Neuropsychopharmacology : official publication of the American College of Neuropsychopharmacology
October 1, 2023
Laura Ley, Friederike Holze, Denis Arikci et al.
127 citations
At equally strong doses, the classic psychedelics mescaline, LSD, and psilocybin produce comparable subjective experiences, with no evidence of qualitative differences in altered states of consciousness. Autonomic effects were moderate; psilocybin increased diastolic blood pressure more than LSD, while LSD showed a trend toward higher heart rate than psilocybin. Mescaline had the longest effect duration (mean 11.1 hours), followed by LSD (8.2 hours) and psilocybin (4.9 hours). Mescaline and LSD, but not psilocybin, raised circulating oxytocin. None altered brain-derived neurotrophic factor. Tolerability was similar, though mescaline caused slightly more subacute adverse effects 12–24 hours later.
Translational psychiatry
May 23, 2023
Severin B Vogt, Laura Ley, Livio Erne et al.
85 citations
Intravenous DMT can produce a psychedelic state that is short-lasting and controllable. A double-blind, placebo-controlled crossover trial with 27 healthy participants tested five DMT regimens: low infusion (0.6 mg/min), high infusion (1 mg/min), low bolus plus low infusion (15 mg + 0.6 mg/min), and high bolus plus high infusion (25 mg + 1 mg/min). Bolus doses induced very intense effects within 2 minutes, with more negative feelings and anxiety than infusions. Infusions produced slowly increasing, dose-dependent effects that plateaued after 30 minutes. All effects subsided within 15 minutes of stopping the infusion. Acute tolerance developed, with stable subjective effects from 30 to 90 minutes despite rising plasma concentrations. Intravenous DMT infusion is a promising tool for tailored psychedelic therapy.
Neuropsychopharmacology : official publication of the American College of Neuropsychopharmacology
December 1, 2023
Isabelle Straumann, Laura Ley, Friederike Holze et al.
41 citations
Co-administering MDMA (100 mg) with LSD (100 µg) does not improve the quality of the acute subjective effects compared with LSD alone in healthy adults. The combination prolongs the duration of subjective effects and increases blood pressure, heart rate, and pupil size more than LSD alone. Oxytocin levels rise more with MDMA alone or the combination than with LSD alone. The findings suggest that combining MDMA with LSD offers no relevant benefits over LSD alone for psychedelic-assisted therapy.
Translational psychiatry
September 30, 2024
Aaron Klaiber, Yasmin Schmid, Anna M Becker et al.
27 citations
Mescaline produces dose-dependent subjective and physiological effects in healthy people, with doses above 100 mg increasing blood pressure and heart rate. Subjective effects lasted from 6.4 hours at 100 mg to 14 hours at 800 mg, and the drug reached peak concentration in blood after about 2 hours with a half-life of 3.5 hours. Nausea and vomiting were common at the highest dose. Blocking serotonin 5-HT2A receptors with ketanserin reduced the effects of 800 mg mescaline to levels similar to lower doses, indicating that mescaline's acute effects are primarily mediated by these receptors.
Med (New York, N.Y.)
June 4, 2025
Felix Müller, Hannes Zaczek, Anna M Becker et al.
21 citations
In a double-blind, low-dose controlled trial, 61 patients with moderate-to-severe major depressive disorder received supportive psychotherapy and either two high doses (100 μg then 200 μg) or two low doses (25 μg each) of LSD. At the primary endpoint two weeks after the second session, the high-dose group showed a greater average reduction in self-rated depression scores (11.8 points) compared to the low-dose group (3.9 points), a difference that approached but did not reach statistical significance. Clinician-rated scores also favored the high dose, but significance was lost after adjusting for baseline depression severity. Improvements were numerically maintained through 12 weeks. Adverse events were similar between groups. The authors suggest these exploratory results warrant a larger phase 3 trial.
Translational psychiatry
September 4, 2024
Patrick Vizeli, Erich Studerus, Friederike Holze et al.
15 citations
LSD dose is the strongest predictor of the drug's subjective and autonomic effects, but non-pharmacological factors also play a significant role. Pre-drug mood states—such as well-being, emotional excitability, and anxiety—predict subjective effects, heart rate, and body temperature. The personality trait openness to experiences correlates with stronger mystical-type effects and oceanic boundlessness. Prior hallucinogen use is linked to less anxious ego dissolution and a less intense overall altered state. Acute anxiety relates negatively to the functionality of the Cytochrome 2D6 enzyme. Sex and body weight do not significantly influence the drug experience.
Journal of psychopharmacology (Oxford, England)
December 26, 2025
Kurt Stocker, Matthias Hartmann, Yasmin Schmid et al.
5 citations
A psychometric revalidation of the Altered States of Consciousness Scale (ASC) using data from 901 questionnaires across 16 psychedelic studies (with LSD, psilocybin, mescaline, and DMT) shows that ten of the eleven subscales can be grouped into three higher-order dimensions—Positive Effects, Distressing Effects, and Perceptual Effects—mirroring the original three-dimensional model but with improved statistical fit. The Anxiety subscale could not be integrated due to floor effects (low anxiety in the sample) but is retained for clinical relevance. The revised scale, 3D-ASCr, is recommended for use with classic serotonergic psychedelics.
Clinical pharmacokinetics
July 14, 2025
Lorenz Mueller, Aaron Klaiber, Laura Ley et al.
4 citations
Mescaline, a classic psychedelic, shows dose-proportional increases in blood concentration and effects after oral administration. Peak levels occur within about 2 hours, with a half-life of 3.5 hours. Effects begin around 1 hour after dosing, with intensity and duration increasing from 13% and 2.8 hours at 100 mg to 89% and 15 hours at 800 mg. About 53% of the dose is excreted unchanged in urine, and 31% as a main metabolite. Oral bioavailability is at least 53%, limited by first-pass metabolism, with renal elimination as the primary clearance route.
Psychopharmacology
March 26, 2025
Laura Ley, Matthias E Liechti, Anna M Becker et al.
3 citations
Healthy volunteers enroll in psychedelic trials primarily out of interest in the substances and the appeal of the study setting, hoping for personal development and transformative experiences. In a series of six double-blind, placebo-controlled trials involving 151 participants, positive experiences were promoted by music, access to nature, and a trusting relationship with the investigator. A sterile hospital environment, lack of investigator support, and investigator-induced discomfort were criticized. Most volunteers felt their expectations were exceeded and would take the substances again, ideally in a natural setting with friends. Four key factors for positive study experiences are a secure interpersonal relationship, an aesthetically pleasing environment, access to nature, and music.
International journal of methods in psychiatric research
June 1, 2026
Kurt Stocker, Matthias Hartmann, Frederick S Barrett et al.
The eight-factor structure of the Psychedelic Experience Scale (PES48), which includes the Mystical Experience Questionnaire (MEQ30) and additional factors for paradoxicality, connectedness, visual experience, and distressing experience, is valid for use in English. Analysis of 280 measurements from 145 healthy participants in four placebo-controlled psilocybin studies found that six subscales have high internal consistency, one good, and one acceptable. Both the MEQ30 and MEQ40 models show acceptable to good model fits, with better fits in English than in German. All six MEQ40 scale means were higher in English data, suggesting that the PES48 provides a broader conceptualization of mystical and non-mystical psychedelic experiences, and that setting may influence mystical experience.