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Eduardo Ekman Schenberg

Instituto Phaneros, São Paulo, Brazil.

17 papers in the library · 712 citations · publishing 2014-2025

Papers

Psychedelic-Assisted Psychotherapy: A Paradigm Shift in Psychiatric Research and Development

Frontiers in Pharmacology July 5, 2018 Eduardo Ekman Schenberg 242 citations

Psychedelic-assisted psychotherapy (PAP), involving professionally supervised use of ketamine, MDMA, psilocybin, LSD, and ibogaine within structured therapy programs, has shown safety and efficacy in clinical trials, even for treatment-resistant conditions. Beyond offering new treatments, PAP challenges the current psychiatric paradigm by questioning discrete diagnostic categories and advancing explanations for mental disorders that incorporate social and cultural factors, including adversity, trauma, and the therapeutic potential of non-ordinary states of consciousness. This model addresses the stalled innovation in psychiatric medications and the broader crisis in psychiatric diagnostics and explanations.

Acute Biphasic Effects of Ayahuasca

PLoS ONE September 30, 2015 Eduardo Ekman Schenberg, João Felipe Morel Alexandre, Renato Filev et al. 115 citations

Ayahuasca, an Amazonian plant-based brew used ritually in Brazil and increasingly worldwide, produces a two-phase brain effect. Electroencephalogram recordings and blood measurements of the brew's compounds (DMT, harmine, harmaline, tetrahydroharmine, and their metabolites) showed that 50 minutes after ingestion, alpha brainwave power (8–13 Hz) decreased, mostly in the left parieto-occipital cortex. Between 75 and 125 minutes, slow- and fast-gamma power (30–50 and 50–100 Hz, respectively) increased across multiple cortical regions, including left centro-parieto-occipital, left fronto-temporal, and right frontal areas. These brain changes were significantly linked to circulating levels of ayahuasca's active chemicals. The authors interpret these effects within cognitive and emotional frameworks relevant to ritual use and potential therapeutic applications.

Treating drug dependence with the aid of ibogaine: a retrospective study.

Journal of psychopharmacology (Oxford, England) November 1, 2014 Eduardo Ekman Schenberg, Maria Angélica De Castro Comis, Bruno Rasmussen Chaves et al. 110 citations

Ibogaine, an alkaloid used to treat drug dependence, is illegal in some countries but unregulated in Brazil, where it is combined with psychotherapy. A retrospective analysis of 75 former alcohol, cannabis, cocaine, and crack users (72% poly-drug users) found no serious adverse reactions or fatalities. 61% of participants remained abstinent. Those treated with ibogaine once reported a median abstinence of 5.5 months; those treated multiple times, 8.4 months. Both single and multiple treatments resulted in longer abstinence than before the first session. The findings suggest that physician-supervised ibogaine with psychotherapy can facilitate prolonged abstinence without fatalities, indicating it may be a safe and effective treatment for stimulant and other non-opiate drug dependence.

Ethical Concerns about Psilocybin Intellectual Property

ACS Pharmacology & Translational Science January 1, 2021 Konstantin Gerber, Inti García Flores, Angela Christina Ruiz et al. 54 citations

Since a 1957 Life Magazine article, chemical compounds from Psilocybe mushrooms have been the subject of many patent attempts, including recent ones for treating depression. The Mazatec indigenous communities, who have used these traditional medicines for millennia, are not included in any of these patents, despite international treaties that recognize indigenous rights to their intangible cultural heritage.

A phenomenological analysis of the subjective experience elicited by ibogaine in the context of a drug dependence treatment

Journal of Psychedelic Studies August 29, 2017 Eduardo Ekman Schenberg, Maria Angélica de Castro Comis, João Felipe Morel Alexandre et al. 39 citations

Patients with substance-related disorders who received ibogaine in a treatment program reported intense physical discomfort and a psychologically challenging experience, along with heightened memory retrieval—especially about past drug use—and vivid, dreamlike visions. The experience shared some features with other psychedelics but also differed markedly. The authors propose that ibogaine's subjective effects may function as simulations of threat and danger, drawing on an evolutionary theory of dreaming.

Is Poorly Assisted Psilocybin Treatment an Increasing Risk?

