Frontier mental health research: psychedelics & drug studies

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8 papers

Sadness or low mood

Based on 75 papers

Research shows several different ways can help with sadness or low mood. Right now, the strongest clinical evidence for a fast-acting drug comes from ketamine and its approved form esketamine. At the same time, a wave of studies on classic psychedelics (psilocybin, LSD, DMT) and entactogens (MDMA) looks promising, especially when the drug is given together with careful psychological support. However, most psychedelic studies are still small or early-stage. They often rely on the setting, preparation, and therapy as part of the treatment, so researchers say we need larger, controlled trials and more long-term safety data. Also, non-drug options like brain stimulation and standard psychotherapies remain important parts of treatment plans and have mixed but useful evidence.

Key findings

  • Ketamine has the strongest current clinical evidence among rapid-acting drug options for major depression. 15070
  • An intranasal form of ketamine (esketamine), given with a new oral antidepressant, produced faster and larger symptom improvements than a new antidepressant plus placebo in a randomized trial of treatment‑resistant depression. 12156
  • A direct clinical trial found ketamine treatment was at least as effective as electroconvulsive therapy (ECT) for some people with hard-to-treat nonpsychotic depression. 10160
  • Psychedelic-assisted psychotherapy (for example psilocybin, MDMA, LSD) has shown promising benefits for depression and PTSD in several trials, but most studies so far are small or early-stage and need larger, controlled follow-up studies. 15135 15056 15063 15085
  • Laboratory and early human studies suggest classic psychedelics can boost the brain’s ability to rewire (called neuroplasticity) and can reduce brain inflammation, but blood biomarkers like BDNF do not reliably reflect these brain changes yet. 15132 15050 15129
  • How the drug is given matters a lot: studies and treatment guides agree that preparation, the person’s mindset, the setting, and follow-up therapy (often called 'set, setting, and integration') shape safety and outcomes. 15065 15086 15096
  • There are real safety and equity concerns: some substances (for example ibogaine) carry serious cardiac or neurological risks, some people can develop lasting perceptual problems after hallucinogens, and people of color are often under‑represented in trials. 15085 15048 15095 15094
  • Non-drug brain treatments show mixed results. Small deep brain stimulation (DBS) studies reported large improvements in a few people with severe depression, while a large one‑year trial of vagus nerve stimulation did not show a clear difference on its main outcome but did show some secondary clinician- and patient-rated benefits. 10166 10163
  • Standard psychotherapies help many people but do not work for everyone: pooled data across trials find modest response rates for depression, and clinical guidelines recommend collaborative, personalized care and stepwise treatment plans for major depression. 12851 15076 13305
  • Combining treatments is an active research idea. Early studies suggest pairing ketamine with brain stimulation (like TMS) or combining mindfulness with psychedelic therapy may boost effects, but this is still experimental. 10162 15047

Effectiveness of physical activity interventions for improving depression, anxiety and distress: an overview of systematic reviews

Ben Singh, Tim Olds, Rachel Curtis, Dorothea Dumuid, Rosa Virgara, Amanda Watson, et al.
PubMed Summary & key facts 2023 784 citations

This umbrella review pooled evidence from 97 systematic reviews (1,039 randomized trials, 128,119 participants) to examine whether physical activity affects symptoms of depression, anxiety and psychological distress in adults. Overall, physical activity produced medium-sized reductions in symptoms (median effect size for depression = -0.43, for anxiety = -0.42; distress effect…

Behavioral Health and Interventions Eating Disorders and Behaviors Physical Activity and Health

Canadian Network for Mood and Anxiety Treatments (CANMAT) 2023 Update on Clinical Guidelines for Management of Major Depressive Disorder in Adults: Réseau canadien pour les traitements de l’humeur et de l’anxiété (CANMAT) 2023 : Mise à jour des lignes directrices cliniques pour la prise en charge du trouble dépressif majeur chez les adultes

Raymond W. Lam, Sidney H. Kennedy, G. Camelia Adams, Anees Bahji, Serge Beaulieu, Venkat Bhat, et al.

