (General) ,QH301-705.5 ,Chemistry ,QD1-999 - Abstract
(1) From mouse to man, shaking behavior (head twitches and/or wet dog shakes) is a reliable readout of psychedelic drug action. Shaking behavior like psychedelia is thought to be mediated by serotonin 2A receptors on cortical pyramidal cells. The involvement of pyramidal cells in psychedelic-induced shaking behavior remains hypothetical, though, as experimental in vivo evidence is limited. (2) Here, we use cell type-specific voltage imaging in awake mice to address this issue. We intersectionally express the genetically encoded voltage indicator VSFP Butterfly 1.2 in layer 2/3 pyramidal neurons. We simultaneously capture cortical hemodynamics and cell type-specific voltage activity while mice display psychedelic shaking behavior. (3) Shaking behavior is preceded by high-frequency oscillations and overlaps with low-frequency oscillations in the motor cortex. Oscillations spectrally mirror the rhythmics of shaking behavior and reflect layer 2/3 pyramidal cell activity complemented by hemodynamics. (4) Our results reveal a clear cortical fingerprint of serotonin-2A-receptor-mediated shaking behavior and open a promising methodological avenue relating a cross-mammalian psychedelic effect to cell-type specific brain dynamics.
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- 2023
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4. The Shipibo Ceremonial Use of Ayahuasca to Promote Well-Being: An Observational Study
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Debora Gonzalez, Jordi Cantillo, Irene Perez, Maria Carvalho, Adam Aronovich, Magi Farre, Amanda Feilding, Jordi E. Obiols, and José Carlos Bouso
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well-being ,quality of life ,herbal medicine ,Shipibo ,ayahuasca ,traditional medicine ,Therapeutics. Pharmacology ,RM1-950 - Abstract
Promoting well-being is one of the main goals to improve health in the world. We examined the well-being and quality of life over the course of one year in a sample that participated in an Indigenous Shipibo healing program where traditional healers work in a series of ayahuasca ceremonies. We also explored the role of decentering as a mediator of psychological well-being. Participants who attended the program responded to an online survey that included a Psychological Well-Being Scale; Oxford Happiness Questionnaire; The World Health Organization Quality of Life Spirituality, Religiousness, and Personal Beliefs scale; the WHO Quality of Life-BREF scale; and Decentering scale. Baseline (T0) and postassessment (T1) were completed by 200 individuals. Of these, 101 completed the follow-up assessment at three months (T2), 91 at 6 months (T3), and 94 at 12 months follow-up (T4) after leaving the center. ANOVA test was performed in a representative subsample to control the passing of time two months before attending the program (T-1). Pearson’s test was performed to examine the relationship between psychological well-being and decentering during the period of T0 and T1. A significant increase was observed in all the scales at all time points (p ≤ 0.01). The subgroup analysis performed in a representative subsample allowed us to infer that the significant differences in outcomes are due to the effect of their stay at the center and not the passing of time. We found a relationship between decentering and the improvement of psychological well-being (r = 0.57; p < 0.01). Our results suggest that the Indigenous Shipibo healing work with ayahuasca has value to improve long-term well-being and quality of life for Westerners.
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- 2021
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5. Self-blinding citizen science to explore psychedelic microdosing
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Balázs Szigeti, Laura Kartner, Allan Blemings, Fernando Rosas, Amanda Feilding, David J Nutt, Robin L Carhart-Harris, and David Erritzoe
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psychedelics ,placebo ,microdosing ,self-blinding ,expectations ,citizen science ,Medicine ,Science ,Biology (General) ,QH301-705.5 - Abstract
Microdosing is the practice of regularly using low doses of psychedelic drugs. Anecdotal reports suggest that microdosing enhances well-being and cognition; however, such accounts are potentially biased by the placebo effect. This study used a ‘self-blinding’ citizen science initiative, where participants were given online instructions on how to incorporate placebo control into their microdosing routine without clinical supervision. The study was completed by 191 participants, making it the largest placebo-controlled trial on psychedelics to-date. All psychological outcomes improved significantly from baseline to after the 4 weeks long dose period for the microdose group; however, the placebo group also improved and no significant between-groups differences were observed. Acute (emotional state, drug intensity, mood, energy, and creativity) and post-acute (anxiety) scales showed small, but significant microdose vs. placebo differences; however, these results can be explained by participants breaking blind. The findings suggest that anecdotal benefits of microdosing can be explained by the placebo effect.
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- 2021
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6. Corrigendum: Four Weekly Ayahuasca Sessions Lead to Increases in 'Acceptance' Capacities: A Comparison Study with a Standard 8-Week Mindfulness Training Program
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Joaquim Soler, Matilde Elices, Elisabeth Dominguez-Clavé, Juan C. Pascual, Amanda Feilding, Mayte Navarro-Gil, Javier Garcia-Campayo, and Jordi Riba
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ayahuasca ,mindfulness ,acceptance ,non-judging ,human ,Therapeutics. Pharmacology ,RM1-950 - Published
- 2021
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7. The alkaloids of Banisteriopsis caapi, the plant source of the Amazonian hallucinogen Ayahuasca, stimulate adult neurogenesis in vitro
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Jose A. Morales-García, Mario de la Fuente Revenga, Sandra Alonso-Gil, María Isabel Rodríguez-Franco, Amanda Feilding, Ana Perez-Castillo, and Jordi Riba
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Medicine ,Science - Abstract
Abstract Banisteriopsis caapi is the basic ingredient of ayahuasca, a psychotropic plant tea used in the Amazon for ritual and medicinal purposes, and by interested individuals worldwide. Animal studies and recent clinical research suggests that B. caapi preparations show antidepressant activity, a therapeutic effect that has been linked to hippocampal neurogenesis. Here we report that harmine, tetrahydroharmine and harmaline, the three main alkaloids present in B. caapi, and the harmine metabolite harmol, stimulate adult neurogenesis in vitro. In neurospheres prepared from progenitor cells obtained from the subventricular and the subgranular zones of adult mice brains, all compounds stimulated neural stem cell proliferation, migration, and differentiation into adult neurons. These findings suggest that modulation of brain plasticity could be a major contribution to the antidepressant effects of ayahuasca. They also expand the potential application of B. caapi alkaloids to other brain disorders that may benefit from stimulation of endogenous neural precursor niches.
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- 2017
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8. Four Weekly Ayahuasca Sessions Lead to Increases in 'Acceptance' Capacities: A Comparison Study With a Standard 8-Week Mindfulness Training Program
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Joaquim Soler, Matilde Elices, Elisabeth Dominguez-Clavé, Juan C. Pascual, Amanda Feilding, Mayte Navarro-Gil, Javier García-Campayo, and Jordi Riba
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ayahuasca ,mindfulness ,acceptance ,Non-Judging ,human ,Therapeutics. Pharmacology ,RM1-950 - Abstract
Background: The therapeutic effects of the Amazonian plant tea ayahuasca may relate to its ability to enhance mindfulness capacities. Ayahuasca induces a modified state of awareness through the combined action of its active principles: the psychedelic N,N-dimethyltryptamine (DMT) and a series of centrally acting β-carbolines, mainly harmine and tetrahydroharmine. To better understand the therapeutic potential of ayahuasca, here we compared the impact on mindfulness capacities induced by two independent interventions: (a) participation in four ayahuasca sessions without any specific purpose related to improving mindfulness capacities; and (b) participation in a standard mindfulness training course: 8 weeks mindfulness-based stress reduction (MBSR), with the specific goal of improving these skills.Methods: Participants of two independent groups completed two self-report instruments: The Five Facet Mindfulness Questionnaire (FFMQ) and the Experiences Questionnaire (EQ). The MINDSENS Composite Index was also calculated, including those EQ and FFMQ items that have proven to be the most sensitive to meditation practice. Group A (n = 10) was assessed before and after the last of four closely spaced consecutive ayahuasca sessions. Group B (n = 10) was assessed before and after completion of a standard 8-week MBSR course.Results: MBSR training led to greater increases in overall mindfulness scores after the 8-week period. MBSR but not ayahuasca led to increases in the MINDSENS Composite Index. However, the ayahuasca sessions induced comparable increases in the Non-Judging subscale of the FFMQ, specifically measuring “acceptance.” Improving this capacity allows for a more detached and less judgmental stance toward potentially distressing thoughts and emotions.Results: The present findings suggest that a small number of ayahuasca sessions can be as effective at improving acceptance as more lengthy and costly interventions. Future studies should address the benefits of combining ayahuasca administration with mindfulness-based interventions. This will allow us to investigate if ayahuasca will improve the outcome of psychotherapeutic interventions.
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- 2018
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9. LSD and language: Decreased structural connectivity, increased semantic similarity, changed vocabulary in healthy individuals
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Isabel Wießner, Marcelo Falchi, Dimitri Daldegan-Bueno, Fernanda Palhano-Fontes, Rodolfo Olivieri, Amanda Feilding, Draulio B. Araujo, Sidarta Ribeiro, Natália Bezerra Mota, and Luís Fernando Tófoli
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Pharmacology ,Psychiatry and Mental health ,Neurology ,Pharmacology (medical) ,Neurology (clinical) ,Biological Psychiatry - Published
- 2023
10. Analgesic potential of macrodoses and microdoses of classical psychedelics in chronic pain sufferers: a population survey
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Valerie Bonnelle, Will J Smith, Natasha L Mason, Mauro Cavarra, Pamela Kryskow, Kim PC Kuypers, Johannes G Ramaekers, Amanda Feilding, RS: FPN NPPP II, and Section Psychopharmacology
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KETAMINE ,PSILOCYBIN ,microdosing ,psychedelics ,self-medication ,MECHANISMS ,LSD ,Anesthesiology and Pain Medicine ,MOOD ,UK ,Survey ,chronic pain ,LIFE SATISFACTION ,HEALTHY-VOLUNTEERS - Abstract
Although several studies and reports have shown the potential analgesic use of serotonergic psychedelics in cancer pain, phantom limb pain and cluster headache, evidence supporting their use for chronic pain is still limited. The past years have seen a considerable renewal of interest toward the therapeutic use of these compounds for mood disorders, resulting in a marked increase in the number of people turning to psychedelics in an attempt to self-medicate a health condition or improve their wellbeing. In western countries particularly, this population of users overlaps substantially with chronic pain sufferers, representing a unique opportunity to evaluate the effects these compounds have on pain and wellbeing. Here, we report results from an online survey conducted between August 2020 and July 2021 in a population of 250 chronic pain sufferers who had experience with psychedelics, either in microdoses (small sub-hallucinogenic doses), macrodoses (hallucinogenic doses), or both. Macrodoses, while less often used for analgesic purposes than microdoses, were reported to induce a higher level of pain relief than both microdoses and conventional pain medications (including opioids and cannabis). Although the effects were weaker and potentially more prone to expectation bias than with macrodoses, our results also suggested some benefits of psychedelics in microdoses for pain management. The reported analgesic effect appeared unrelated to mood improvements associated with psychedelic use, or the advocacy of psychedelic use. Taken together, our findings indicate interesting potential analgesic applications for psychedelics that warrant further clinical research.
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- 2022
11. Cortical Correlates of Psychedelic-Induced Shaking Behavior Revealed by Voltage Imaging
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Knöpfel, Tobias Buchborn, Taylor Lyons, Chenchen Song, Amanda Feilding, and Thomas
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voltage imaging ,pyramidal cells ,psychedelic ,5-HT2A receptor ,wet dog shakes ,hemodynamics ,genetically encoded voltage indicator (GEVI) - Abstract
(1) From mouse to man, shaking behavior (head twitches and/or wet dog shakes) is a reliable readout of psychedelic drug action. Shaking behavior like psychedelia is thought to be mediated by serotonin 2A receptors on cortical pyramidal cells. The involvement of pyramidal cells in psychedelic-induced shaking behavior remains hypothetical, though, as experimental in vivo evidence is limited. (2) Here, we use cell type-specific voltage imaging in awake mice to address this issue. We intersectionally express the genetically encoded voltage indicator VSFP Butterfly 1.2 in layer 2/3 pyramidal neurons. We simultaneously capture cortical hemodynamics and cell type-specific voltage activity while mice display psychedelic shaking behavior. (3) Shaking behavior is preceded by high-frequency oscillations and overlaps with low-frequency oscillations in the motor cortex. Oscillations spectrally mirror the rhythmics of shaking behavior and reflect layer 2/3 pyramidal cell activity complemented by hemodynamics. (4) Our results reveal a clear cortical fingerprint of serotonin-2A-receptor-mediated shaking behavior and open a promising methodological avenue relating a cross-mammalian psychedelic effect to cell-type specific brain dynamics.
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- 2023
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
12. LSD and creativity
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Isabel Wießner, Marcelo Falchi, Lucas Oliveira Maia, Dimitri Daldegan-Bueno, Fernanda Palhano-Fontes, Natasha L Mason, Johannes G Ramaekers, Madeleine E Gross, Jonathan W Schooler, Amanda Feilding, Sidarta Ribeiro, Draulio B Araujo, Luís Fernando Tófoli, RS: FPN NPPP II, and Section Psychopharmacology
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Pharmacology ,Cross-Over Studies ,divergent and convergent thinking ,DEPEND ,PERFORMANCE ,EXPERIENCES ,Thinking ,ACTIVATION ,Lysergic Acid Diethylamide ,Psychiatry and Mental health ,symbolic thinking ,PSYCHOTHERAPY ,Hallucinogens ,Psychedelics ,Humans ,Pharmacology (medical) ,semantic distance ,DIVERGENT THINKING ,5-HT2A AGONIST PSILOCYBIN ,creativity - Abstract
Background: Controversy surrounds psychedelics and their potential to boost creativity. To date, psychedelic studies lack a uniform conceptualization of creativity and methodologically rigorous designs. Aims: This study aimed at addressing previous issues by examining the effects of lysergic acid diethylamide (LSD) on creativity using multimodal tasks and multidimensional approaches. Methods: In a randomized, double-blind, placebo-controlled, crossover study, 24 healthy volunteers received 50 μg of LSD or inactive placebo. Near drug peak, a creativity task battery was applied, including pattern meaning task (PMT), alternate uses task (AUT), picture concept task (PCT), creative metaphors task (MET) and figural creativity task (FIG). Creativity was assessed by scoring creativity criteria (novelty, utility, surprise), calculating divergent thinking (fluency, originality, flexibility, elaboration) and convergent thinking, computing semantic distances (semantic spread, semantic steps) and searching for data-driven special features. Results: LSD, compared to placebo, changed several creativity measurements pointing to three overall LSD-induced phenomena: (1) ‘pattern break’, reflected by increased novelty, surprise, originality and semantic distances; (2) decreased ‘organization’, reflected by decreased utility, convergent thinking and, marginally, elaboration; and (3) ‘meaning’, reflected by increased symbolic thinking and ambiguity in the data-driven results. Conclusion: LSD changed creativity across modalities and measurement approaches. Three phenomena of pattern break, disorganization and meaning seemed to fundamentally influence creative cognition and behaviour pointing to a shift of cognitive resources ‘away from normal’ and ‘towards the new’. LSD-induced symbolic thinking might provide a tool to support treatment efficiency in psychedelic-assisted therapy.
