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Markus R Baumgartner

Zurich Institute of Forensic Medicine, Center for Forensic Hair Analytics University of Zurich, Zurich, Switzerland.

5 papers in the library · 51 citations · publishing 2017-2026

Papers

Discrete memory impairments in largely pure chronic users of MDMA.

European neuropsychopharmacology : the journal of the European College of Neuropsychopharmacology October 1, 2017 Michael D Wunderli, Matthias Vonmoos, Marina Fürst et al. 37 citations

Chronic MDMA use is linked to memory and thinking problems, but past research often failed to separate effects of MDMA from those of other drugs like stimulants. In this study, 26 MDMA users who avoided stimulants, 25 MDMA users who also used stimulants, and 56 non-users completed cognitive tests. Hair analysis confirmed drug use patterns. MDMA-only users showed strong, specific impairments in declarative memory (effect size d=0.90), while stimulant-using MDMA users had broader, larger deficits across memory, working memory, executive functions, and attention (d=0.70 to 1.21). The findings suggest that pure MDMA use mainly harms declarative memory, whereas additional cognitive deficits stem from stimulant co-use.

Chemical cousins with contrasting behavioural profiles: MDMA users and methamphetamine users differ in social-cognitive functions and aggression.

European neuropsychopharmacology : the journal of the European College of Neuropsychopharmacology June 1, 2024 Amelie Zacher, Josua Zimmermann, David M Cole et al. 10 citations

Chronic methamphetamine users show diminished cognitive and emotional empathy toward positive stimuli, elevated punitive social behavior regardless of provocation, and heightened self-reported trait anger compared to non-users. Chronic MDMA users differ from controls only by displaying increased punitive behavior when provoked. Higher hair concentrations of both drugs may be linked to reduced cognitive empathy, and greater lifetime MDMA use correlates with more punitive behavior among MDMA users. The dopaminergic mechanism of methamphetamine may underlie social-cognitive deficits.

Cannabis use is associated with changes in psychological and functional well-being during young adulthood: evidence from self-reports and hair analyses.

Psychological medicine August 26, 2025 Lydia Johnson-Ferguson, Michelle Loher, Laura Bechtiger et al. 2 citations

Frequent cannabis use in young adulthood predicts increases in psychotic-like experiences, internalizing symptoms, aggression, problematic substance use, and higher odds of not being in employment, education, or training, along with decreased general well-being from ages 20 to 24. These associations held whether cannabis exposure was measured by self-reported frequency or by hair THC concentrations, and effect sizes were small. Composite measures combining self-reports and hair data were no more informative than either source alone. The findings come from a community sample of 863 young adults, with 150 reporting weekly-to-daily use and 110 having detectable cannabis in hair at age 20.

Conflict monitoring and emotional processing in 3,4-methylenedioxymethamphetamine (MDMA) and methamphetamine users - A comparative neurophysiological study.

NeuroImage. Clinical January 1, 2024 Antje Opitz, Josua Zimmermann, David M Cole et al. 2 citations

Chronic users of methamphetamine and MDMA show similar deficits in conflict control and emotional processing, rather than substance-specific differences. In an emotional face-word Stroop task with anger and happy faces, both user groups exhibited smaller behavioral effects of cognitive-emotional conflict and selective impairments in processing anger, compared to amphetamine-naïve controls. These deficits were accompanied by stronger P3 event-related potential modulations, indicating altered stimulus-response mapping and decision-making. The findings suggest that chronic use of substituted amphetamines may affect noradrenergic systems, which could underlie the observed similarities. Understanding noradrenaline's role in these processes is an important direction for future research.

Differential alterations in peripheral tryptophan pathways in methamphetamine versus MDMA users are linked to their contrasting psychiatric symptoms.

Translational psychiatry May 21, 2026 Francesco Bavato, Andrea Steuer, Anna M Jacobsen et al.

Chronic users of methamphetamine (METH) and MDMA (Ecstasy) show distinct alterations in blood levels of tryptophan-related metabolites, which may help explain their different clinical effects. In a study of 36 chronic MDMA users, 33 chronic METH users, and 71 healthy controls, METH use was linked to depleted serum tryptophan and serotonin and broad activation of kynurenine pathways, whereas MDMA use was associated with selective activation of the OH-kynurenine branch. These metabolite changes correlated with the severity of depression and psychosis symptoms. The findings suggest that persistent changes in peripheral tryptophan metabolism may contribute to the substances' contrasting addiction and psychiatric profiles.