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Akila Ram

Stanford University

3 papers in the library · 8 citations · publishing 2025-2026

Papers

No evidence of immediate or persistent analgesic effect from a single dose of psilocybin in three mouse models of pain

Nature Communications January 22, 2026 Nicholas Gregory, Tyler Girard, Akila Ram et al. 5 citations

Psilocybin, a psychedelic compound, was tested for direct pain-relieving effects in mice with inflammatory, nerve injury, and muscle pain. Across a range of doses (0.3, 2, and 10 mg/kg) in both sexes, using multiple sensory and functional pain tests, psilocybin showed no analgesic effect except for reduced cold sensitivity. That reduction likely resulted from psilocybin-induced hypothermia rather than true pain relief. The findings suggest that any lasting therapeutic benefits of psilocybin for chronic pain are not due to direct analgesic action.

Psilocybin has no immediate or persistent analgesic effect in acute and chronic mouse pain models

bioRxiv (Cold Spring Harbor Laboratory) July 7, 2025 Akila Ram, Austen B. Casey, Robert C. Malenka et al. 2 citations preprint

Psilocybin does not produce direct analgesic effects in mice, despite suggestions from clinical and preclinical data that it might help chronic pain. Across multiple pain assays and models of acute and chronic inflammatory, neuropathic, and musculoskeletal pain, no dose of psilocybin was analgesic. The finding indicates that any therapeutic benefits for chronic pain syndromes are unlikely to come from direct pain relief.