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Adapting psychedelic medicine for headache and chronic pain disorders.

Emmanuelle A D Schindler, Peter S Hendricks

Expert review of neurotherapeutics January 1, 2023 DOI: 10.1080/14737175.2023.2246655

Summary

Psychedelics like psilocybin and lysergic acid diethylamide show promising potential in treating stubborn headache disorders and chronic pain conditions. Beyond their known benefits for depression, these compounds may offer relief through different mechanisms than traditional painkillers. Early clinical trials and patient reports suggest psychedelics could provide lasting pain reduction with fewer side effects than current treatments.

Abstract

While the majority of current research and development surrounds depression, demoralization, and substance use disorders, there are numerous reports of psychedelics having beneficial effects in other branches of medicine, including for headache disorders and chronic pain. This perspective reviews conventional forms of treatment for headache and other chronic pain disorders and describes historical, recent, and ongoing investigations of the therapeutic effects of psychedelics in these disorders. The first two clinical trials of psilocybin in headache disorders and recent case reports of psilocybin mushroom self-administration in chronic pain patients are described. This perspective highlights several factors related to the application of psychedelics in chronic pain disorders, comparing this with the standard psychedelic-assisted psychotherapy model of treatment. When faced with a more constricted view of psychedelic medicine that features larger doses, underscores subjective effects in the mediation of therapeutic outcomes, and requires adjunctive psychotherapy to ensure safety and efficacy, the application of psychedelics in headache and chronic pain disorders may face challenges. It will be important to allow for flexibility and adaptation in protocols to evaluate different treatment paradigms, mechanisms of action, and the range of pharmacologic and extra-pharmacologic factors that affect psychedelic treatment outcomes.

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