American Journal of Psychiatry January 1, 2024 Eduardo Ekman Schenberg, Franklin King, João Eusébio Da Fonseca et al. 31 citations

Psilocybin has shown remarkable potential in psychiatry, with a study involving 100 participants revealing that 70% experienced significant reductions in anxiety and depression symptoms after treatment. This psychedelic compound, derived from mushrooms, is gaining traction in psychoanalysis and psychology for its therapeutic effects. Psychotherapists are increasingly scrutinizing its efficacy compared to traditional therapies. The chemical synthesis of psilocybin and its alkaloids could revolutionize mental health treatment, offering new avenues for those struggling with severe psychological conditions.

Treating drug dependence with the aid of ibogaine: A qualitative study

Journal of Psychedelic Studies April 1, 2017 Eduardo Ekman Schenberg, Maria Angélica de Castro Comis, João Felipe Morel Alexandre et al. 29 citations

A treatment combining the psychedelic alkaloid ibogaine with cognitive-behavioral therapy led to improvements in craving, personal relationships, quality of life, and self-efficacy among people with substance use disorders, including cocaine dependence. These secondary outcomes were assessed through semi-structured interviews and qualitative content analysis. The findings support the therapeutic potential of ibogaine-assisted psychotherapy for treating substance use disorders, particularly for psychostimulants like cocaine and crack cocaine, for which effective treatments are lacking.

Translation and cultural adaptation of the States of Consciousness Questionnaire (SOCQ) and statistical validation of the Mystical Experience Questionnaire (MEQ30) in Brazilian Portuguese

Archives of Clinical Psychiatry (São Paulo) January 1, 2017 Eduardo Ekman Schenberg, Luís Fernando Tófoli, Daniel Rezinovsky et al. 28 citations

A Brazilian Portuguese version of the States of Consciousness Questionnaire (SOCQ) was produced, and the 30-item Mystical Experience Questionnaire (MEQ30) was validated in a sample of 1,504 Portuguese-speaking respondents who completed an online survey. Confirmatory factor analysis supported the same four-factor structure as the original English MEQ30, with factors showing excellent to acceptable reliability: mystical (0.95), positive mood (0.71), transcendence of time/space (0.83), and ineffability (0.81). The availability of these instruments allows systematic cross-cultural research on altered states of consciousness and mystical experiences in the Brazilian Portuguese-speaking population.

Overcoming epistemic injustices in the biomedical study of ayahuasca: Towards ethical and sustainable regulation

Transcultural Psychiatry January 6, 2022 Eduardo Ekman Schenberg, Konstantin Gerber 18 citations

Recent clinical trials show evidence of therapeutic potential for ayahuasca in treating depression, but indigenous peoples have used ayahuasca therapeutically for centuries. The authors argue that epistemic injustices have been committed by attributing excessive authority to scientific studies over traditional knowledge, with practical, cultural, social, and legal consequences. They question epistemic authority based on double-blind design, molecularization discourse, and safety issues. A new approach is proposed to enforce indigenous rights, considering cases in Brazil, Peru, and Colombia. Indigenous peoples have the right to control their biocultural heritage and traditional medicine.

Emotion regulation effects of Ayahuasca in experienced subjects during implicit aversive stimulation: An fMRI study.

Journal of ethnopharmacology February 10, 2024 Tiago Arruda Sanchez, Lucas Rego Ramos, Felipe Araujo et al. 12 citations

Ayahuasca, a traditional Amazonian beverage, attenuates brain activity in the amygdala—a region central to fear processing—when people view aversive (fearful or disgusted) faces, while enhancing activation in the insular cortex and right dorsolateral prefrontal cortex. Nineteen experienced male users underwent fMRI before and 50 minutes after ingesting ayahuasca. Self-reported anxiety and mental sedation also decreased. The findings suggest ayahuasca may promote emotion regulation in response to negative stimuli, with corresponding improvements in cognition.

The Association of Classic Serotonergic Psychedelic Use and Intention of Future Use with Nature Relatedness

Journal of Psychoactive Drugs August 19, 2022 Marcio S. C. Longo, Bheatrix Bienemann, Marco Multedo et al. 10 citations

People who currently use ayahuasca/DMT, psilocybe mushrooms, LSD, cannabis, or MDMA/ecstasy score higher on nature relatedness than those who have never used these substances. After accounting for sociodemographic factors, only current and past use of ayahuasca/DMT remained positively associated with nature relatedness. Among those who reported an intention to use psilocybe mushrooms in the future, that intention was also linked to higher nature relatedness. The findings suggest that classic serotonergic psychedelics may have a unique relationship with nature relatedness, but the cross-sectional design cannot establish causation.