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- 2022
13. Low-dose LSD and the stream of thought: Increased Discontinuity of Mind, Deep Thoughts and abstract flow
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Lucas O. Maia, Marcelo Falchi, Isabel Wießner, Amanda Feilding, Sidarta Ribeiro, Fernanda Palhano-Fontes, Dráulio Barros de Araújo, Natália Bezerra Mota, and Luís Fernando Tófoli
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Lysergic acid diethylamide ,Pharmacology ,Abstract thinking ,Resting state fMRI ,Low dose ,Resting state cognition ,Cognition ,Forward flow ,Free association ,Semantic analysis ,LSD ,Mind-wandering ,Mental state ,Sensation ,medicine ,Psychology ,Cognitive psychology ,medicine.drug - Abstract
Rationale: Stream of thought describes the nature of the mind when it is freely roaming, a mental state that is continuous and highly dynamic as in mind-wandering or free association. Classic serotonergic psychedelics are known to profoundly impact perception, cognition and language, yet their influence on the stream of thought remains largely unexplored. Objective: To elucidate the effects of LSD on the stream of thought. Methods: In a randomized, double-blind, placebo-controlled, crossover study, 24 healthy participants received 50 μg lysergic acid diethylamide (LSD) or inactive placebo. Mind-wandering was measured by the Amsterdam Resting State Questionnaire (ARSQ), free association by the Forward Flow Task (FFT) for three seed word types (animals, objects, abstract words). ARSQ and FFT were assessed at +0 h, +2 h, +4 h, +6 h, +8 h and +24 h after drug administration, respectively. Results: LSD, compared to placebo, induced different facets of mind-wandering we conceptualized as “chaos” (Discontinuity of Mind, decreased Sleepiness, Planning, Thoughts under Control, Thoughts about Work and Thoughts about Past), “meaning” (Deep Thoughts, Not Sharing Thoughts) and “sensation” (Thoughts about Odours, Thoughts about Sounds). LSD increased the FFT for abstract words reflecting an “abstract flow” under free association. Overall, chaos was strongest pronounced (+2 h to +6 h), followed by meaning (+2 h to +4 h), sensation (+2 h) and abstract flow (+4 h). Conclusions: LSD affects the stream of thought within several levels (active, passive), facets (chaos, meaning, sensation, abstractness) and time points (from +2 h to +6 h). Increased chaos, meaning and abstract flow at +4 h indicate the utility of a late therapeutic window in psycholytic therapy.
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- 2021
14. LSD, Madness and Healing: Mystical Experiences as Possible Link Between Psychosis Model and Therapy Model
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Isabel Wießner, Marcelo Falchi, Fernanda Palhano-Fontes, Amanda Feilding, Sidarta Ribeiro, and Luís Fernando Tófoli
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- 2022
15. LSD, Afterglow and Hangover: Increased Episodic Memory and Verbal Fluency, Decreased Cognitive Flexibility
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Isabel Wießner, Rodolfo Olivieri, Marcelo Falchi, Fernanda Palhano-Fontes, Lucas Oliveira Maia, Amanda Feilding, Draulio Araujo, Sidarta Ribeiro, and Luís Fernando Tófoli
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- 2022
16. Me, myself, bye
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Desmond H. Y. Tse, J. Reckweg, Natasha L. Mason, Stefan W. Toennes, Nadia R P W Hutten, Felix Müller, Peter Stiers, Johannes G. Ramaekers, Kim P. C. Kuypers, Amanda Feilding, Jacobus F.A. Jansen, Section Psychopharmacology, RS: FPN NPPP II, RS: MHeNs - R1 - Cognitive Neuropsychiatry and Clinical Neuroscience, Beeldvorming, MUMC+: DA BV Klinisch Fysicus (9), Section Neuropsychology, and RS: FPN NPPP I
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Consciousness ,Neurophysiology ,Glutamic Acid ,PREFRONTAL CORTEX ,Hippocampal formation ,Article ,Psilocybin ,Neurochemical ,POSITRON-EMISSION-TOMOGRAPHY ,Human behaviour ,medicine ,MYSTICAL-TYPE EXPERIENCES ,Humans ,Prefrontal cortex ,Default mode network ,IN-VIVO ,Pharmacology ,Ego ,business.industry ,5-HT2A RECEPTORS ,Glutamate receptor ,SEROTONIN ,HEALTHY HUMANS ,Glutamic acid ,Neurotransmitters ,V PYRAMIDAL CELLS ,Psychiatry and Mental health ,Solubility ,DEFAULT-MODE ,METABOLIC HYPERFRONTALITY ,Hallucinogens ,Serotonin ,business ,Neuroscience ,medicine.drug - Abstract
There is growing interest in the therapeutic utility of psychedelic substances, like psilocybin, for disorders characterized by distortions of the self-experience, like depression. Accumulating preclinical evidence emphasizes the role of the glutamate system in the acute action of the drug on brain and behavior; however this has never been tested in humans. Following a double-blind, placebo-controlled, parallel group design, we utilized an ultra-high field multimodal brain imaging approach and demonstrated that psilocybin (0.17 mg/kg) induced region-dependent alterations in glutamate, which predicted distortions in the subjective experience of one’s self (ego dissolution). Whereas higher levels of medial prefrontal cortical glutamate were associated with negatively experienced ego dissolution, lower levels in hippocampal glutamate were associated with positively experienced ego dissolution. Such findings provide further insights into the underlying neurobiological mechanisms of the psychedelic, as well as the baseline, state. Importantly, they may also provide a neurochemical basis for therapeutic effects as witnessed in ongoing clinical trials.
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- 2020
17. LSD, afterglow and hangover: Increased episodic memory and verbal fluency, decreased cognitive flexibility
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Isabel Wießner, Rodolfo Olivieri, Marcelo Falchi, Fernanda Palhano-Fontes, Lucas Oliveira Maia, Amanda Feilding, Draulio B. Araujo, Sidarta Ribeiro, and Luís Fernando Tófoli
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Pharmacology ,Psychiatry and Mental health ,Lysergic Acid Diethylamide ,Cognition ,Cross-Over Studies ,Neurology ,Memory, Episodic ,Hallucinogens ,Humans ,Pharmacology (medical) ,Neurology (clinical) ,Neuropsychological Tests ,Biological Psychiatry - Abstract
Psychedelics acutely impair cognitive functions, but these impairments decline with growing experiences with psychedelics and microdoses may even exert opposing effects. Given the recent evidence that psychedelics induce neuroplasticity, this explorative study aimed at investigating the potential of psychedelics to sub-acutely change cognition. For this, we applied a randomized, double-blind, placebo-controlled, crossover study with 24 healthy volunteers receiving 50 μg lysergic acid diethylamide (LSD) or an inactive placebo. Sub-acute changes in cognition were measured 24 h after dosing, including memory (Rey-Osterrieth Complex Figure, ROCF; 2D Object-Location Memory Task, OLMT; Rey Auditory-Verbal Learning Test, RAVLT), verbal fluency (phonological; semantic; switch), design fluency (basic; filter; switch), cognitive flexibility (Wisconsin Card Sorting Test, WCST), sustained and switching attention (Trail Making Test, TMT), inhibitory control (Stroop Task) and perceptual reasoning (Block Design Test, BDT). The results show that when compared to placebo and corrected for Body Mass Index (BMI) and abstinence period from psychedelics, LSD sub-acutely improved visuospatial memory (ROCF immediate recall points and percentage, OLMT consolidation percentage) and phonological verbal fluency and impaired cognitive flexibility (WCST: fewer categories achieved; more perseveration, errors and conceptual level responses). In conclusion, the low dose of LSD moderately induced both "afterglow" and "hangover". The improvements in visuospatial memory and phonological fluency suggest that LSD-assisted therapy should be explored as a novel treatment perspective in conditions involving memory and language declines such as brain injury, stroke or dementia.
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- 2021
18. Nootropic effects of LSD: Behavioral, molecular and computational evidence
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Isis M. Ornelas, Felipe A. Cini, Isabel Wießner, Encarni Marcos, Dráulio B. Araújo, Livia Goto-Silva, Juliana Nascimento, Sergio R.B. Silva, Marcelo N. Costa, Marcelo Falchi, Rodolfo Olivieri, Fernanda Palhano-Fontes, Eduardo Sequerra, Daniel Martins-de-Souza, Amanda Feilding, César Rennó-Costa, Luis Fernando Tófoli, Stevens K. Rehen, Sidarta Ribeiro, Fundação Carlos Chagas Filho de Amparo à Pesquisa do Estado do Rio de Janeiro, Coordenação de Aperfeiçoamento de Pessoal de Nível Superior (Brasil), Conselho Nacional de Desenvolvimento Científico e Tecnológico (Brasil), Sao Paulo Research Foundation, Universidade Federal do Rio Grande do Norte, Ministerio de Economía y Competitividad (España), Ministerio de Ciencia, Innovación y Universidades (España), Agencia Estatal de Investigación (España), and Royal Society (UK)
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Proteomics ,Lysergic Acid Diethylamide ,Developmental Neuroscience ,Neurology ,TOR Serine-Threonine Kinases ,Hallucinogens ,Animals ,Humans ,Nootropic Agents ,Rats - Abstract
The therapeutic use of classical psychedelic substances such as d-lysergic acid diethylamide (LSD) surged in recent years. Studies in rodents suggest that these effects are produced by increased neural plasticity, including stimulation of the mTOR pathway, a key regulator of metabolism, plasticity, and aging. Could psychedelic-induced neural plasticity be harnessed to enhance cognition? Here we show that LSD treatment enhanced performance in a novel object recognition task in rats, and in a visuo-spatial memory task in humans. A proteomic analysis of human brain organoids showed that LSD affected metabolic pathways associated with neural plasticity, including mTOR. To gain insight into the relation of neural plasticity, aging and LSD-induced cognitive gains, we emulated the experiments in rats and humans with a neural network model of a cortico-hippocampal circuit. Using the baseline strength of plasticity as a proxy for age and assuming an increase in plasticity strength related to LSD dose, the simulations provided a good fit for the experimental data. Altogether, the results suggest that LSD has nootropic effects., This project was supported by the Beckley Foundation; Fundação de Amparo à Pesquisa do Estado do Rio de Janeiro, Coordenação de Aperfeiçoamento de Pessoal de Nível Superior (CAPES) – Finance Code 001, Conselho Nacional de Desenvolvimento Científico e Tecnológico (CNPq) (grants 308775/2015-5 and 408145/2016-1), São Paulo Research Foundation grants (2013/07699-0, 2014/10068-4, 2017/25588-1 and 2019/00098-7), intramural grants from D'Or Institute and Federal University of Rio Grande do Norte, and a Juan de la Cierva-Incorporación Scholarship (IJCI-2016-27864) from the Spanish Ministry of Science, Innovation and Universities, and a Newton International Fellowship from the Royal Society.
- Published
- 2022
19. LSD, madness and healing: Mystical experiences as possible link between psychosis model and therapy model
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Fernanda Palhano-Fontes, Isabel Wießner, Luís Fernando Tófoli, Amanda Feilding, Sidarta Ribeiro, and Marcelo Falchi
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Psychosis ,Psychedelic experience ,Mindfulness ,Psychotherapist ,Salience (language) ,Altered state of consciousness ,Suggestibility ,Five Facet Mindfulness Questionnaire ,medicine.disease ,030227 psychiatry ,03 medical and health sciences ,Psychiatry and Mental health ,0302 clinical medicine ,medicine ,Anxiety ,medicine.symptom ,Psychology ,030217 neurology & neurosurgery ,Applied Psychology - Abstract
BackgroundFor a century, psychedelics have been investigated as models of psychosis for demonstrating phenomenological similarities with psychotic experiences and as therapeutic models for treating depression, anxiety, and substance use disorders. This study sought to explore this paradoxical relationship connecting key parameters of the psychotic experience, psychotherapy, and psychedelic experience.MethodsIn a randomized, double-blind, placebo-controlled, crossover design, 24 healthy volunteers received 50 μg d-lysergic acid diethylamide (LSD) or inactive placebo. Psychotic experience was assessed by aberrant salience (Aberrant Salience Inventory, ASI), therapeutic potential by suggestibility (Creative Imagination Scale, CIS) and mindfulness (Five Facet Mindfulness Questionnaire, FFMQ; Mindful Attention Awareness Scale, MAAS; Experiences Questionnaire, EQ), and psychedelic experience by four questionnaires (Altered State of Consciousness Questionnaire, ASC; Mystical Experiences Questionnaire, MEQ; Challenging Experiences Questionnaire, CEQ; Ego-Dissolution Inventory, EDI). Relationships between LSD-induced effects were examined.ResultsLSD induced psychedelic experiences, including alteration of consciousness, mystical experiences, ego-dissolution, and mildly challenging experiences, increased aberrant salience and suggestibility, but not mindfulness. LSD-induced aberrant salience correlated highly with complex imagery, mystical experiences, and ego-dissolution. LSD-induced suggestibility correlated with no other effects. Individual mindfulness changes correlated with aspects of aberrant salience and psychedelic experience.ConclusionsThe LSD state resembles a psychotic experience and offers a tool for healing. The link between psychosis model and therapeutic model seems to lie in mystical experiences. The results point to the importance of meaning attribution for the LSD psychosis model and indicate that psychedelic-assisted therapy might benefit from therapeutic suggestions fostering mystical experiences.