The CANMAT 2023 update gives doctors clear, up-to-date advice for treating adults with major depressive disorder. It puts evidence into a practical, clinician-friendly format. The update says treatment should be a team effort between patients and clinicians, be tailored to each person, and follow a planned, systematic process with regular…

Mental Health Research Topics Treatment of Major Depression Tryptophan and brain disorders

Psychedelic Treatments for Psychiatric Disorders: A Systematic Review and Thematic Synthesis of Patient Experiences in Qualitative Studies

Joost J. Breeksema, Alistair Niemeijer, Erwin Krediet, Eric Vermetten, Robert A. Schoevers
CNS Drugs Summary & key facts 2020 207 citations

Researchers collected and read 15 studies where patients described their own experiences with psychedelic treatments for mental disorders. These studies looked at about 180 patient accounts across different drugs and different illnesses. Even though the drugs and treatment settings were very different, many patients described similar helpful processes, such as…

Chemical synthesis and alkaloids Neurotransmitter Receptor Influence on Behavior Psychedelics and Drug Studies Ayahuasca Ibogaine

Absolute and relative outcomes of psychotherapies for eight mental disorders: a systematic review and meta‐analysis

Pim Cuijpers, Clara Miguel, Marketa Ciharova, Mathias Harrer, Djordje Basic, Ioana A Cristea, et al.
PubMed Central (PMC) Summary & key facts 2024 107 citations

This large review combined 441 randomized trials with 33,881 patients to measure how many people show a clear response to psychotherapy across eight mental disorders. Response was defined as at least a 50% reduction in symptoms from before to after treatment. Pooled response rates were modest (for example, about 42%…

Anxiety, Depression, Psychometrics, Treatment, Cognitive Processes Psychosomatic Disorders and Their Treatments Treatment of Major Depression

The Influence of the COVID-19 Pandemic on Social Anxiety: A Systematic Review

Reuben Kindred, Glen Bates

This systematic review looked at 33 studies about social anxiety during the COVID-19 pandemic. The studies suggest social anxiety increased in the general population. Women and people with low incomes appeared more likely to report higher social anxiety. Other links to higher social anxiety included poor coping, weaker social support,…

Anxiety, Depression, Psychometrics, Treatment, Cognitive Processes COVID-19 and Mental Health Perfectionism, Procrastination, Anxiety Studies

The Therapeutic Potential of Psychedelic-assisted Therapies for Symptom Control in Patients Diagnosed With Serious Illness: A Systematic Review

Lucas Oliveira Maia, Yvan Beaussant, Ana Cláudia Mesquita Garcia

This paper looked at 20 clinical trials to see whether therapies that use psychedelic drugs together with talking therapy can help people who have serious, life‑limiting illnesses. The review found that these therapies often helped with psychological and spiritual problems like anxiety, low mood, and fear of dying. The drugs…

Chemical synthesis and alkaloids Complementary and Alternative Medicine Studies Psychedelics and Drug Studies Ketamine LSD

Triggers for acute mood episodes in bipolar disorder: A systematic review

Catarina Cordeiro, Beatriz Côrte‐Real, Rodrigo Saraiva, Benício N. Frey, Flávio Kapczinski, Taiane de Azevedo Cardoso

This systematic review looked for events that can trigger sudden mood episodes in people with bipolar disorder. The authors examined 108 studies published up to May 23, 2022. They found the strongest evidence that antidepressant use is linked to manic or hypomanic episodes. Other reported triggers for mania included brain…

Bipolar Disorder and Treatment Electroconvulsive Therapy Studies Schizophrenia research and treatment

The Effect of Walking on Depressive and Anxiety Symptoms: Systematic Review and Meta-Analysis

Zijun Xu

This systematic review pooled 75 randomized trials with 8,636 people to see if walking changes symptoms of depression and anxiety. In adults, walking reduced depressive symptoms (SMD −0.591, 95% CI −0.778 to −0.403, P

Climate Change and Health Impacts Occupational Therapy Practice and Research Urban Green Space and Health
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