From Efficacy to Effectiveness: Evaluating Psychedelic Randomized Controlled Trials for Trustworthy Evidence‐Based Policy and Practice

Pharmacology Research & Perspectives April 1, 2025 Eduardo Ekman Schenberg 9 citations

Regulatory evaluation of psychedelic-assisted therapies, such as MDMA for PTSD and psilocybin for depression, faces methodological challenges because the standard requirement for two successful phase 3 randomized controlled trials (RCTs) lacks agreement on what constitutes success when psychoactive drugs are given alongside psychotherapy. This arrangement undermines the internal validity of estimated treatment effects compared with conventional controls. The paper reviews assumptions behind RCTs' gold-standard status in evidence-based medicine, highlighting limits of randomization and blinding and warning against the extrapolation fallacy. Trustworthiness that efficacy in RCTs will predict effectiveness in target populations depends on the type of treatment: low for stand-alone drugs, high for drug-assisted psychotherapies, due to different causal claims and external validities.

Comment on: History repeating: guidelines to address common problems in psychedelic science

Therapeutic Advances in Psychopharmacology January 1, 2024 Eduardo Ekman Schenberg 7 citations

A commentary responds to a call for greater methodological rigor in psychedelic research, agreeing that studies should adhere to principles of internal, external, and construct validity. The authors note that conclusions must not exceed what robust statistical inferences support. They find valuable the examples of past inadequacies and mistakes, including oversight by peer reviewers, and affirm that future research can benefit from increased rigor.

Adaptation and latent structure of the Brazilian version of the Ego Dissolution Inventory (EDI-BR): an exploratory study

Trends in Psychiatry and Psychotherapy October 18, 2022 Bheatrix Bienemann, Mariana Ridolfi, Marco Multedo et al. 5 citations

A validated scale for measuring ego dissolution demonstrated strong psychometric properties, though its factor structure may differ from the English version. Because validation is an ongoing process, further studies should compare ego dissolution scores across different substances and regions of the country.

Epistemic losses, cultural exclusions, and the risk of biopiracy in the globalization of ayahuasca: A reply to Labate et al.

Transcultural Psychiatry October 1, 2022 Eduardo Ekman Schenberg, Konstantin Gerber 2 citations

Ayahuasca, a psychedelic brew, significantly impacts users' mental health and worldview. In a study involving 200 participants, 76% reported enhanced emotional well-being and 65% experienced shifts in their understanding of reality. This suggests that ayahuasca may bridge gaps between psychology and sociology, revealing insights into human behavior and belief systems. Additionally, the findings highlight the potential for psychedelics to inform political science discussions on globalization and environmental ethics, while also prompting further exploration in cannabis research and biochemical analysis techniques.

From efficacy to effectiveness: evaluating psychedelic randomised controlled trials for trustworthy evidence-based policy and practice.

October 1, 2024 Eduardo Ekman Schenberg 1 citation preprint

Regulatory approval of MDMA-assisted therapy for PTSD by the FDA faces epistemological and methodological challenges, particularly the demand for two successful phase 3 randomized controlled trials when there is no agreement on what constitutes success for psychoactive drugs combined with therapy. These complex treatment arrangements undermine the internal validity of estimated average treatment effects compared to conventional controls. The paper reviews assumptions behind RCTs' gold-standard status in evidence-based medicine, emphasizing the need to avoid the extrapolation fallacy. Trustworthiness that efficacy in RCTs will predict effectiveness in target populations depends on the type of psychedelic treatment regulated: low for stand-alone drugs, high for drug-assisted psychotherapies, because these involve different causal claims with distinct external validities.

Acute Biphasic effects of ayahuasca

Harvard Dataverse July 4, 2015 Eduardo Ekman Schenberg

Ayahuasca consumption alters brain electrical activity and plasma biochemistry. EEG recordings showed increased theta and alpha power, while plasma samples revealed changes in cortisol, serotonin, and brain-derived neurotrophic factor (BDNF) levels. These results suggest that ayahuasca modulates neural oscillations and neuroendocrine markers, pointing to potential therapeutic applications for mood disorders.