- Published
- 2021
20. Dissociable effects of cannabis with and without cannabidiol on the human brain’s resting-state functional connectivity
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Valerie Curran, Matthew B. Wall, Lysia Demetriou, David J. Nutt, Rebecca A. Pope, Abigail Freeman, Michael A P Bloomfield, Oliwia Simela Kowalczyk, Claire Mokrysz, Amanda Feilding, Tom P. Freeman, Will Lawn, and Chandni Hindocha
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cannabis ,Male ,cannabidiol ,default mode network ,0302 clinical medicine ,Cannabidiol ,Pharmacology (medical) ,Dronabinol ,Default mode network ,Cross-Over Studies ,biology ,Functional connectivity ,fMRI ,Brain ,Human brain ,Magnetic Resonance Imaging ,Psychiatry and Mental health ,surgical procedures, operative ,medicine.anatomical_structure ,Female ,Psychology ,medicine.drug ,Adult ,THC ,Marijuana Smoking ,digestive system ,Young Adult ,03 medical and health sciences ,SDG 3 - Good Health and Well-being ,Double-Blind Method ,mental disorders ,medicine ,Humans ,resting state ,Effects of cannabis ,Cannabis ,Pharmacology ,Resting state fMRI ,organic chemicals ,biology.organism_classification ,digestive system diseases ,030227 psychiatry ,Hallucinogens ,salience network ,marijuana ,Neuroscience ,030217 neurology & neurosurgery - Abstract
Background: Two major constituents of cannabis are Δ 9 -tetrahydrocannabinol (THC) and cannabidiol (CBD). THC is the main psychoactive component; CBD may buffer the user against the harmful effects of THC. Aims: We examined the effects of two strains of cannabis and placebo on the human brain’s resting-state networks using fMRI. Methods: Seventeen healthy volunteers (experienced with cannabis, but not regular users) underwent three drug treatments and scanning sessions. Treatments were cannabis containing THC (Cann−CBD; 8 mg THC), cannabis containing THC with CBD (Cann+CBD; 8 mg THC + 10 mg CBD), and matched placebo cannabis. Seed-based resting-state functional connectivity analyses were performed on three brain networks: the default mode (DMN; defined by positive connectivity with the posterior cingulate cortex: PCC+), executive control (ECN; defined by negative connectivity with the posterior cingulate cortex: PCC−) and salience (SAL; defined by positive connectivity with the anterior insula: AI+) network. Results: Reductions in functional connectivity (relative to placebo) were seen in the DMN (PCC+) and SAL (AI+) networks for both strains of cannabis, with spatially dissociable effects. Across the entire salience network (AI+), Cann−CBD reduced connectivity relative to Cann+CBD. The PCC in the DMN was specifically disrupted by Cann−CBD, and this effect correlated with subjective drug effects, including feeling ‘stoned’ and ‘high’. Conclusions: THC disrupts the DMN, and the PCC is a key brain region involved in the subjective experience of THC intoxication. CBD restores disruption of the salience network by THC, which may explain its potential to treat disorders of salience such as psychosis and addiction.
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- 2019
21. Low Doses of LSD Acutely Increase BDNF Blood Plasma Levels in Healthy Volunteers
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Friederike Holze, Amanda Feilding, Johannes G. Ramaekers, Kim P. C. Kuypers, Patrick C. Dolder, Nimmy Varghese, Natasha L. Mason, Eef L. Theunissen, Matthias E. Liechti, Nadia R P W Hutten, Anne Eckert, Section Psychopharmacology, and RS: FPN NPPP II
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Pharmacology ,Letter ,business.industry ,Microdosing ,KETAMINE ,Low dose ,neuroplasticity ,microdosing ,PSYCHEDELICS ,placebo-controlled clinical trial ,LSD ,BDNF ,Neurotrophic factors ,Neuroplasticity ,Blood plasma ,Healthy volunteers ,medicine ,Pharmacology (medical) ,Ketamine ,BRAIN ,business ,medicine.drug ,NEUROTROPHIC FACTOR - Abstract
Despite preclinical evidence for psychedelic-induced neuroplasticity, confirmation in humans is grossly lacking. Given the increased interest in using low doses of psychedelics for psychiatric indications and the importance of neuroplasticity in the therapeutic response, this placebo-controlled within-subject study investigated the effect of single low doses of LSD (5, 10, and 20 μg) on circulating BDNF levels in healthy volunteers. Blood samples were collected every 2 h over 6 h, and BDNF levels were determined afterward in blood plasma using ELISA. The findings demonstrated an increase in BDNF blood plasma levels at 4 h (5 μg) and 6 h (5 and 20 μg) compared to that for the placebo. The finding that LSD acutely increases BDNF levels warrants studies in patient populations.
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- 2021
22. Spontaneous and deliberate creative cognition during and after psilocybin exposure
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Peter Stiers, Amanda Feilding, J.G. Ramaekers, Kim P. C. Kuypers, Felix Müller, Natasha L. Mason, B. Da Rios, Desmond H. Y. Tse, J. Reckweg, Stefan W. Toennes, Section Psychopharmacology, RS: FPN NPPP II, Section Neuropsychology, and RS: FPN NPPP I
- Subjects
0301 basic medicine ,Ultrahigh field ,media_common.quotation_subject ,Article ,lcsh:RC321-571 ,Psilocybin ,Creativity ,03 medical and health sciences ,Cellular and Molecular Neuroscience ,0302 clinical medicine ,Cognition ,Human behaviour ,medicine ,Humans ,Creative thinking ,lcsh:Neurosciences. Biological psychiatry. Neuropsychiatry ,Biological Psychiatry ,Default mode network ,media_common ,Cognitive flexibility ,Brain ,Magnetic Resonance Imaging ,Psychiatry and Mental health ,030104 developmental biology ,Hallucinogens ,Psychology ,030217 neurology & neurosurgery ,medicine.drug ,Cognitive psychology ,Neuroscience - Abstract
Creativity is an essential cognitive ability linked to all areas of our everyday functioning. Thus, finding a way to enhance it is of broad interest. A large number of anecdotal reports suggest that the consumption of psychedelic drugs can enhance creative thinking; however, scientific evidence is lacking. Following a double-blind, placebo-controlled, parallel-group design, we demonstrated that psilocybin (0.17 mg/kg) induced a time- and construct-related differentiation of effects on creative thinking. Acutely, psilocybin increased ratings of (spontaneous) creative insights, while decreasing (deliberate) task-based creativity. Seven days after psilocybin, number of novel ideas increased. Furthermore, we utilized an ultrahigh field multimodal brain imaging approach, and found that acute and persisting effects were predicted by within- and between-network connectivity of the default mode network. Findings add some support to historical claims that psychedelics can influence aspects of the creative process, potentially indicating them as a tool to investigate creativity and subsequent underlying neural mechanisms. Trial NL6007; psilocybin as a tool for enhanced cognitive flexibility; https://www.trialregister.nl/trial/6007.
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- 2021
23. Low-dose LSD and the stream of thought: Increased Discontinuity of Mind, Deep Thoughts and abstract flow
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Isabel, Wießner, Marcelo, Falchi, Fernanda, Palhano-Fontes, Lucas, Oliveira Maia, Amanda, Feilding, Sidarta, Ribeiro, Natália, Bezerra Mota, Draulio B, Araujo, and Luís Fernando, Tófoli
- Subjects
Lysergic Acid Diethylamide ,Cognition ,Cross-Over Studies ,Hallucinogens ,Humans ,Healthy Volunteers - Abstract
Stream of thought describes the nature of the mind when it is freely roaming, a mental state that is continuous and highly dynamic as in mind-wandering or free association. Classic serotonergic psychedelics are known to profoundly impact perception, cognition and language, yet their influence on the stream of thought remains largely unexplored.To elucidate the effects of LSD on the stream of thought.In a randomized, double-blind, placebo-controlled, crossover study, 24 healthy participants received 50 μg lysergic acid diethylamide (LSD) or inactive placebo. Mind-wandering was measured by the Amsterdam Resting State Questionnaire (ARSQ), free association by the Forward Flow Task (FFT) for three seed word types (animals, objects, abstract words). ARSQ and FFT were assessed at +0 h, +2 h, +4 h, +6 h, +8 h and +24 h after drug administration, respectively.LSD, compared to placebo, induced different facets of mind-wandering we conceptualized as "chaos" (Discontinuity of Mind, decreased Sleepiness, Planning, Thoughts under Control, Thoughts about Work and Thoughts about Past), "meaning" (Deep Thoughts, Not Sharing Thoughts) and "sensation" (Thoughts about Odours, Thoughts about Sounds). LSD increased the FFT for abstract words reflecting an "abstract flow" under free association. Overall, chaos was strongest pronounced (+2 h to +6 h), followed by meaning (+2 h to +4 h), sensation (+2 h) and abstract flow (+4 h).LSD affects the stream of thought within several levels (active, passive), facets (chaos, meaning, sensation, abstractness) and time points (from +2 h to +6 h). Increased chaos, meaning and abstract flow at +4 h indicate the utility of a late therapeutic window in psycholytic therapy.
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- 2021
24. Pharmacokinetics and pharmacodynamics of lysergic acid diethylamide microdoses in healthy participants
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Friederike Holze, Kim P. C. Kuypers, Patrick C. Dolder, Johannes G. Ramaekers, Eef L. Theunissen, Amanda Feilding, Matthias E. Liechti, Nadia R P W Hutten, Natasha L. Mason, Urs Duthaler, Section Psychopharmacology, and RS: FPN NPPP II
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Adult ,Male ,Microdosing ,PSYCHEDELICS ,Pharmacology ,Placebo ,030226 pharmacology & pharmacy ,Models, Biological ,Article ,LSD ,03 medical and health sciences ,Young Adult ,0302 clinical medicine ,Cognition ,Pharmacokinetics ,Double-Blind Method ,medicine ,Humans ,Pharmacology (medical) ,Lysergic acid diethylamide ,Cross-Over Studies ,Dose-Response Relationship, Drug ,business.industry ,Research ,Plasma levels ,Articles ,Crossover study ,Confidence interval ,Healthy Volunteers ,Affect ,Lysergic Acid Diethylamide ,030220 oncology & carcinogenesis ,Pharmacodynamics ,Hallucinogens ,Linear Models ,Female ,business ,medicine.drug - Abstract
Lysergic acid diethylamide microdoses exhibit dose‐dependent pharmacokinetics and subjective effects., “Microdoses” of lysergic acid diethylamide (LSD) are used recreationally to enhance mood and cognition. Increasing interest has also been seen in developing LSD into a medication. Therefore, we performed a pharmacokinetic‐pharmacodynamic study using very low doses of LSD. Single doses of LSD base (5, 10, and 20 µg) and placebo were administered in a double‐blind, randomized, placebo‐controlled crossover study in 23 healthy participants. Test days were separated by at least 5 days. Plasma levels of LSD and subjective effects were assessed up to 6 hours after administration. Pharmacokinetic parameters were determined using compartmental modeling. Concentration‐subjective effect relationships were described using pharmacokinetic‐pharmacodynamic modeling. Mean (95% confidence interval) maximal LSD concentrations were 151 pg/mL (127–181), 279 pg/mL (243–320), and 500 pg/mL (413–607) after 5, 10, and 20 µg LSD administration, respectively. Maximal concentrations were reached after 1.1 hours. The mean elimination half‐life was 2.7 hours (1.5–6.2). The 5 µg dose of LSD elicited no significant acute subjective effects. The 10 µg dose of LSD significantly increased ratings of “under the influence” and “good drug effect” compared with placebo. These effects began an average of 1.1 hours after 10 µg LSD administration, peaked at 2.5 hours, and ended at 5.1 hours. The 20 µg dose of LSD significantly increased ratings of “under the influence,” “good drug effects,” and “bad drug effects.” LSD concentrations dose‐proportionally increased at doses as low as 5–20 µg and decreased with a half‐life of 3 hours. The threshold dose of LSD base for psychotropic effects was 10 µg.
