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Gut-Mind Interactions in Psychedelic Healing: A Case Study Assessing the Effects of Huachuma and Ayahuasca on the Mind and Microbiome.

Payton Follestad, Patricia Filbin, Brice Thompson, Piper Dobner, Atara Jaffe, Austin Perlmutter, Heather Zwickey

Journal of restorative medicine January 1, 2025 Peer reviewed DOI: 10.14200/jrm.2025.0006 via PubMed

Summary

Ayahuasca and Huachuma ceremonies significantly reduced depression scores and increased feelings of connectedness in a 35-year-old female participant. The Hamilton Depression Rating Scale scores dropped from 18 to 6 after Ayahuasca and from 12 to 2 after Huachuma. Connectedness scores improved from 62.3% to 95.37% with Ayahuasca and from 58.32% to 84.65% with Huachuma. Both ceremonies also led to beneficial changes in gut microbiome composition, suggesting a link between these changes and mental health improvements.

Study at a glance

Design case study
Sample size 1
Population a single 35-year-old female with prior psychedelic experience
Key finding Both Ayahuasca and Huachuma ceremonies resulted in substantial reductions in depression and increases in connectedness scores.

Abstract

Psychedelic plant medicines such as Ayahuasca and Huachuma (San Pedro cactus) are gaining scientific attention for their potential to improve mental health. However, the interplay between these traditional medicines, the gut microbiome, and mental health outcomes remains underexplored. The main objectives of this study are to investigate the effects of Ayahuasca and Huachuma ceremonies on the gut microbiome, depression, and subjective connectedness in a single patient and to generate hypotheses for future studies. A 35-year-old female with prior psychedelic experience participated in separate Ayahuasca and Huachuma ceremonies. Qualitative data were collected through patient interviews. Quantitative data included stool samples collected before and after each ceremony for microbiome analysis, as well as survey data using the Hamilton Depression Rating Scale (HAM-D) and Watts Connectedness Scale (WCS) administered pre- and post-ceremony. Both ceremonies resulted in substantial reductions in depression scores (HAM-D decreased: Ayahuasca from 18 to 6; Huachuma from 12 to 2) and connectedness scores (WCS increased: Ayahuasca from 62.3% to 95.37%; Huachuma from 58.32% to 84.65%). Although Ayahuasca and Huachuma induced different gut microbial composition shifts, reductions in pro-inflammatory taxa, normalization of inflammation-linked bacterial species, and increases in beneficial butyrate-producing bacterial species were observed for both. These microbial shifts aligned with improved subjective mental health and reduced inflammation. Qualitative interviews revealed distinct archetypal experiences with each medicine, informing personalized therapeutic approaches. This hypothesis-generating case study illustrates a potential link between psychedelic-induced microbiome changes and improvements in mental health which may contribute to reduced inflammation and sustained antidepressant effects via the microbiota-gut-brain axis.

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