Frontier mental health research: psychedelics & drug studies

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2 papers

Ayahuasca for Anxiety or worry

Based on 12 papers

Research on ayahuasca for anxiety is interesting but still early. A few clinical studies and reviews suggest psychedelics can reduce anxiety, and ayahuasca is included in that small set of trials. Lab and animal work show the active chemical in ayahuasca (called DMT) can change brain cells in ways that might help mood, but those biological findings are not proven in people yet. Overall, people often report meaningful psychological effects after psychedelic sessions — things like new insights or feeling more connected — that may help reduce worry. But evidence specific to ayahuasca is limited, studies are small, and safety and long-term effects need more careful study and testing in diverse groups.

Key findings

  • Only a very small number of clinical trials have tested ayahuasca for anxiety; one recent review counted one ayahuasca trial among nine psychedelic trials for anxiety disorders. 15068
  • Across the broader psychedelic studies, researchers often saw reductions in anxiety symptoms after treatment, but many trials used different drugs or mixed methods, so results are not all about ayahuasca alone. 15068 15058
  • People who took psychedelics (including ayahuasca in some reports) commonly describe gaining personal insights, feeling changed in their sense of self, and feeling more connected to others—experiences they say helped reduce worry. 15092 15059 15063
  • Ayahuasca contains DMT, a naturally occurring compound that acts on serotonin brain systems (a chemical system that affects mood and perception). 15059 15050
  • Lab and animal studies show DMT can increase growth of neuron branches and synapses (this is called "neuroplasticity", meaning the brain’s wiring can change). These findings are in cells or animals, not yet proven in people. 15050 15091
  • A large review looking at many psychoplastogen drugs found no clear rise in a common blood marker (BDNF) after drug use, so blood biomarker evidence for brain change is unclear. 15129
  • Psychedelic treatments carry risks and need careful medical and therapeutic support. Some drugs in the field (for example ibogaine) have serious physical risks, and animal studies show effects can depend on dose and sex, which raises safety questions for humans. 15091 15085 15050
  • The current evidence is limited: many studies are small or early‑stage and often include mostly white participants. That means we do not yet know how long benefits last, who is most likely to benefit, or what the safest, most effective dose and setting are. 15068 15095 15087 15091

Inclusion of people of color in psychedelic-assisted psychotherapy: a review of the literature

Timothy I. Michaels, Jennifer Purdon, Alexis Collins, Monnica T. Williams
BMC Psychiatry Summary & key facts 2018 247 citations

The authors reviewed psychedelic-assisted psychotherapy studies published from 1993 to 2017 to see how many people of color took part. They found 18 studies with about 280 people. About 82% of participants were non-Hispanic White, while only small percentages were African American, Latino, Asian, indigenous, or mixed race. Because so…

Natural Compound Pharmacology Studies Neurotransmitter Receptor Influence on Behavior Psychedelics and Drug Studies Ayahuasca LSD

Three Naturally-Occurring Psychedelics and Their Significance in the Treatment of Mental Health Disorders

Nataliya S. Vorobyeva, Alena A. Kozlova
Frontiers in Pharmacology Summary & key facts 2022 14 citations

This paper reviews research on three naturally occurring psychedelics: psilocybin, ibogaine, and N,N-dimethyltryptamine (the active part of the brew ayahuasca). It explains that these drugs work on the brain's serotonin system and summarizes growing studies that suggest they might help with problems like post-traumatic stress disorder, major depression, anxiety, and…

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