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- 2021
25. Self-blinding citizen science to explore psychedelic microdosing
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David Erritzoe, David J. Nutt, Laura Kartner, Robin L. Carhart-Harris, Amanda Feilding, Allan Blemings, Balázs Szigeti, and Fernando Rosas
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Male ,Life Sciences & Biomedicine - Other Topics ,medicine ,Microdosing ,Emotions ,microdosing ,0601 Biochemistry and Cell Biology ,Creativity ,neuroscience ,LSD ,0302 clinical medicine ,Cognition ,MicroDose ,citizen science ,Medicine ,Biology (General) ,General Neuroscience ,General Medicine ,DEPRESSION ,6.1 Pharmaceuticals ,Anxiety ,Female ,Mental health ,TRIAL ,medicine.symptom ,Drug ,Life Sciences & Biomedicine ,Clinical psychology ,Research Article ,Human ,Adult ,Blinding ,QH301-705.5 ,Science ,Clinical Trials and Supportive Activities ,Placebo ,PATIENT ,General Biochemistry, Genetics and Molecular Biology ,Dose-Response Relationship ,03 medical and health sciences ,self-blinding ,Clinical Research ,Behavioral and Social Science ,Humans ,human ,Biology ,Science & Technology ,General Immunology and Microbiology ,business.industry ,Clinical supervision ,Evaluation of treatments and therapeutic interventions ,psychedelics ,Placebo Effect ,030227 psychiatry ,MODEL ,Affect ,Mood ,placebo ,Hallucinogens ,Biochemistry and Cell Biology ,business ,030217 neurology & neurosurgery ,Neuroscience ,expectations - Abstract
Microdosing is the practice of regularly using low doses of psychedelic drugs. Anecdotal reports suggest that microdosing enhances well-being and cognition; however, such accounts are potentially biased by the placebo effect. This study used a ‘self-blinding’ citizen science initiative, where participants were given online instructions on how to incorporate placebo control into their microdosing routine without clinical supervision. The study was completed by 191 participants, making it the largest placebo-controlled trial on psychedelics to-date. All psychological outcomes improved significantly from baseline to after the 4 weeks long dose period for the microdose group; however, the placebo group also improved and no significant between-groups differences were observed. Acute (emotional state, drug intensity, mood, energy, and creativity) and post-acute (anxiety) scales showed small, but significant microdose vs. placebo differences; however, these results can be explained by participants breaking blind. The findings suggest that anecdotal benefits of microdosing can be explained by the placebo effect., eLife digest Psychedelic psychotherapy, therapy enhanced with psychedelic drugs such as LSD or psilocybin (the active ingredient of ‘magic mushrooms’), has been suggested to improve psychological well-being. For this reason, trials on psychedelic therapy for the treatment of depression, addiction and other conditions are ongoing. Recently, ‘microdosing’ – a way of administering psychedelics that involves taking about 10% of a recreational dose two or three times per week – has gained popularity. Unlike taking large doses of psychedelics, microdosing does not induce hallucinations, but anecdotal reports suggest that it yields similar benefits as psychedelic therapy. A key feature of modern medicine are ‘placebo control’ studies that compare two groups of patients: one that takes a drug and another that takes inactive pills, known as placebos. Crucially, neither group knows whether they are taking drug or placebo. This control ensures that observed effects are due to the drug itself and not to unrelated psychological causes. For example, in trials of mood medicines, participants often expect to feel happier, which in itself improves their mood even when taking a placebo. This is known as the placebo effect. Restrictive drug policies make placebo-controlled studies on psychedelics difficult and expensive, in particular for microdosing, which involves taking psychedelics over a longer time period. To overcome this problem, Szigeti et al. developed a new citizen-science approach, where microdosers implemented their own placebo control based on online instructions. The advantages are the low cost and the ability to recruit participants globally. The experiment was completed by 191 microdosers, making it the largest placebo-controlled study on psychedelics to-date, for a fraction of the cost of an equivalent clinical study. The trial examined whether psychedelic microdosing can improve cognitive function and psychological well-being. The team found that microdosing significantly increased a number of psychological measures, such as well-being and life satisfaction. However, participants taking placebo also improved: there were no significant differences between the two groups. The findings confirmed positive anecdotes about microdosing improving people’s moods, but at the same time show that taking empty capsules, knowing they might be microdoses, have the same benefits. This result suggests that the observed benefits are not caused by the microdose, but rather by psychological expectations. The study’s innovative ‘do-it-yourself’ approach to placebo control may serve as a template for future citizen science studies on other popular phenomena where positive expectations and social factors could play a role, such as cannabidiol (CBD) oils, nootropics and nutrition.
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- 2021
26. Author response: Self-blinding citizen science to explore psychedelic microdosing
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Allan Blemings, Amanda Feilding, Robin L. Carhart-Harris, David J. Nutt, Balázs Szigeti, Laura Kartner, Fernando Rosas, and David Erritzoe
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Blinding ,Microdosing ,Citizen science ,Engineering ethics ,Psychology - Published
- 2020
27. Effects of external stimulation on psychedelic state neurodynamics
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Leor Roseman, Mediano Pam., Robin L. Carhart-Harris, David J. Nutt, Daniel Bor, Morten L. Kringelbach, Amanda Feilding, Christopher Timmermann, Mendel Kaelen, Suresh D. Muthukumaraswamy, Adam B. Barrett, Anil K. Seth, and Fernando Rosas
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Personality changes ,Psychedelic experience ,Brain activity and meditation ,media_common.quotation_subject ,Wakefulness ,Psychedelic therapy ,Neurophysiology ,Consciousness ,Stimulus (physiology) ,Psychology ,media_common ,Cognitive psychology - Abstract
Recent findings have shown that psychedelics reliably enhance brain entropy (understood as neural signal diversity), and this effect has been associated with both acute and long-term psychological outcomes such as personality changes. These findings are particularly intriguing given that a decrease of brain entropy is a robust indicator of loss of consciousness (e.g. from wakefulness to sleep). However, little is known about how context impacts the entropy-enhancing effect of psychedelics, which carries important implications for how it can be exploited in, for example, psychedelic psychotherapy. This article investigates how brain entropy is modulated by stimulus manipulation during a psychedelic experience, by studying participants under the effects of LSD or placebo, either with gross state changes (eyes closed vs. open) or different stimulus (no stimulus vs. music vs. video). Results show that while brain entropy increases with LSD in all the experimental conditions, it exhibits largest changes when subjects have their eyes closed. Furthermore, brain entropy changes are consistently associated with subjective ratings of the psychedelic experience, but this relationship is disrupted when participants are viewing video — potentially due to a “competition” between external stimuli and endogenous LSD-induced imagery. Taken together, our findings provide strong quantitative evidence for the role of context in modulating neural dynamics during a psychedelic experience, underlining the importance of performing psychedelic psychotherapy in a suitable environment. Additionally, our findings put into question simplistic interpretations of brain entropy as a direct neural correlate of conscious level.Significance StatementThe effects of psychedelic substances on conscious experience can be substantially affected by contextual factors, which play a critical role in the outcomes of psychedelic therapy. This study shows how context can modulate not only psychological, but also neurophysiological phenomena during a psychedelic experience. Our findings reveal distinctive effects of having eyes closed after taking LSD, including a more pronounced change on the neural dynamics, and a closer correspondence between brain activity and subjective ratings. Furthermore, our results suggest a competition between external stimuli and internal psychedelic-induced imagery, which supports the practice of carrying out psychedelic therapy with patients having their eyes closed.
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- 2020
28. Therapeutic potential of ayahuasca in grief: a prospective, observational study
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Débora González, José Carlos Bouso, Irene Perez, Magí Farré, Jordi Cantillo, Amanda Feilding, and Jordi E. Obiols
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Adult ,Male ,Quality of life ,media_common.quotation_subject ,Pharmacology toxicology ,Beverages ,03 medical and health sciences ,0302 clinical medicine ,Surveys and Questionnaires ,Experiential avoidance ,Humans ,Prospective Studies ,Shipibo ,Depression (differential diagnoses) ,media_common ,Original Investigation ,Aged ,Pharmacology ,Decentering ,Plant Stems ,Psychopathology ,Depression ,Banisteriopsis ,Ayahuasca ,Middle Aged ,humanities ,030227 psychiatry ,Plant Leaves ,Death ,Acceptance ,Grief ,Observational study ,Female ,Medicine, Traditional ,Psychology ,030217 neurology & neurosurgery ,Clinical psychology ,Follow-Up Studies ,Bereavement - Abstract
Rationale Recent studies have assessed the therapeutic potential of ayahuasca for the treatment of depression with promising preliminary results. Objectives Here, we examine the course of grief over 1 year of follow-up in a bereaved sample that attended a center in Peru to participate in indigenous Shipibo ayahuasca ceremonies. We also explore the roles of experiential avoidance and decentering as mechanisms of change. Methods Bereaved participants who attended the ayahuasca center responded to an online survey that included the Texas Revised Inventory of Grief, Symptom Assessment-45, WHO Quality of Life-Bref, Acceptance and Action Questionnaire, and Decentering. Baseline assessment was completed by 50 individuals (T0). Of these, 39 completed the post-assessment at 15 days (T1), 31 at 3 months (T2), 29 at 6 months (T3), and 27 at 12 months (T4) after leaving the retreat. Pearson’s analysis was performed to examine the relationship between the severity of grief and mechanisms of change during the period of T0 and T1. Results A significant decrease in Texas Revised Inventory was observed at all time points (T1: Cohen’s d = 0.84; T2: Cohen’s d = 1.38; T3: Cohen’s d = 1.16; T4: Cohen’s d = 1.39). We found a relationship between experiential avoidance (r = 0.55; p r = − 0.47; p Conclusions Our results suggest that the ceremonial use of ayahuasca has therapeutic value by reducing the severity of grief. Acceptance and decentering are both psychological processes that mediate the improvement of grief symptoms.
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- 2020
29. The serotonin 2A receptor agonist 25CN-NBOH increases murine heart rate and neck-arterial blood flow in a temperature-dependent manner
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Chenchen Song, Taylor Lyons, Amanda Feilding, Thomas Knöpfel, Tobias Buchborn, Commission of the European Communities, and European Commission
- Subjects
Tachycardia ,Male ,Hemodynamics ,25CN-NBOH ,selective 5-HT2AR agonist ,tachycardia ,Body Temperature ,LSD ,ACTIVATION ,Mice ,0302 clinical medicine ,Heart Rate ,Receptor, Serotonin, 5-HT2A ,Pharmacology (medical) ,Pharmacology & Pharmacy ,5-HT2 RECEPTORS ,11 Medical and Health Sciences ,Lysergic acid diethylamide ,Psychiatry ,0303 health sciences ,thermoregulation ,Chemistry ,Temperature ,Thermoregulation ,Original Papers ,STATE ,3. Good health ,17 Psychology and Cognitive Sciences ,Psychiatry and Mental health ,vasoactive ,Female ,medicine.symptom ,Life Sciences & Biomedicine ,bradypnea ,medicine.drug ,Hallucinogen ,Agonist ,medicine.medical_specialty ,hypertension ,medicine.drug_class ,Clinical Neurology ,CARDIOVASCULAR REGULATION ,03 medical and health sciences ,HALLUCINOGENS ,Internal medicine ,Heart rate ,medicine ,Animals ,TOLERANCE ,030304 developmental biology ,Pharmacology ,Science & Technology ,haemodynamics ,carotid artery ,2,5-DIMETHOXY-4-METHYLAMPHETAMINE DOM ,Neurosciences ,LYSERGIC-ACID DIETHYLAMIDE ,Mice, Inbred C57BL ,Endocrinology ,psychedelic ,Neurosciences & Neurology ,030217 neurology & neurosurgery ,Neck ,Serotonin 5-HT2 Receptor Agonists ,RESPONSES - Abstract
Background: Serotonin 2A receptors, the molecular target of psychedelics, are expressed by neuronal and vascular cells, both of which might contribute to brain haemodynamic characteristics for the psychedelic state. Aim: Aiming for a systemic understanding of psychedelic vasoactivity, here we investigated the effect of N-(2-hydroxybenzyl)-2,5-dimethoxy-4-cyanophenylethylamine – a new-generation agonist with superior serotonin 2A receptor selectivity – on brain-supplying neck-arterial blood flow. Methods: We recorded core body temperature and employed non-invasive, collar-sensor based pulse oximetry in anesthetised mice to extract parameters of local blood perfusion, oxygen saturation, heart and respiration rate. Hypothesising an overlap between serotonergic pulse- and thermoregulation, recordings were done under physiological and elevated pad temperatures. Results: N-(2-hydroxybenzyl)-2,5-dimethoxy-4-cyanophenylethylamine (1.5 mg/kg, subcutaneous) significantly increased the frequency of heart beats accompanied by a slight elevation of neck-arterial blood flow. Increasing the animal-supporting heat-pad temperature from 37°C to 41°C enhanced the drug’s effect on blood flow while counteracting tachycardia. Additionally, N-(2-hydroxybenzyl)-2,5-dimethoxy-4-cyanophenylethylamine promoted bradypnea, which, like tachycardia, quickly reversed at the elevated pad temperature. The interrelatedness of N-(2-hydroxybenzyl)-2,5-dimethoxy-4-cyanophenylethylamine’s respiro-cardiovascular effects and thermoregulation was further corroborated by the drug selectively increasing the core body temperature at the elevated pad temperature. Arterial oxygen saturation was not affected by N-(2-hydroxybenzyl)-2,5-dimethoxy-4-cyanophenylethylamine at either temperature. Conclusions: Our findings imply that selective serotonin 2A receptor activation modulates systemic cardiovascular functioning in orchestration with thermoregulation and with immediate relevance to brain-imminent neck (most likely carotid) arteries. As carotid branching is a critical last hub to channel cardiovascular output to or away from the brain, our results might have implications for the brain haemodynamics associated with psychedelia.
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- 2020
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30. d-Lysergic acid diethylamide has major potential as a cognitive enhancer
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Juliana Damieli Nascimento, Encarni Marcos, Sergio Ruschi, Marcelo N. Costa, Luís Fernando Tófoli, Eduardo Bouth Sequerra, César Rennó-Costa, Isis M. Ornelas, Stevens K. Rehen, Amanda Feilding, Draulio de Araujo, Daniel Martins-de-Souza, Sidarta Ribeiro, Livia Goto-Silva, Karina Karmirian, Felipe Augusto Cini, and José Alexandre Salerno
- Subjects
Environmental enrichment ,medicine.anatomical_structure ,Neuroplasticity ,medicine ,Synaptogenesis ,Hippocampus ,Human brain ,Biology ,Prefrontal cortex ,Serotonergic ,Neuroscience ,Presynaptic active zone - Abstract
Psychedelic agonists of serotonin receptors induce neural plasticity and synaptogenesis, but their potential to enhance learning remains uncharted. Here we show that a single dose of d-LSD, a potent serotonergic agonist, increased novel object preference in young and adult rats several days after treatment. d-LSD alone did not increase preference in old animals, but could rescue it to young levels when followed by a 6-day exposure to enriched environment (EE). Mass spectrometry-based proteomics in human brain organoids treated with d-LSD showed upregulation of proteins from the presynaptic active zone. A computational model of synaptic connectivity in the hippocampus and prefrontal cortex suggests that d-LSD enhances novelty preference by combining local synaptic changes in mnemonic and executive regions, with alterations of long-range synapses. Better pattern separation within EE explained its synergy with d-LSD in rescuing novelty preference in old animals. These results advance the use of d-LSD in cognitive enhancement.
