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9 results for "Meta-analysis: what did research on ayahuasca find in may 2026?"

An exploratory persistent-homology analysis of resting-state fMRI functional connectivity under Ayahuasca

Chaos Solitons & Fractals May 30, 2026 Tales Ramos Monteiro Dos Santos, Dráulio B. Araújo, Helcio Felippe et al.

Psychedelic states can help researchers understand how the brain reorganizes at a large scale. In nine people scanned before and after taking ayahuasca, topological data analysis of resting-state fMRI connectivity showed a nominal decrease in persistent entropy of H2 features—a measure of higher-dimensional topological structure—that did not survive correction for multiple comparisons and was not reproduced with signed correlations. Exploratory analyses of signal complexity found descriptive but non-significant increases. These preliminary, hypothesis-generating results highlight persistent homology as a potential framework for studying psychedelic-related brain changes, but replication in larger placebo-controlled studies is needed.

Observability and pharmacological calibration in psychoactive ethnobotany: ceremony duration, admixture selection, and the discovery of ayahuasca

Zenodo (CERN European Organization for Nuclear Research) May 21, 2026 Elliot Allan

Traditional psychoactive plant ceremonies across 11 indigenous traditions on five continents show a near-perfect log–log correlation (r = 0.977) between ceremony duration and the pharmacokinetic duration of the active compounds, spanning seven pharmacological classes including DMT, mescaline, psilocybin, ergolines, salvinorin, ibogaine, and GABA-A-active compounds. A catalogue of 118 Amazonian admixture plants reveals that pharmacologically active species cluster at the extremes of purpose observability, while candidate plants concentrate in the middle. Agent-based simulations indicate that guided iterative search, not random trial-and-error, could realistically discover the DMT plus MAO-I combination within centuries to millennia in the Amazonian flora.

AVALIAÇÃO IN SÍLICO DAS POSSÍVEIS ATIVIDADES FARMACOLÓGICAS E TOXICOLÓGICAS DOS COMPOSTOS SECUNDÁRIOS QUE COMPÕEM A BEBIDA AYAHUASCA: BANISTERIOPSIS CAAPI E PSYCHOTRIA VIRIDIS

Revista Ibero-Americana de Humanidades, Ciências e Educação May 20, 2026 Maysa Cruz Lima Feitosa, Bernardo Melo Neto, Joubert Aires de Sousa

Ayahuasca is a beverage of indigenous origin made from Banisteriopsis caapi, which contains β-carboline alkaloids (harmine, harmaline, tetrahydroharmine), and Psychotria viridis, which contains N,N-dimethyltryptamine (DMT). The β-carbolines inhibit monoamine oxidase, enabling oral DMT bioavailability and characteristic psychoactive effects. This study analyzed the secondary compounds of the plants to examine pharmacokinetic and toxicological information. Molecular structures from PubChem were assessed using Swiss Target Prediction, Protox 3.0, and PreADMET platforms. The compounds show significant pharmacological potential but also toxicological risks that should not be overlooked, reinforcing the need for further in vivo and clinical studies.

Ayahuasca use and improvements in suicidal behavior: An exploratory qualitative study

Psychedelics May 16, 2026 Nádia Valéria Moreira Santos, Cristiane Ferreira Silveira, Camila Gutieres Dos Santos Soares Costa et al.

Interviews with nine Brazilian participants who took ayahuasca in neoshamanic ceremonies suggested that the experience helped reduce suicidal thoughts and behaviors. Three themes emerged: motivations for seeking ayahuasca, strategies for strengthening psychological well-being afterward, and the perceived health benefits of the psychedelic experience itself. The ceremonial use of ayahuasca may offer a promising model of care, especially in communities with limited access to advanced medical treatment.

Therapeutic properties of ayahuasca component N,N-Dimethyltryptamine in a pre-clinical model of Parkinson's disease

DIGITAL.CSIC (Spanish National Research Council (CSIC)) May 12, 2026 Javier Calleja‐conde, Víctor Echeverry‐alzate, Marina Sanz-Sancristóbal et al.

Parkinson's disease involves progressive loss of dopamine-producing neurons in the nigrostriatal pathway, along with brain inflammation. Current medications only manage symptoms. This preclinical study tested N,N-dimethyltryptamine (DMT), the active compound in ayahuasca, which activates serotonin 5-HT2A receptors (causing hallucinogenic effects) and sigma-1 receptors linked to neuroprotection. DMT treatment produced molecular changes in the nigrostriatal pathway indicating reduced neuroinflammation and preserved neurons. Behavioral tests also showed symptom improvement. These results suggest DMT may modify disease progression in Parkinson's disease, supporting further research.

Baseline Resilience as a Predictor of Ayahuasca Acute Effects and Moderator of the Relationship between Acute Effects and Psychospiritual Outcomes

Psychedelic Medicine May 9, 2026 Yitong Xin, Alan K. Davis, Susan Yoon et al.

People with higher psychological resilience before an ayahuasca retreat reported more intense acute challenging experiences, such as nausea or emotional distress. Resilience also moderated how those challenging experiences related to later meaning-making: among participants with higher baseline resilience, the link between acute difficulty and a subsequent search for meaning in life was stronger. The findings suggest that resilience may help individuals transform difficult psychedelic moments into psychospiritual growth, pointing to the value of incorporating resilience-building into retreat preparation and integration programs.

Ayahuasca Groups and Networks in the Netherlands: A Challenge to the Study of Contemporary Religion

UvA-DARE May 2, 2026 Wouter J. Hanegraaff 8 citations

The chapter examines the global spread of ayahuasca use, focusing on the social and political dynamics that shape its internationalization. It argues that the movement of ayahuasca from indigenous Amazonian contexts to urban and global settings involves complex negotiations between religious, therapeutic, and recreational frameworks. The text analyzes how different groups—including indigenous communities, religious organizations, and secular users—adapt and contest the meanings and regulations of ayahuasca. It highlights tensions between cultural appropriation and respectful exchange, as well as the role of legal and medical discourses in defining ayahuasca's status. The chapter concludes that the internationalization of ayahuasca reflects broader processes of globalization and cultural hybridization.

B48-13 Severe Serotonin Syndrome With Acute Respiratory Failure Following Ayahuasca and Dextromethorphan Use: A Case Report

American Journal of Respiratory and Critical Care Medicine May 1, 2026 S Pack, T Ellett, J Pham et al.

A 46-year-old man developed life-threatening serotonin syndrome after consuming ayahuasca at a retreat and later taking dextromethorphan and diphenhydramine. He presented with agitation, hyperthermia, tachycardia, and respiratory failure requiring intubation and intensive care. Treatment with cyproheptadine and midazolam led to full recovery within three days. The case highlights the dangerous interaction between ayahuasca's monoamine oxidase inhibitors and over-the-counter serotonergic medications, which can synergistically cause severe toxicity.

Investigating Hypo‐Egoic Features: Ayahuasca's Psychedelic Path Versus Meditation's Mindful Journey

Human Psychopharmacology Clinical and Experimental May 1, 2026 María Arqueros, J L Fayos Soler, Ausiàs Cebolla et al.

Ego dissolution, a temporary state of reduced self-referential processing and increased unity with the environment, can be modulated by both psychedelics like ayahuasca and contemplative practices like meditation. In a comparison of 37 ayahuasca users and 137 meditators, meditators scored significantly higher on the 'Delusion of Me' index, which measures acceptance, decentering, and non-attachment. While meditation practice showed a significant non-linear association with cumulative practice and higher scores, repeated ayahuasca exposure showed no evidence of a cumulative association with the index in this sample.