Psychedelics: reconnecting the brain to heal the mind
The Biochemist – March 25, 2024
Source: OpenAlex
Summary
Remarkably, a single psychedelic experience can yield profound, long-lasting improvements across various mental illnesses. After a 1970s ban, modern Psychedelics and Drug Studies reveal how hallucinogens like Psilocybin influence neurotransmitter receptors, particularly serotonin 5-HT2A, altering brain circuitry. This mechanism shows promise in Psychiatry and Psychology for treating Depression and Addiction. With consistent positive outcomes, including in Australia for treatment-resistant depression, these substances, whether natural alkaloids or via chemical synthesis, are poised for wider acceptance in Medicine, addressing significant societal burdens.
Abstract
Natural psychedelics such as magic mushrooms have a long history of human use of at least 7000 years. Their use underwent a resurgence in the 1950/1960s following the synthesis of LSD as a psychedelic and its use as a medicine with powerful therapeutic benefits. But because non-medical use led to massive cultural changes especially in young people, all psychedelics were banned globally in the early 1970s. Over the past 20 years, there has been a resurrection of psychedelic research. This has revealed their common modes of action as agonists (stimulators) of the serotonin 5-HT2A receptor in the brain and that this activity leads to profound alterations in neuro-circuitry, producing a more integrated and flexible pattern of activity. These brain changes found in healthy volunteers predicted utility in mental illnesses such as depression and addiction and subsequent trials revealed this to be true. A single psychedelic trip can lead to very long-lasting improvements in a range of mental illnesses. From these remarkable and consistent positive outcomes, it seems likely that psychedelic therapy will soon become widely approved in western medicine, as it has already been in Australia for treatment-resistant depression.