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- 2019
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31. The hidden therapist: evidence for a central role of music in psychedelic therapy
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David J. Nutt, Robin L. Carhart-Harris, Jordan Raine, Lisa Helen Evans, Christopher Timmerman, Mendel Kaelen, Natalie Rodriguez, Bruna Giribaldi, Leor Roseman, Amanda Feilding, Medical Research Council (MRC), and The Beckley Foundation
- Subjects
Male ,PSILOCYBIN-ASSISTED PSYCHOTHERAPY ,Emotions ,Medical and Health Sciences ,Psilocybin ,LSD ,POSTTRAUMATIC-STRESS-DISORDER ,0302 clinical medicine ,Psychedelic therapy ,INTERPRETATIVE PHENOMENOLOGICAL ANALYSIS ,Pharmacology & Pharmacy ,media_common ,Psychiatry ,Interpretative phenomenological analysis ,Depression ,Treatment-Resistant ,11 Medical And Health Sciences ,HALLUCINOGEN PSILOCYBIN ,EXPERIENCES ,humanities ,3. Good health ,LIFE-THREATENING CANCER ,Mental Health ,Auditory Perception ,Female ,Psychology ,Life Sciences & Biomedicine ,HEALTHY-HUMAN VOLUNTEERS ,Mental image ,medicine.drug ,Adult ,Psychotherapist ,media_common.quotation_subject ,Resistance (psychoanalysis) ,behavioral disciplines and activities ,17 Psychology And Cognitive Sciences ,03 medical and health sciences ,Clinical Research ,Behavioral and Social Science ,Openness to experience ,medicine ,Humans ,AGONIST PSILOCYBIN ,3,4-METHYLENEDIOXYMETHAMPHETAMINE-ASSISTED PSYCHOTHERAPY ,Music Therapy ,Pharmacology ,Depressive Disorder ,Science & Technology ,Addiction ,Psychology and Cognitive Sciences ,Neurosciences ,medicine.disease ,Brain Disorders ,030227 psychiatry ,Psychotherapy ,Good Health and Well Being ,Mood disorders ,Hallucinogens ,Neurosciences & Neurology ,Mind and Body ,Music ,030217 neurology & neurosurgery - Abstract
Recent studies have supported the safety and efficacy of psychedelic therapy for mood disorders and addiction. Music is considered an important component in the treatment model, but little empirical research has been done to examine the magnitude and nature of its therapeutic role. The present study assessed the influence of music on the acute experience and clinical outcomes of psychedelic therapy. Semi-structured interviews inquired about the different ways in which music influenced the experience of 19 patients undergoing psychedelic therapy with psilocybin for treatment-resistant depression. Interpretative phenomenological analysis was applied to the interview data to identify salient themes. In addition, ratings were given for each patient for the extent to which they expressed “liking,” “resonance” (the music being experienced as “harmonious” with the emotional state of the listener), and “openness” (acceptance of the music-evoked experience). Analyses of the interviews revealed that the music had both “welcome” and “unwelcome” influences on patients’ subjective experiences. Welcome influences included the evocation of personally meaningful and therapeutically useful emotion and mental imagery, a sense of guidance, openness, and the promotion of calm and a sense of safety. Conversely, unwelcome influences included the evocation of unpleasant emotion and imagery, a sense of being misguided and resistance. Correlation analyses showed that patients’ experience of the music was associated with the occurrence of “mystical experiences” and “insightfulness.” Crucially, the nature of the music experience was significantly predictive of reductions in depression 1 week after psilocybin, whereas general drug intensity was not. This study indicates that music plays a central therapeutic function in psychedelic therapy.
- Published
- 2018
32. P.323 Cognitive and subjective effects of different low ‘micro’ doses of LSD in a placebo-controlled study
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Patrick C. Dolder, Amanda Feilding, Matthias E. Liechti, Nadia R P W Hutten, Kim P. C. Kuypers, Eef L. Theunissen, Natasha L. Mason, J.G. Ramaekers, Section Psychopharmacology, and RS: FPN NPPP II
- Subjects
Pharmacology ,medicine.medical_specialty ,Subjective effects ,business.industry ,Placebo-controlled study ,Cognition ,Audiology ,Psychiatry and Mental health ,Neurology ,medicine ,Pharmacology (medical) ,Neurology (clinical) ,business ,Biological Psychiatry - Published
- 2020
33. P.324 Acute effects of psilocybin on glutamate concentration levels, functional connectivity and subjective state
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J.G. Ramaekers, Kim P. C. Kuypers, Natasha L. Mason, Desmond H. Y. Tse, J. Reckweg, Amanda Feilding, Felix Müller, Stefan W. Toennes, Section Psychopharmacology, and RS: FPN NPPP II
- Subjects
Pharmacology ,Acute effects ,business.industry ,Functional connectivity ,Glutamate receptor ,State (functional analysis) ,Psilocybin ,Psychiatry and Mental health ,Neurology ,Medicine ,Pharmacology (medical) ,Neurology (clinical) ,business ,Neuroscience ,Biological Psychiatry ,medicine.drug - Published
- 2020
34. LSD modulates music-induced imagery via changes in parahippocampal connectivity
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Suresh D. Muthukumaraswamy, Luke Williams, Csaba Orban, Frederick S. Barrett, Leor Roseman, Amanda Feilding, Andre Santos-Ribeiro, Romy Lorenz, David J. Nutt, Mendel Kaelen, Robin L. Carhart-Harris, Timothy Williams, Joshua Kahan, Matthew B. Wall, and Mark Bolstridge
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Adult ,Male ,0301 basic medicine ,Hallucinogen ,Visual perception ,Rest ,Context (language use) ,behavioral disciplines and activities ,Developmental psychology ,Young Adult ,03 medical and health sciences ,0302 clinical medicine ,Neural Pathways ,medicine ,Humans ,Pharmacology (medical) ,Active listening ,Biological Psychiatry ,Lysergic acid diethylamide ,Pharmacology ,Brain Mapping ,medicine.diagnostic_test ,Middle Aged ,Magnetic Resonance Imaging ,humanities ,Lysergic Acid Diethylamide ,Psychiatry and Mental health ,030104 developmental biology ,medicine.anatomical_structure ,Neurology ,Auditory Perception ,Hallucinogens ,Imagination ,Visual Perception ,Parahippocampal Gyrus ,Administration, Intravenous ,Female ,Neurology (clinical) ,Functional magnetic resonance imaging ,Psychology ,Music ,030217 neurology & neurosurgery ,Parahippocampal gyrus ,medicine.drug ,Cognitive psychology ,Mental image - Abstract
Psychedelic drugs such as lysergic acid diethylamide (LSD) were used extensively in psychiatry in the past and their therapeutic potential is beginning to be re-examined today. Psychedelic psychotherapy typically involves a patient lying with their eyes-closed during peak drug effects, while listening to music and being supervised by trained psychotherapists. In this context, music is considered to be a key element in the therapeutic model; working in synergy with the drug to evoke therapeutically meaningful thoughts, emotions and imagery. The underlying mechanisms involved in this process have, however, never been formally investigated. Here we studied the interaction between LSD and music-listening on eyes-closed imagery by means of a placebo-controlled, functional magnetic resonance imaging (fMRI) study. Twelve healthy volunteers received intravenously administered LSD (75µg) and, on a separate occasion, placebo, before being scanned under eyes-closed resting conditions with and without music-listening. The parahippocampal cortex (PHC) has previously been linked with (1) music-evoked emotion, (2) the action of psychedelics, and (3) mental imagery. Imaging analyses therefore focused on changes in the connectivity profile of this particular structure. Results revealed increased PHC-visual cortex (VC) functional connectivity and PHC to VC information flow in the interaction between music and LSD. This latter result correlated positively with ratings of enhanced eyes-closed visual imagery, including imagery of an autobiographical nature. These findings suggest a plausible mechanism by which LSD works in combination with music listening to enhance certain subjective experiences that may be useful in a therapeutic context.
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- 2016
35. LSD-induced entropic brain activity predicts subsequent personality change
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David J. Nutt, Amanda Feilding, Robin L. Carhart-Harris, Martin Lövdén, Jonna Nilsson, Mendel Kaelen, and Alexander V. Lebedev
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Radiological and Ultrasound Technology ,Resting state fMRI ,Brain activity and meditation ,media_common.quotation_subject ,Psychedelic therapy ,Brain mapping ,030227 psychiatry ,Developmental psychology ,Revised NEO Personality Inventory ,Sample entropy ,03 medical and health sciences ,0302 clinical medicine ,Neurology ,Openness to experience ,Personality ,Radiology, Nuclear Medicine and imaging ,Neurology (clinical) ,Anatomy ,Psychology ,030217 neurology & neurosurgery ,Clinical psychology ,media_common - Abstract
Personality is known to be relatively stable throughout adulthood. Nevertheless, it has been shown that major life events with high personal significance, including experiences engendered by psychedelic drugs, can have an enduring impact on some core facets of personality. In the present, balanced-order, placebo-controlled study, we investigated biological predictors of post-lysergic acid diethylamide (LSD) changes in personality. Nineteen healthy adults underwent resting state functional MRI scans under LSD (75µg, I.V.) and placebo (saline I.V.). The Revised NEO Personality Inventory (NEO-PI-R) was completed at screening and 2 weeks after LSD/placebo. Scanning sessions consisted of three 7.5-min eyes-closed resting-state scans, one of which involved music listening. A standardized preprocessing pipeline was used to extract measures of sample entropy, which characterizes the predictability of an fMRI time-series. Mixed-effects models were used to evaluate drug-induced shifts in brain entropy and their relationship with the observed increases in the personality trait openness at the 2-week follow-up. Overall, LSD had a pronounced global effect on brain entropy, increasing it in both sensory and hierarchically higher networks across multiple time scales. These shifts predicted enduring increases in trait openness. Moreover, the predictive power of the entropy increases was greatest for the music-listening scans and when "ego-dissolution" was reported during the acute experience. These results shed new light on how LSD-induced shifts in brain dynamics and concomitant subjective experience can be predictive of lasting changes in personality. Hum Brain Mapp 37:3203-3213, 2016. © 2016 Wiley Periodicals, Inc.
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- 2016
36. LSD alters eyes-closed functional connectivity within the early visual cortex in a retinotopic fashion
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Mendel Kaelen, Leor Roseman, Martin I. Sereno, Robin L. Carhart-Harris, David J. Nutt, Amanda Feilding, Csaba Orban, Robert Leech, and John McGonigle
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Hallucinogen ,genetic structures ,Experimental psychology ,050105 experimental psychology ,03 medical and health sciences ,0302 clinical medicine ,medicine ,0501 psychology and cognitive sciences ,Radiology, Nuclear Medicine and imaging ,Lysergic acid diethylamide ,Radiological and Ultrasound Technology ,Drug condition ,Functional connectivity ,05 social sciences ,Healthy subjects ,eye diseases ,Visual field ,Visual cortex ,medicine.anatomical_structure ,Neurology ,Neurology (clinical) ,Anatomy ,Psychology ,Neuroscience ,030217 neurology & neurosurgery ,medicine.drug - Abstract
The question of how spatially organized activity in the visual cortex behaves during eyes-closed, lysergic acid diethylamide (LSD)-induced "psychedelic imagery" (e.g., visions of geometric patterns and more complex phenomena) has never been empirically addressed, although it has been proposed that under psychedelics, with eyes-closed, the brain may function "as if" there is visual input when there is none. In this work, resting-state functional connectivity (RSFC) data was analyzed from 10 healthy subjects under the influence of LSD and, separately, placebo. It was suspected that eyes-closed psychedelic imagery might involve transient local retinotopic activation, of the sort typically associated with visual stimulation. To test this, it was hypothesized that, under LSD, patches of the visual cortex with congruent retinotopic representations would show greater RSFC than incongruent patches. Using a retinotopic localizer performed during a nondrug baseline condition, nonadjacent patches of V1 and V3 that represent the vertical or the horizontal meridians of the visual field were identified. Subsequently, RSFC between V1 and V3 was measured with respect to these a priori identified patches. Consistent with our prior hypothesis, the difference between RSFC of patches with congruent retinotopic specificity (horizontal-horizontal and vertical-vertical) and those with incongruent specificity (horizontal-vertical and vertical-horizontal) increased significantly under LSD relative to placebo, suggesting that activity within the visual cortex becomes more dependent on its intrinsic retinotopic organization in the drug condition. This result may indicate that under LSD, with eyes-closed, the early visual system behaves as if it were seeing spatially localized visual inputs. Hum Brain Mapp 37:3031-3040, 2016. © 2016 Wiley Periodicals, Inc.
