Frontiers in Pharmacology
December 3, 2020
Daniela Dudysová, Karolína Janků, Michal Šmotek et al.
37 citations
Psilocybin, a serotonergic psychedelic with antidepressant potential, altered sleep architecture in healthy volunteers the night after administration. In a randomized, double-blinded trial, 20 healthy adults (10 women, ages 28–53) received psilocybin or placebo. Psilocybin prolonged REM sleep latency and showed a trend toward reduced total REM sleep duration, with no changes in NREM sleep or whole-night EEG power spectra. Contrary to expectations, psilocybin suppressed slow-wave activity in the first sleep cycle, providing no evidence for sleep-related neuroplasticity. The findings suggest that psilocybin's antidepressant properties may involve sleep changes, possibly through different mechanisms than those of classical antidepressants.
Journal of Personalized Medicine
June 19, 2022
Vojtěch Viktorin, Inga Griškova-bulanova, Aleksandras Voicikas et al.
19 citations
Psilocybin, a psychedelic compound, reduces the brain's ability to synchronize its electrical activity at 40 Hz in response to auditory clicks. In a double-blind, placebo-controlled crossover study, 20 healthy volunteers received either psilocybin (0.26 mg/kg) or placebo. Measurements taken before and after ingestion showed that psilocybin decreased the phase-locking index and amplitude of the 40 Hz auditory steady-state response, and the degree of this reduction correlated with changes in cognition and affect. These findings support the role of gamma oscillations in cognitive processing and their disruption in psychosis.
Pharmacological reports : PR
June 16, 2025
Tereza Klučková, Marek Nikolič, Filip Tylš et al.
4 citations
In healthy individuals, psilocybin produces lasting positive effects regardless of previous psychedelic experience, repeated use, setting, sex, or occupation. In a double-blind, placebo-controlled crossover study with 40 participants (20 females, mean age 38), each received two doses of psilocybin (0.26 mg/kg) at least 56 days apart. Acute effects were moderate on the Altered States of Consciousness Scales, with mostly pleasant or fluctuating experiences and only one unpleasant session; all sessions ended positively or neutrally. Long-term effects, assessed by the Persisting Effects Questionnaire, were positive across all domains with negligible negative effects. Peak experiences ending in a positive mood strongly predicted favorable long-term outcomes, while challenging experiences did not cause adverse outcomes. These findings support psilocybin's psychological safety and repeated use in clinical trials.
medRxiv
August 26, 2024
Tereza Klučková, Filip Tylš, Vojtěch Viktorin et al.
2 citations
preprint
In healthy volunteers, two doses of psilocybin (0.26 mg/kg) given at least 56 days apart produced moderate acute psychedelic effects that were mostly pleasant or fluctuating, with only one unpleasant experience. All sessions ended in a positive or neutral state. Psilocybin led to sustained positive effects across all domains of the Persisting Effects Questionnaire, with negligible negative effects. Contrary to expectations, dread of ego dissolution was not linked to negative long-term outcomes. Peak experiences culminating in positive mood were associated with positive lasting effects, while the type of experience (pleasant or mixed) did not correlate with the intensity or direction of the lasting effect. Results were independent of previous psychedelic experience, sex, or study setting.
Journal of Psychopharmacology
January 1, 2026
Petr Scholle, Štěpán Wenke, Tereza Nekovářová et al.
1 citation
Under psilocybin, healthy volunteers perceived time as moving more slowly and their temporal precision decreased, particularly for intervals longer than 2 seconds. In a double-blinded placebo-controlled study with 24 participants, the bisection point shifted rightward, indicating subjective time slowing, and the just noticeable difference increased, reflecting reduced accuracy. These changes were captured both by performance on the Temporal Bisection Task and by self-report scales. The findings suggest psilocybin disrupts cognitive functions such as working memory and attention, altering time perception through serotonergic system involvement.
Therapeutic advances in psychopharmacology
January 1, 2026
Veronika Andrashko, Tomas Novak, Miloslav Kopecek et al.
Higher blood pressure during ketamine infusion was associated with better antidepressant response in people with depression. Among 39 patients who received a single intravenous dose of ketamine, those who responded at day 7 had significantly higher systolic and diastolic blood pressure during the infusion than nonresponders. Dissociation and psychotomimetic symptoms did not differ between responders and nonresponders. Concomitant antipsychotic medication was linked to worse antidepressant outcome and lower infusion-related blood pressure. Plasma levels of ketamine or norketamine did not correlate with blood pressure, dissociative symptoms, or psychotomimetic effects.
Psychopharmacology
December 13, 2025
David Greguš, Jaroslav Hlinka, Filip Tylš et al.
The spatial organization of the cingulate cortex, rather than the thickness of a single region, predicts the intensity of psychedelic experiences under psilocybin. In a double-blind, placebo-controlled crossover study with 25 healthy participants, an anterior–posterior gradient in cingulate thickness significantly predicted psychedelic experience intensity. The previously reported finding that rostral anterior cingulate cortex thickness alone predicts emotional responses showed a comparable effect size but did not reach statistical significance, likely due to the smaller sample size. These results suggest that the pattern of cortical thickness across the cingulate cortex, not focal measures, serves as a neuroanatomical marker of variability in psychedelic response.
Research Square
September 25, 2025
David Greguš, Jaroslav Hlinka, Filip Tylš et al.
Individual differences in how people respond to psilocybin are linked to the structural organization of the cingulate cortex. A previous finding that thickness of a specific cingulate region predicted emotional responses was not replicated. Instead, a broader anterior-to-posterior gradient of cingulate thickness predicted the overall intensity of the psychedelic experience, and general cingulate thickness was associated with the balance between anxiety and visionary states. These results suggest that patterns of cortical thickness across the cingulate, rather than a single region, may serve as a neuroanatomical marker for predicting psychedelic response, with potential implications for personalized dosing in therapy.