Frontier mental health research: psychedelics & drug studies

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6 papers

Psilocybin

Based on 45 papers

Researchers are actively testing psilocybin (the active part of “magic mushrooms”) as a possible treatment for several mental health problems. Early clinical trials—usually done under medical supervision with therapy before and after the drug session—have found quick improvements in some people with major depression, anxiety linked to serious illness, and other hard-to-treat conditions (but the studies are still small). (15135,15063,15056) Scientists propose several ways psilocybin might help, such as changing how brain networks communicate, boosting the brain’s ability to form new connections, and lowering brain inflammation. However, the exact reasons are not settled. Safety in careful clinical settings looks acceptable so far, but harms may be underreported, and unsupervised use can carry real risks. More and larger trials are needed, and many groups (for example people of color) were not well represented in early studies. (15132,15050,15135,15061,15095,15056)

Key findings

  • Psilocybin is being tested for major depression, anxiety (including cancer‑related anxiety), substance use problems, and other mental health conditions. 15135 15063 15056
  • In research studies, psilocybin is usually given as one or a few full (hallucinogenic) doses together with hours of preparation and follow‑up psychotherapy. 15063 15065 15056
  • Some clinical trials report rapid and sometimes lasting reductions in depression and anxiety after only one or a few psilocybin sessions. 15132 15063 15049
  • Trials done with people who have serious illnesses (for example advanced cancer) often show lower anxiety, less depression, and reduced fear of dying after psychedelic‑assisted therapy. 15055 15063
  • Clinical studies run in controlled settings have generally reported acceptable safety and mostly short‑lived side effects, but reviews warn that studies often do not track or report harms in a consistent way. 15135 15055 15061
  • In community or illegal settings, psychedelic use (including psilocybin) has been linked to increases in psychotic or manic symptoms for some users, and users in unregulated settings report more negative experiences than people in clinical trials. 15133 15072 15080
  • Scientists do not agree on one single reason psilocybin might help. Evidence points to changes in brain networks, increased neuroplasticity (the brain’s ability to form new connections), and lower inflammation as possible mechanisms. 15132 15135 15050
  • Many studies so far are small, have limited long‑term follow‑up, and underrepresent people of color, so we do not yet know how well results generalize to all groups or how long benefits and harms last. 15056 15095 15064

Management of Treatment-Resistant Depression: Challenges and Strategies

Daphne Voineskos, Zafiris J. Daskalakis, Daniel M. Blumberger

This paper is a careful review of research about treatment-resistant depression. The authors looked through medical studies to see how doctors define this kind of depression, what makes it hard to assess, and which treatments have been tried. They describe drug strategies like adding lithium or thyroid hormone, switching antidepressant…

Electroconvulsive Therapy Studies Treatment of Major Depression Tryptophan and brain disorders Ketamine Psilocybin

Investigation of self-treatment with lysergic acid diethylamide and psilocybin mushrooms: Findings from the Global Drug Survey 2020

Emma I Kopra, Jason Ferris, Adam Winstock, Kim P. C. Kuypers, Allan H. Young, James Rucker
Journal of Psychopharmacology Summary & key facts 2023 58 citations

Researchers used responses from the Global Drug Survey 2020 to look at how people try to treat themselves with LSD and psilocybin mushrooms. In this large international sample, many people reported positive results, but unwanted or difficult effects were reported more often than you see in carefully controlled medical studies.…

Chemical synthesis and alkaloids Natural Compound Pharmacology Studies Psychedelics and Drug Studies LSD Psilocybin

The Emerging Field of Psychedelic Psychotherapy

Gregory Barber, Scott T. Aaronson
Current Psychiatry Reports Summary & key facts 2022 48 citations

This review looks at recent research where drugs like MDMA and psilocybin are given inside carefully run therapy programs. People get hours of preparation, one or more drug sessions, and several follow-up therapy sessions to help make sense of the experience. Trials so far show big improvements for some people…

Chemical synthesis and alkaloids Diverse academic research themes Psychedelics and Drug Studies Ayahuasca Ibogaine

Psychedelics in the treatment of unipolar and bipolar depression

Oliver G. Bosch, Simon Halm, Erich Seifritz

This paper reviews past and recent research on classic psychedelics and some newer psychedelic-like drugs as treatments for unipolar and bipolar depression. Classic psychedelics named in the paper are LSD, psilocybin, mescaline, and ayahuasca. Early carefully controlled studies of psilocybin show encouraging results for unipolar depression, and ketamine (in the…

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

Effects of Psychedelics in Older Adults: A Prospective Cohort Study

Hannes Kettner, Leor Roseman, Adam Gazzaley, Robin Carhart‐Harris, Lorenzo Pasquini

Researchers followed 62 older adults (age 60 and up) and 62 younger adults who planned to take part in guided psychedelic group sessions. People in both age groups reported better well-being in the weeks after the sessions, but older adults experienced weaker immediate drug effects during the sessions. For older…

Biochemical Analysis and Sensing Techniques Chemical synthesis and alkaloids Psychedelics and Drug Studies Ayahuasca LSD

Ayahuasca and Its Main Component N,N-Dimethyltryptamine (DMT) for the Treatment of Mental Disorders: Mechanisms of Action, Clinical Studies, and Tools to Explore the Human Mind

Alice Melani, Giorgia Papini, Marco Bonaso, Letizia Biso, Shivakumar Kolachalam, Nicola Luigi Bragazzi, et al.
Biomedicines Summary & key facts 2026 0 citations

This paper reviews research on ayahuasca and its main ingredient, DMT, and how they might help with mental health. Ayahuasca is a plant brew that makes DMT work when you drink it because it also contains chemicals that stop the body from breaking DMT down. Lab studies and a small…

Alkaloids: synthesis and pharmacology Forensic Toxicology and Drug Analysis Psychedelics and Drug Studies Ayahuasca MDMA
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