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- 2016
37. Neural correlates of the LSD experience revealed by multimodal neuroimaging
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Leor Roseman, Robert Leech, Ben Sessa, David J. Nutt, Tim M. Williams, Krish D. Singh, Robin L. Carhart-Harris, Amanda Feilding, Timothy Nest, Suresh D. Muthukumaraswamy, Enzo Tagliazucchi, Martin I. Sereno, Wouter Droog, John McGonigle, Richard G. Wise, Peter J. Hellyer, Csaba Orban, John Evans, Kevin Murphy, David E. Nichols, Mark Bolstridge, Luke T. J. Williams, Eduardo Ekman Schenberg, H. Valerie Curran, Peter Hobden, and Mendel Kaelen
- Subjects
Hallucinations ,Brain activity and meditation ,PREFRONTAL CORTEX ,work integrated learning ,Multimodal Imaging ,Synaptic Transmission ,Brain mapping ,LSD ,0302 clinical medicine ,Retrosplenial cortex ,VISUAL HALLUCINATIONS ,1ST-DEGREE RELATIVES ,5-HT2A ,Receptor, Serotonin, 5-HT2A ,Prefrontal cortex ,Brain Mapping ,Multidisciplinary ,Brain ,Magnetoencephalography ,Human brain ,Biological Sciences ,Magnetic Resonance Imaging ,serotonin ,Multidisciplinary Sciences ,medicine.anatomical_structure ,Cerebrovascular Circulation ,Neurological ,Science & Technology - Other Topics ,Biomedical Imaging ,Mental health ,Psychology ,Receptor ,Serotonin ,Psychedelic experience ,Consciousness ,clinical placement ,brain ,1.1 Normal biological development and functioning ,03 medical and health sciences ,Clinical Research ,Underpinning research ,reflective practice ,Connectome ,medicine ,LYSERGIC-ACID ,Humans ,Eye Disease and Disorders of Vision ,BRAIN-FUNCTION ,Science & Technology ,Resting state fMRI ,STATE FUNCTIONAL CONNECTIVITY ,PSYCHEDELIC STATE ,Neurosciences ,performance improvement ,030227 psychiatry ,Oxygen ,Lysergic Acid Diethylamide ,Visual cortex ,ANTIPSYCHOTIC-DRUGS ,psychedelic ,Hallucinogens ,Spin Labels ,ALPHA-ACTIVITY ,Nerve Net ,Neuroscience ,Serotonin 5-HT2 Receptor Agonists ,030217 neurology & neurosurgery ,HEALTHY-VOLUNTEERS - Abstract
Lysergic acid diethylamide (LSD) is the prototypical psychedelic drug, but its effects on the human brain have never been studied before with modern neuroimaging. Here, three complementary neuroimaging techniques: arterial spin labeling (ASL), blood oxygen level-dependent (BOLD) measures, and magnetoencephalography (MEG), implemented during resting state conditions, revealed marked changes in brain activity after LSD that correlated strongly with its characteristic psychological effects. Increased visual cortex cerebral blood flow (CBF), decreased visual cortex alpha power, and a greatly expanded primary visual cortex (V1) functional connectivity profile correlated strongly with ratings of visual hallucinations, implying that intrinsic brain activity exerts greater influence on visual processing in the psychedelic state, thereby defining its hallucinatory quality. LSD’s marked effects on the visual cortex did not significantly correlate with the drug’s other characteristic effects on consciousness, however. Rather, decreased connectivity between the parahippocampus and retrosplenial cortex (RSC) correlated strongly with ratings of “ego-dissolution” and “altered meaning,” implying the importance of this particular circuit for the maintenance of “self” or “ego” and its processing of “meaning.” Strong relationships were also found between the different imaging metrics, enabling firmer inferences to be made about their functional significance. This uniquely comprehensive examination of the LSD state represents an important advance in scientific research with psychedelic drugs at a time of growing interest in their scientific and therapeutic value. The present results contribute important new insights into the characteristic hallucinatory and consciousness-altering properties of psychedelics that inform on how they can model certain pathological states and potentially treat others.
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- 2016
38. Decreased mental time travel to the past correlates with default-mode network disintegration under lysergic acid diethylamide
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Mendel Kaelen, Clemens Speth, Amanda Feilding, Jana Speth, David J. Nutt, Robin L. Carhart-Harris, and Astrid M. Schloerscheidt
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Male ,Chronesthesia ,Poison control ,EPISODIC MEMORY ,self ,0302 clinical medicine ,CONNECTIVITY ,Neural Pathways ,default-mode network ,Image Processing, Computer-Assisted ,MINDFULNESS ,Pharmacology (medical) ,Pharmacology & Pharmacy ,BRAIN ,Episodic memory ,Default mode network ,Lysergic acid diethylamide ,Psychiatry ,Brain Mapping ,Cross-Over Studies ,medicine.diagnostic_test ,05 social sciences ,PSILOCYBIN ,MEDITATION ,11 Medical And Health Sciences ,Middle Aged ,Magnetic Resonance Imaging ,MIND ,Healthy Volunteers ,Psychiatry and Mental health ,Administration, Intravenous ,Female ,Psychology ,Life Sciences & Biomedicine ,medicine.drug ,Clinical psychology ,Adult ,CORTEX ,Altered states of consciousness ,Clinical Neurology ,lysergic acid diethylamide ,050105 experimental psychology ,17 Psychology And Cognitive Sciences ,Young Adult ,03 medical and health sciences ,FUTURE ,Memory ,medicine ,Humans ,0501 psychology and cognitive sciences ,mental time travel ,episodic past memory ,Pharmacology ,Science & Technology ,Recall ,Autobiographical memory ,mentation reports ,Neurosciences ,psychedelics ,Mental Recall ,Hallucinogens ,Neurosciences & Neurology ,Functional magnetic resonance imaging ,human activities ,030217 neurology & neurosurgery - Abstract
This paper reports on the effects of LSD on mental time travel during spontaneous mentation. Twenty healthy volunteers participated in a placebo-controlled crossover study, incorporating intravenous administration of LSD (75 μg) and placebo (saline) prior to functional magnetic resonance imaging (fMRI). Six independent, blind judges analysed mentation reports acquired during structured interviews performed shortly after the functional magnetic resonance imaging (fMRI) scans (approximately 2.5 h post-administration). Within each report, specific linguistic references to mental spaces for the past, present and future were identified. Results revealed significantly fewer mental spaces for the past under LSD and this effect correlated with the general intensity of the drug’s subjective effects. No differences in the number of mental spaces for the present or future were observed. Consistent with the previously proposed role of the default-mode network (DMN) in autobiographical memory recollection and ruminative thought, decreased resting-state functional connectivity (RSFC) within the DMN correlated with decreased mental time travel to the past. These results are discussed in relation to potential therapeutic applications of LSD and related psychedelics, e.g. in the treatment of depression, for which excessive reflection on one’s past, likely mediated by DMN functioning, is symptomatic.
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- 2016
39. Psilocybin with psychological support for treatment-resistant depression: six-month follow-up
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Camilla M. Day, HV Curran, David Taylor, David Erritzoe, James Rucker, Robin L. Carhart-Harris, Stephen Pilling, Bruna Giribaldi, Ben Forbes, James Rickard, Rosalind Watts, David J. Nutt, Mendel Kaelen, Michael A P Bloomfield, Mark Bolstridge, Amanda Feilding, and Medical Research Council (MRC)
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DISORDER ,Male ,Time Factors ,Medical and Health Sciences ,Psilocybin ,LSD ,Depressive Disorder, Treatment-Resistant ,0302 clinical medicine ,Mood ,ANXIETY ,RECURRENT DEPRESSION ,Pharmacology & Pharmacy ,Depression (differential diagnoses) ,Original Investigation ,Psychiatry ,Depression ,Treatment-Resistant ,11 Medical And Health Sciences ,Psychedelic therapy ,Middle Aged ,ANTIDEPRESSANTS ,Combined Modality Therapy ,Antidepressive Agents ,CONTROLLED-TRIALS ,3. Good health ,serotonin ,LIFE-THREATENING CANCER ,Mental Health ,Treatment Outcome ,5-HT2AR ,Tolerability ,6.1 Pharmaceuticals ,depression ,treatment-resistant depression ,AUGMENTATION ,Psychedelic ,Female ,Hallucinogen ,Treatment-resistant depression ,Psychology ,Life Sciences & Biomedicine ,medicine.drug ,Adult ,medicine.medical_specialty ,Psychedelic experience ,Serotonin ,mood ,Clinical Trials and Supportive Activities ,PSYCHEDELICS ,17 Psychology And Cognitive Sciences ,03 medical and health sciences ,Double-Blind Method ,Clinical Research ,Internal medicine ,Behavioral and Social Science ,medicine ,hallucinogen ,Humans ,psilocybin ,Pharmacology ,Depressive Disorder ,Science & Technology ,Psychology and Cognitive Sciences ,Neurosciences ,Psychosocial Support Systems ,Evaluation of treatments and therapeutic interventions ,LYSERGIC-ACID DIETHYLAMIDE ,medicine.disease ,030227 psychiatry ,Brain Disorders ,Clinical trial ,Psychotherapy ,psychotherapy ,Good Health and Well Being ,psychedelic ,Hallucinogens ,Feasibility Studies ,Neurosciences & Neurology ,030217 neurology & neurosurgery ,Follow-Up Studies - Abstract
Rationale Recent clinical trials are reporting marked improvements in mental health outcomes with psychedelic drug-assisted psychotherapy. Objectives Here, we report on safety and efficacy outcomes for up to 6 months in an open-label trial of psilocybin for treatment-resistant depression. Methods Twenty patients (six females) with (mostly) severe, unipolar, treatment-resistant major depression received two oral doses of psilocybin (10 and 25 mg, 7 days apart) in a supportive setting. Depressive symptoms were assessed from 1 week to 6 months post-treatment, with the self-rated QIDS-SR16 as the primary outcome measure. Results Treatment was generally well tolerated. Relative to baseline, marked reductions in depressive symptoms were observed for the first 5 weeks post-treatment (Cohen’s d = 2.2 at week 1 and 2.3 at week 5, both p
- Published
- 2018
40. LSD enhances the emotional response to music
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Leor Roseman, Frederick S. Barrett, Amanda Feilding, David J. Nutt, Mark Bolstridge, Robin L. Carhart-Harris, Helen Valerie Curran, Mendel Kaelen, Romy Lorenz, and Neiloufar Family
- Subjects
Adult ,Male ,Hallucinogen ,Psychotherapist ,Emotions ,emotion ,Blood Pressure ,Pilot Projects ,Context (language use) ,behavioral disciplines and activities ,Psilocybin ,LSD ,serotonin 2A receptor ,Double-Blind Method ,Heart Rate ,Emotionality ,medicine ,Humans ,music ,Lysergic acid diethylamide ,Pharmacology ,Music psychology ,Psychedelic therapy ,Middle Aged ,humanities ,psychotherapy ,Lysergic Acid Diethylamide ,psychedelic ,Hallucinogens ,Anxiety ,Female ,medicine.symptom ,Psychology ,medicine.drug ,Clinical psychology - Abstract
Rationale: There is renewed interest in the therapeutic potential of psychedelic drugs such as lysergic acid diethylamide (LSD). LSD was used extensively in the 1950s and 1960s as an adjunct in psychotherapy, reportedly enhancing emotionality. Music is an effective tool to evoke and study emotion and is considered an important element in psychedelic-assisted psychotherapy; however, the hypothesis that psychedelics enhance the emotional response to music has yet to be investigated in a modern placebo-controlled study. Objectives: The present study sought to test the hypothesis that music-evoked emotions are enhanced under LSD. Methods: Ten healthy volunteers listened to five different tracks of instrumental music during each of two study days, a placebo day followed by an LSD day, separated by 5–7 days. Subjective ratings were completed after each music track and included a visual analogue scale (VAS) and the nine-item Geneva Emotional Music Scale (GEMS-9). Results: Results demonstrated that the emotional response to music is enhanced by LSD, especially the emotions “wonder”, “transcendence”, “power” and “tenderness”. Conclusions: These findings reinforce the long-held assumption that psychedelics enhance music-evoked emotion, and provide tentative and indirect support for the notion that this effect can be harnessed in the context of psychedelic-assisted psychotherapy. Further research is required to test this link directly.
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- 2015
41. Finding the self by losing the self: Neural correlates of ego-dissolution under psilocybin
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Alexander V. Lebedev, Robin L. Carhart-Harris, Gidon Rosenthal, Martin Lövdén, Amanda Feilding, and David J. Nutt
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Rest (physics) ,Psychedelic experience ,Radiological and Ultrasound Technology ,Self ,media_common.quotation_subject ,Magic (programming) ,Psychology of self ,Psilocybin ,Developmental psychology ,Neurology ,Feeling ,Phenomenon ,medicine ,Radiology, Nuclear Medicine and imaging ,Neurology (clinical) ,Anatomy ,Psychology ,medicine.drug ,media_common - Abstract
Ego-disturbances have been a topic in schizophrenia research since the earliest clinical descriptions of the disorder. Manifesting as a feeling that one's "self," "ego," or "I" is disintegrating or that the border between one's self and the external world is dissolving, "ego-disintegration" or "dissolution" is also an important feature of the psychedelic experience, such as is produced by psilocybin (a compound found in "magic mushrooms"). Fifteen healthy subjects took part in this placebo-controlled study. Twelve-minute functional MRI scans were acquired on two occasions: subjects received an intravenous infusion of saline on one occasion (placebo) and 2 mg psilocybin on the other. Twenty-two visual analogue scale ratings were completed soon after scanning and the first principal component of these, dominated by items referring to "ego-dissolution", was used as a primary measure of interest in subsequent analyses. Employing methods of connectivity analysis and graph theory, an association was found between psilocybin-induced ego-dissolution and decreased functional connectivity between the medial temporal lobe and high-level cortical regions. Ego-dissolution was also associated with a "disintegration" of the salience network and reduced interhemispheric communication. Addressing baseline brain dynamics as a predictor of drug-response, individuals with lower diversity of executive network nodes were more likely to experience ego-dissolution under psilocybin. These results implicate MTL-cortical decoupling, decreased salience network integrity, and reduced inter-hemispheric communication in psilocybin-induced ego disturbance and suggest that the maintenance of "self"or "ego," as a perceptual phenomenon, may rest on the normal functioning of these systems.
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- 2015
42. Altered Insula Connectivity under MDMA
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Leor Roseman, Amanda Feilding, David Erritzoe, David J. Nutt, Timothy Nest, Ishan C Walpola, and Robin L. Carhart-Harris
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Male ,Brain activity and meditation ,4-methylenedioxyamphetamine ,Image Processing ,Brain mapping ,Medical and Health Sciences ,Substance Misuse ,POSTTRAUMATIC-STRESS-DISORDER ,0302 clinical medicine ,Computer-Assisted ,Image Processing, Computer-Assisted ,3,4-METHYLENEDIOXYMETHAMPHETAMINE MDMA ,Pharmacology & Pharmacy ,N-Methyl-3 ,media_common ,Cerebral Cortex ,Psychiatry ,Brain Mapping ,MDMA ,11 Medical And Health Sciences ,Middle Aged ,Magnetic Resonance Imaging ,Psychiatry and Mental health ,Feeling ,SCALE BRAIN NETWORKS ,Original Article ,Female ,Mental health ,Psychology ,Life Sciences & Biomedicine ,INTRINSIC CONNECTIVITY ,psychological phenomena and processes ,medicine.drug ,Adult ,ANXIETY DISORDERS ,N-Methyl-3,4-methylenedioxyamphetamine ,media_common.quotation_subject ,Rest ,INTEROCEPTIVE AWARENESS ,Basic Behavioral and Social Science ,17 Psychology And Cognitive Sciences ,03 medical and health sciences ,Young Adult ,Double-Blind Method ,Clinical Research ,mental disorders ,Behavioral and Social Science ,medicine ,Humans ,Pharmacology ,Science & Technology ,STATE FUNCTIONAL CONNECTIVITY ,PHYSIOLOGICAL CONDITION ,Psychology and Cognitive Sciences ,Neurosciences ,Ascorbic acid ,ANTERIOR INSULA ,030227 psychiatry ,Mood ,Hallucinogens ,Linear Models ,Neurosciences & Neurology ,Serotonin ,Nerve Net ,Drug Abuse (NIDA only) ,Neuroscience ,Insula ,030217 neurology & neurosurgery ,HEALTHY-VOLUNTEERS ,Follow-Up Studies - Abstract
Recent work with noninvasive human brain imaging has started to investigate the effects of 3,4-methylenedioxymethamphetamine (MDMA) on large-scale patterns of brain activity. MDMA, a potent monoamine-releaser with particularly pronounced serotonin- releasing properties, has unique subjective effects that include: marked positive mood, pleasant/unusual bodily sensations and pro-social, empathic feelings. However, the neurobiological basis for these effects is not properly understood, and the present analysis sought to address this knowledge gap. To do this, we administered MDMA-HCl (100 mg p.o.) and, separately, placebo (ascorbic acid) in a randomized, double-blind, repeated-measures design with twenty-five healthy volunteers undergoing fMRI scanning. We then employed a measure of global resting-state functional brain connectivity and follow-up seed-to-voxel analysis to the fMRI data we acquired. Results revealed decreased right insula/salience network functional connectivity under MDMA. Furthermore, these decreases in right insula/salience network connectivity correlated with baseline trait anxiety and acute experiences of altered bodily sensations under MDMA. The present findings highlight insular disintegration (ie, compromised salience network membership) as a neurobiological signature of the MDMA experience, and relate this brain effect to trait anxiety and acutely altered bodily sensations–both of which are known to be associated with insular functioning.
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- 2017
43. Effects of LSD on music-evoked brain activity
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Romy Lorenz, Robert Leech, Mendel Kaelen, Robin L. Carhart-Harris, Leor Roseman, Csaba Orban, Andre Santos-Ribeiro, Matthew B. Wall, David J. Nutt, Amanda Feilding, Frederick S. Barrett, and Suresh D. Muthukumaraswamy
- Subjects
Brain activity and meditation ,Psychedelic therapy ,Stimulus (physiology) ,behavioral disciplines and activities ,humanities ,Rhythm ,Neuroimaging ,medicine ,Active listening ,Psychology ,Timbre ,Neuroscience ,human activities ,Lysergic acid diethylamide ,medicine.drug - Abstract
Music is a highly dynamic stimulus, and consists of distinct acoustic features, such as pitch, rhythm and timbre. Neuroimaging studies highlight a hierarchy of brain networks involved in music perception. Psychedelic drugs such as lysergic acid diethylamide (LSD) temporary disintegrate the normal hierarchy of brain functioning, and produce profound subjective effects, including enhanced music-evoked emotion. The primary objective of this study was to investigate the acute effects of LSD on music-evoked brain-activity under naturalistic music listening conditions. 16 healthy participants were enrolled in magnetic resonance imaging (fMRI) while listening to a 7-minute music piece under eyes-closed conditions on two separate visits (LSD (75 mcg) and placebo). Dynamic time courses for acoustic features were extracted from the music excerpts, and were entered into subject-level fMRI analyses as regressors of interest. Differences between conditions were assessed at group level subsequently, and were related to changes in music-evoked emotions via correlation analyses. Psycho-physiological interactions (PPIs) were carried out to further interrogate underlying music-specific changes in functional connectivity under LSD. Results showed pronounced cortical and subcortical changes in music-evoked brain activity under LSD. Most notable changes in brain activity and connectivity were associated with the component timbral complexity, representing the complexity of the music’s spectral distribution, and these occurred in brain networks previously identified for music-perception and music-evoked emotion, and showed an association with enhanced music-evoked feelings of wonder under LSD. The findings shed light on how the brain processes music under LSD, and provide a neurobiological basis for the usefulness of music in psychedelic therapy.
- Published
- 2017
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44. The effect of acutely administered MDMA on subjective and BOLD-fMRI responses to favourite and worst autobiographical memories
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Mark A. Tanner, David Erritzoe, Tim M. Williams, Celia J. A. Morgan, Bart Ferguson, David J. Nutt, Michael A P Bloomfield, Lorna Stewart, HV Curran, Robin L. Carhart-Harris, Matthew B. Wall, Mark Bolstridge, Mendel Kaelen, I. De Meer, Amanda Feilding, and Rexford D. Newbould
- Subjects
Adult ,Male ,medicine.medical_specialty ,MDMA ,Memory, Episodic ,N-Methyl-3,4-methylenedioxyamphetamine ,Emotions ,5-HT ,emotion ,Audiology ,Traumatic memories ,Placebos ,Serotonin Agents ,Double-Blind Method ,mental disorders ,medicine ,5-HT2A ,Humans ,Pharmacology (medical) ,Episodic memory ,Cerebral Cortex ,Pharmacology ,Temporal cortex ,medicine.diagnostic_test ,Recall ,Autobiographical memory ,Functional Neuroimaging ,autobiographical memory ,fMRI ,episodic memory ,Ascorbic acid ,Magnetic Resonance Imaging ,serotonin ,psychotherapy ,Psychiatry and Mental health ,Mental Recall ,Female ,Functional magnetic resonance imaging ,Psychology ,Neuroscience ,psychological phenomena and processes ,medicine.drug - Abstract
3,4-methylenedioxymethamphetamine (MDMA) is a potent monoamine-releaser that is widely used as a recreational drug. Preliminary work has supported the potential of MDMA in psychotherapy for post-traumatic stress disorder (PTSD). The neurobiological mechanisms underlying its putative efficacy are, however, poorly understood. Psychotherapy for PTSD usually requires that patients revisit traumatic memories, and it has been argued that this is easier to do under MDMA. Functional magnetic resonance imaging (fMRI) was used to investigate the effect of MDMA on recollection of favourite and worst autobiographical memories (AMs). Nineteen participants (five females) with previous experience with MDMA performed a blocked AM recollection (AMR) paradigm after ingestion of 100 mg of MDMA-HCl or ascorbic acid (placebo) in a double-blind, repeated-measures design. Memory cues describing participants' AMs were read by them in the scanner. Favourite memories were rated as significantly more vivid, emotionally intense and positive after MDMA than placebo and worst memories were rated as less negative. Functional MRI data from 17 participants showed robust activations to AMs in regions known to be involved in AMR. There was also a significant effect of memory valence: hippocampal regions showed preferential activations to favourite memories and executive regions to worst memories. MDMA augmented activations to favourite memories in the bilateral fusiform gyrus and somatosensory cortex and attenuated activations to worst memories in the left anterior temporal cortex. These findings are consistent with a positive emotional-bias likely mediated by MDMA's pro-monoaminergic pharmacology.
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- 2013
45. 19th biennial IPEG Meeting
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Sonja Simpraga, Rosanna Tortelli, Jill C. Richardson, Bernhard Mueller, Berrie J.L. Gerrits, Marieke Jepma, Silvia Armenise, Martin F.J. Perescis, Inga Griskova-Bulanova, C. Wintmolders, Haitham S. Mohammed, J. Leon Kenemans, Matteo Demuru, Paolo Ranzi, Jakub Korcak, J. A. Kemp, Georg Gruber, T. A. Iseger, N. Marzano, Giuseppe Bertini, Caitlyn Kruiper, Anke Sambeth, Ronald J. Swatzyna, Iris Schutte, Robert A. Comley, Frans C. T. van der Helm, Juergen Dukart, Robin L. Carhart-Harris, Flavio Nobili, Martin Brunovsky, Maria Vasileva, José Carlos Millán-Calenti, Kelly Holt, Jan A. Freund, S. Deepeshwar, Alexandra Kirsten, Yasser A. Khadrawy, Daniel Brandeis, Martin Bareš, Roshan Cools, Eduardo Ekman Schenberg, Sigita Melynyte, Antonio Ivano Triggiani, Ashley Baddeley, Karlijn I. van Aerde, Gerhard Trube, Leonardo Jose Trejo, Stephane Nave, D. A. Jackson, Tomáš Páleníček, Raffaella Franciotti, A. E. Maqueda, Laura Bonanni, E. Saifutdinova, Rahul Chaudhary, Natasja de Bruin, Christoph Mulert, Gilles van Luijtelaar, Hans-Christian Pape, Jeannette Hofmeijer, Martin Brunovský, Marijtje L.A. Jongsma, L. Raeymaekers, Boris Ferger, Donna Palmer, Robert Aidelbaum, Nash N. Boutros, Hanneke E. M. den Ouden, Genevieve N. Izzo, Jessica I. Määttä, Lucilla Parnetti, Gerald P. Kozlowski, Arjan Hillebrand, C. Bouyssières, Philip L.C. van den Broek, David J. Nutt, Jay D. Tarnow, Vlastimil Koudelka, Paolo Maria Rossini, Anna-Lena Dohrmann, Peter Veselcic, Asbjørn Mohr Drewes, Antonio Giannini, Ole Jensen, Christiane M. Thiel, Grazia Buenza, Tomas Novak, Chris G. Kruse, Alexander Sumich, Gaetano Scianatico, Jan-Mathijs Schoffelen, V. Duveau, K. Tahon, Lana Donse, Vladimir Krajca, Pierre Payoux, Vaclava Sedlamyerova, Else A. Tolner, M. Arns, Jennifer Mollon, Michael Derks, Nazimah Hamid, Andrea Szabo, Loreto Gesualdo, Shelly M. Menolascino, M. A. Mañanas, Thorsten Mikoteit, D. Balschun, Mitchell Belgin, Giacomo Tattoli, Cestmir Vejmola, Bob Oranje, Barbora Kohutova, Giovanni B. Frisoni, Iris E. C. Sommer, Dylan Smith, Rosa van Mourik, Michel D. Ferrari, Christian Zöllner, Maria-Clemancia Hernandez, Nick Seneca, James Miller, Martijn Arns, Timothy K. Murphy, Giancarlo Logroscino, Annika Lüttjohann, Noreen Rahmani, Christopher Timmermann, Martien J H Kas, Grace Y. Wang, Klaus Linkenkaer-Hansen, F. Nobili, Tieme W. P. Janssen, R. Biermans, Fernando H. Lopes da Silva, Bernd Saletu, Brian A. Coffman, Ileana L. Hanganu-Opatz, Sian Lennon-Chrimes, Madelon A. Vollebregt, D. Moechars, Brittany Duncan, Joerg F. Hipp, Y. Roche, Valentina Cardinali, Neveen A. Noor, Christoph Wandel, S. Romero, Anna Bravermanová, J. Koprivova, Gerda M. Saletu-Zyhlarz, Nicola Walter Falasca, Marco Onofrj, Jaap Oosterlaan, J. L. Kenemans, J. Prasko, Jürgen Gallinat, C. Roucard, Vaclava Piorecka, Karsten Wicke, Jennifer C. Swart, Peterjan Ris, Heba S. Aboul Ezz, M Valle, Jesper F. Bastlund, Ivo Heitland, Paul B. Fitzgerald, Katleen Geladé, W. H. Drinkenburg, Lillian E. Fisher, Lars Eichler, J. Riba, Hélène Brisebois, Régis Bordet, Robert Leech, Roberta Lizio, Cornelis J. Stam, M. Avinash, N. K. Manjunath, Parissa Azadi, Raffaele Ferri, Cyril Höschl, Susanna Cordone, Sander Nieuwenhuis, Gregor Leicht, Alexandra J. Roark, Esben Bolvig Mark, Jakub Polak, Alexander T. Sack, Iris Eichler, Heidi Haavik, Athanasios Maras, Dirk J. Heslenfeld, Hans-Peter Landolt, A. Bottelbergs, Galina Surova, Ross Apparies, Lin Tiffany, Angelisa Frasca, Ida A. Nissen, Dario Arnaldi, Alessandro Bertolino, Wilhelmus Drinkenburg, Philip Scheltens, Cristina Bagnoli, Matthijs J.L. Perenboom, Dane M. Chetkovich, Thomas Budde, Annette Beatrix Brühl, Wilfried Dimpfel, Yuan Yang, Jonathan Kelley, Hervé Caci, Christoph Herrmann, Olivier Blin, Robert P. Turner, Georg Dorffner, Michaela Viktorinova, Igor Timofeev, Stephanie Thiebes, Dina Lelic, K. Van Kolen, P. F. Fabene, Frédéric Knoflach, S. Jacob, John Wallerius, Claudio Del Percio, Marina Bentivoglio, Mendel Kaelen, Peter Anderer, Imran Khan Niazi, Iman M. Mourad, S. Barker, Muhammad Samran Navid, Giuseppe Noce, Dean F. Salisbury, Huibert D. Mansvelder, Premysl Vlcek, Marek Adamczyk, Emmanouil Spanakis, Vitoantonio Bevilacqua, Orietta Barulli, Roy P. C. Kessels, Axel Steiger, Darren Bentley, Antonio Brunetti, Clementina M. van Rijn, Nikita van der Vinne, Evian Gordon, Nash Boutros, Lukáš Kadeřábek, Brendan Parsons, A. Ahnaou, Tilman Hensch, Christian Sander, Torsten Meyer, Barbora Cimrová, Marleen C. Tjepkema-Cloostermans, Molly Hyde, Robert Oostenveld, Liesbeth Heijink, Eléonore Czarik, Paolo F. Fabene, Jean-Paul Laurent, Stig Hollup, Leon Kenemans, Ana Buján, Vadim Ilivitsky, Danielle Impey, Alfred C. Schouten, Claudio Babiloni, M. Pawlowski, Ricardo Alvarez-Jimenez, Joop M. A. van Gerven, Filip Tylš, Jan van Egmond, Saskia Steinmann, Caroline Dupont, B. Mandé-Nidergang, Sebastian Olbrich, Geert Jan Groeneveld, H. Huysmans, Kastytis Dapsys, P. Sos, M. Raszka, C. Walsh, Justin Piché, Giovanni Frisoni, Silvia Parapatics, Annika Lütjohann, Simon-Shlomo Poil, Erin K. MacInerney, T. Nekovarova, Jana Nöldeke, Michel J.A.M. van Putten, Ilse E. C. W. van Straaten, Suresh D. Muthukumaraswamy, Mehrnoush Zobeiri, Magda Tsolaki, Ulrich Hegerl, Jaap C. Reijneveld, Patrizia Voehringer, N. V. Manyakov, Sandra K. Loo, Patrick Meuth, Bettina Clausen, Roman Rosipal, David Bartrés Faz, Nenad Polomac, Renata Androvicova, Pantaleo Spagnolo, Pilar Garcés, Andrea Soricelli, Amanda Feilding, R. Maury, Aleksandras Voicikas, Stjepan Curic, Verner Knott, Tabitha A. Iseger, Jiri Horacek, Susanna Lopez, Joelle Choueiry, Gianluigi Forloni, Andrew WThomas, Lyudmila V. Vinogradova, Alida A. Gouw, Sarah M. Haigh, and B. Pouyatos
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medicine.medical_specialty ,05 social sciences ,Clinical Neurology ,Neuropsychology ,050105 experimental psychology ,03 medical and health sciences ,Psychiatry and Mental health ,0302 clinical medicine ,Physiology (medical) ,Family medicine ,medicine ,0501 psychology and cognitive sciences ,Psychology ,030217 neurology & neurosurgery - Published
- 2016
46. LSD alters eyes-closed functional connectivity within the early visual cortex in a retinotopic fashion
- Author
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Robin L. Carhart-Harris, Csaba Orban, Leor Roseman, Martin I. Sereno, Mendel Kaelen, John McGonigle, Robert Leech, Amanda Feilding, David J. Nutt, and The Beckley Foundation
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Male ,Geometric pattern ,genetic structures ,LSD ,psyc ,Clinical Research ,Neural Pathways ,medicine ,Hum ,Humans ,visual cortex ,Eye Disease and Disorders of Vision ,Research Articles ,Lysergic acid diethylamide ,Drug condition ,Functional connectivity ,fMRI ,Healthy subjects ,Neurosciences ,Experimental Psychology ,1702 Cognitive Science ,psychedelics ,Magnetic Resonance Imaging ,Sensory Systems ,eye diseases ,Visual field ,Ophthalmology ,Lysergic Acid Diethylamide ,Visual cortex ,medicine.anatomical_structure ,Hallucinogens ,serotonin 5-HT2 receptor agonists ,Female ,Cognitive Sciences ,hallucinations ,Psychology ,1109 Neurosciences ,Neuroscience ,imagery ,medicine.drug - Abstract
© 2016 Wiley Periodicals, Inc.The question of how spatially organized activity in the visual cortex behaves during eyes-closed, lysergic acid diethylamide (LSD)-induced “psychedelic imagery” (e.g., visions of geometric patterns and more complex phenomena) has never been empirically addressed, although it has been proposed that under psychedelics, with eyes-closed, the brain may function “as if” there is visual input when there is none. In this work, resting-state functional connectivity (RSFC) data was analyzed from 10 healthy subjects under the influence of LSD and, separately, placebo. It was suspected that eyes-closed psychedelic imagery might involve transient local retinotopic activation, of the sort typically associated with visual stimulation. To test this, it was hypothesized that, under LSD, patches of the visual cortex with congruent retinotopic representations would show greater RSFC than incongruent patches. Using a retinotopic localizer performed during a nondrug baseline condition, nonadjacent patches of V1 and V3 that represent the vertical or the horizontal meridians of the visual field were identified. Subsequently, RSFC between V1 and V3 was measured with respect to these a priori identified patches. Consistent with our prior hypothesis, the difference between RSFC of patches with congruent retinotopic specificity (horizontal–horizontal and vertical–vertical) and those with incongruent specificity (horizontal–vertical and vertical–horizontal) increased significantly under LSD relative to placebo, suggesting that activity within the visual cortex becomes more dependent on its intrinsic retinotopic organization in the drug condition. This result may indicate that under LSD, with eyes-closed, the early visual system behaves as if it were seeing spatially localized visual inputs. Hum Brain Mapp 37:3031–3040, 2016. © 2016 Wiley Periodicals, Inc.
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- 2016
47. Ayahuasca: Pharmacology, neuroscience and therapeutic potential
- Author
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Juan C. Pascual, Joaquim Soler, Elisabet Domínguez-Clavé, Pablo Friedlander, Mario de la Fuente Revenga, Jordi Riba, Amanda Feilding, Matilde Elices, and Enrique Álvarez
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Mindfulness ,Psychotria viridis ,media_common.quotation_subject ,Pharmacology ,03 medical and health sciences ,0302 clinical medicine ,medicine ,Animals ,Humans ,media_common ,Banisteriopsis ,biology ,Plant Extracts ,General Neuroscience ,Neurosciences ,Ayahuasca ,biology.organism_classification ,Banisteriopsis caapi ,030227 psychiatry ,Anxiety ,Substance use ,Consciousness ,medicine.symptom ,Psychology ,Neuroscience ,030217 neurology & neurosurgery ,Clinical psychology ,Carbolines - Abstract
Ayahuasca is the Quechua name for a tea obtained from the vine Banisteriopsis caapi, and used for ritual purposes by the indigenous populations of the Amazon. The use of a variation of the tea that combines B. caapi with the leaves of the shrub Psychotria viridis has experienced unprecedented expansion worldwide for its psychotropic properties. This preparation contains the psychedelic 5-HT2A receptor agonist N,N-dimethyltryptamine (DMT) from P. viridis, plus β-carboline alkaloids with monoamine-oxidase-inhibiting properties from B. caapi. Acute administration induces a transient modified state of consciousness characterized by introspection, visions, enhanced emotions and recollection of personal memories. A growing body of evidence suggests that ayahuasca may be useful to treat substance use disorders, anxiety and depression. Here we review the pharmacology and neuroscience of ayahuasca, and the potential psychological mechanisms underlying its therapeutic potential. We discuss recent findings indicating that ayahuasca intake increases certain mindfulness facets related to acceptance and to the ability to take a detached view of one's own thoughts and emotions. Based on the available evidence, we conclude that ayahuasca shows promise as a therapeutic tool by enhancing self-acceptance and allowing safe exposure to emotional events. We postulate that ayahuasca could be of use in the treatment of impulse-related, personality and substance use disorders and also in the handling of trauma. More research is needed to assess the full potential of ayahuasca in the treatment of these disorders.
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- 2016
48. Inhibition of alpha oscillations through serotonin-2A receptor activation underlies the visual effects of ayahuasca in humans
- Author
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Joan Francesc Alonso, Marta Valle, Mireia Rabella, Pablo Friedlander, Rosa M. Antonijoan, Jordi Riba, Miquel Angel Mañanas, Sergio Romero, Ana Elda Maqueda, Amanda Feilding, Aina Rodríguez-Pujadas, Steven A. Barker, Universitat Politècnica de Catalunya. Departament d'Enginyeria de Sistemes, Automàtica i Informàtica Industrial, and Universitat Politècnica de Catalunya. BIOART - BIOsignal Analysis for Rehabilitation and Therapy
- Subjects
Male ,Ketanserin ,Serotonin-2A receptor ,Psychotria viridis ,Administration, Oral ,Pharmacology ,Serotonin-(2A) receptor ,0302 clinical medicine ,Ayahuasca ,Pharmacology (medical) ,Receptor, Serotonin, 5-HT2A ,Cross-Over Studies ,biology ,Banisteriopsis ,Banisteriopsis caapi ,Ayahuasea ,Psychiatry and Mental health ,Alpha Rhythm ,Neurology ,Visual Perception ,Female ,Serotonin Antagonists ,Psychology ,medicine.drug ,Human ,Agonist ,Adult ,Ciències de la salut::Medicina [Àrees temàtiques de la UPC] ,medicine.drug_class ,Alpha (ethology) ,Ayahuasca, Human, Ketanserin, Neurophysiological effects, Serotonin-(2A) receptor, Subjective effects ,03 medical and health sciences ,Double-Blind Method ,medicine ,Humans ,Biological Psychiatry ,Neurophysiological effects ,Antagonist ,biology.organism_classification ,030227 psychiatry ,Subjective effects ,Hallucinogens ,Neurology (clinical) ,Serotonin ,Drogues ,030217 neurology & neurosurgery - Abstract
Ayahuasca is an Amazonian psychotropic plant tea typically obtained from two plants, Banisteriopsis caapi and Psychotria viridis. It contains the psychedelic 5-HT2A and sigma-1 agonist N,N-dimethyltryptamine (DMT) plus beta-carboline alkaloids with monoamine-oxidase (MAO)-inhibiting properties. Although the psychoactive effects of ayahuasca have commonly been attributed solely to agonism at the 5-HT2A receptor, the molecular target of classical psychedelics, this has not been tested experimentally. Here we wished to study the contribution of the 5-HT2A receptor to the neurophysiological and psychological effects of ayahuasca in humans. We measured drug-induced changes in spontaneous brain oscillations and subjective effects in a double-blind randomized placebo-controlled study involving the oral administration of ayahuasca (0.75 mg DMT/kg body weight) and the 5-HT2A antagonist ketanserin (40 mg). Twelve healthy, experienced psychedelic users (5 females) participated in four experimental sessions in which they received the following drug combinations: placebo + placebo, placebo +ayahuasca, ketanserin +placebo and ketanserin +ayahuasca. Ayahuasca induced EEG power decreases in the delta, theta and alpha frequency bands. Current density in alpha-band oscillations in parietal and occipital cortex was inversely correlated with the intensity of visual imagery induced by ayahuasca. Pretreatment with ketanserin inhibited neurophysiological modifications, reduced the correlation between alpha and visual effects, and attenuated the intensity of the subjective experience. These findings suggest that despite the chemical complexity of ayahuasca, 5-HT2A activation plays a key role in the neurophysiological and visual effects of ayahuasca in humans. (C) 2016 Elsevier B.V. and ECNP. All rights reserved.
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- 2016
49. Drug Policy in Guatemala: Constraints and Opportunities
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Amanda Feilding and Juan Fernández Ochoa
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021110 strategic, defence & security studies ,Economic growth ,Government ,Drug court ,education ,05 social sciences ,Rebuttal ,0211 other engineering and technologies ,02 engineering and technology ,Drug problem ,Drug policy reform ,Criminal organization ,0506 political science ,Personal consumption expenditures price index ,Political science ,050602 political science & public administration ,Rhetorical question - Abstract
In the last few years, Guatemala has emerged as a leading voice in the drug policy reform debate. This chapter sheds light on the roots of this shift in the national discourse and assesses its depth and potential implications. Our research will be presented in three parts. Part one explores the origins of Guatemala’s drug problem, its transformation into a pivotal transit country for cocaine trafficking at the end of the 1980s and the destructive impact of the externally driven counter-narcotic strategy. The second part analyzes the recent government-led rebuttal of the “War on Drugs” and its implications, both nationally and internationally. Finally, the third part evaluates the reach of this rhetorical shift, as well as the difficulties of its translation into effective policies at home. The study concludes by characterizing the country’s efforts to regain ownership over its own drug policy.
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- 2016
50. Exploring the therapeutic potential of Ayahuasca: acute intake increases mindfulness-related capacities
- Author
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Steven A. Barker, Joaquim Soler, Alba Franquesa, Matilde Elices, Juan C. Pascual, Jordi Riba, Pablo Friedlander, and Amanda Feilding
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Adult ,Male ,Mindfulness ,Psychotherapist ,Monoamine Oxidase Inhibitors ,Pharmacology toxicology ,Exploratory research ,Addictive drugs ,03 medical and health sciences ,Judgment ,0302 clinical medicine ,Surveys and Questionnaires ,Humans ,In patient ,Receptor, Serotonin, 5-HT2A ,Beneficial effects ,Pharmacology ,Decentering ,Plant Extracts ,Banisteriopsis ,Ayahuasca ,Middle Aged ,030227 psychiatry ,Serotonin Receptor Agonists ,Antidepressant ,Female ,Psychology ,Therapeutic potential ,030217 neurology & neurosurgery ,Carbolines ,Human - Abstract
Ayahuasca is a psychotropic plant tea used for ritual purposes by the indigenous populations of the Amazon. In the last two decades, its use has expanded worldwide. The tea contains the psychedelic 5-HT2A receptor agonist N,N-dimethyltryptamine (DMT), plus beta-carboline alkaloids with monoamine-oxidase-inhibiting properties. Acute administration induces an introspective dream-like experience characterized by visions and autobiographic and emotional memories. Studies of long-term users have suggested its therapeutic potential, reporting that its use has helped individuals abandon the consumption of addictive drugs. Furthermore, recent open-label studies in patients with treatment-resistant depression found that a single ayahuasca dose induced a rapid antidepressant effect that was maintained weeks after administration. Here, we conducted an exploratory study of the psychological mechanisms that could underlie the beneficial effects of ayahuasca. We assessed a group of 25 individuals before and 24 h after an ayahuasca session using two instruments designed to measure mindfulness capacities: The Five Facets Mindfulness Questionnaire (FFMQ) and the Experiences Questionnaire (EQ). Ayahuasca intake led to significant increases in two facets of the FFMQ indicating a reduction in judgmental processing of experiences and in inner reactivity. It also led to a significant increase in decentering ability as measured by the EQ. These changes are classic goals of conventional mindfulness training, and the scores obtained are in the range of those observed after extensive mindfulness practice. The present findings support the claim that ayahuasca has therapeutic potential and suggest that this potential is due to an increase in mindfulness capacities.
- Published
- 2016
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