Skip to content

Chiranth Bhagavan

Department of Psychiatry University of Melbourne Austin Health Heidelberg Victoria Australia.

9 papers in the library · 22 citations · publishing 2024-2026

Papers

Effect of MDMA-assisted therapy on mood and anxiety symptoms in advanced-stage cancer (EMMAC): study protocol for a double-blind, randomised controlled trial.

Trials May 21, 2024 Chiranth Bhagavan, Paul Glue, Will Evans et al. 7 citations

A clinical trial will test whether MDMA-assisted therapy can reduce anxiety and depression in people with advanced-stage cancer. Up to 32 participants will be randomly assigned to receive either 120 mg of MDMA (with an optional 60 mg supplement) or a low dose of methylphenidate as a psychoactive control, each combined with therapeutic support sessions. The study will track mood, anxiety, quality of life, and other measures for up to 12 months. This research aims to establish the safety and effectiveness of a novel treatment for mental suffering in patients with life-threatening illness.

Psilocybin-assisted physiotherapy for refractory motor functional neurological disorder: protocol for a randomised dose-comparison pilot study

Acta Neuropsychiatrica November 4, 2025 Chiranth Bhagavan, Alexander Bryson, Olivia Carter et al. 4 citations

Combining psychedelics with physiotherapy may offer a new treatment for motor functional neurological disorder (FND), a condition with no effective medications and often persistent disability. This protocol describes the first trial testing two psilocybin-assisted physiotherapy regimens in 24 people with refractory motor FND. Participants are randomly assigned to either 15 mg psilocybin with movement tasks during the drug's acute effects or 25 mg psilocybin alone. All receive two physiotherapy sessions before dosing and six after, with follow-ups at one and four weeks. The study assesses tolerability, feasibility, symptom severity, and brain imaging to inform a larger definitive trial.

Probing the functional magnetic resonance imaging response to psilocybin in functional neurological disorder (PsiFUND): study protocol.

Wellcome open research January 1, 2024 Matt Butler, Catherine Bird, Carolina Maggio et al. 4 citations

Functional neurological disorder (FND) causes seizures and movement disorders, is debilitating, and often has a poor prognosis. Brain imaging suggests FND involves multiple networks, and mechanisms like dissociation and abnormal motor agency may play a role. Psychedelics disrupt brain networks and are being tested for neuropsychiatric disorders. This open-label neuroimaging study will give 25 mg oral psilocybin with psychological support to 24 people with chronic FND. Resting-state and task-based fMRI, plus measures of interoception, somatisation, and dissociation, will be collected before and after psilocybin, with three-month follow-up. The study aims to probe FND mechanisms and assess safety and feasibility of psychedelic administration in this population.

Probing the functional magnetic resonance imaging response to psilocybin in functional neurological disorder (PsiFUND): study protocol

Wellcome Open Research April 22, 2025 Matthew Butler, Catherine Bird, Carolina Maggio et al. 3 citations

Functional neurological disorder (FND) is a common, debilitating condition linked to abnormal brain networks, dissociation, interoception, and motor agency. This open-label neuroimaging protocol will administer 25 mg of oral psilocybin with psychological support to 24 people with chronic FND. Resting-state and task-based functional MRI sequences will be compared before and after psilocybin. Additional measures include interoception, somatisation, illness perceptions, suggestibility, and dissociation. Participants will be followed for three months. The study aims to probe mechanisms underlying FND and assess the safety and feasibility of psychedelic administration with psychological support in this population.

Psilocybin and Motor Function: A Triple‐Blind, Dose‐Finding Study in Healthy Participants

Psychiatric Research and Clinical Practice July 23, 2024 Chiranth Bhagavan, Richard Kanaan, Olivia Carter et al. 2 citations

A protocol for the first study testing whether movement tasks can be performed safely while under the influence of psilocybin. Twelve healthy participants will each receive three different doses (5 to 20 mg) in a randomized, blinded order at least one week apart. Motor function, safety, brain activity via fMRI, and subjective experience will be measured during the acute drug effects. The study aims to inform future research combining psychedelics with motor retraining for conditions involving motor dysfunction.

Psychedelics in functional disorders: A scoping review

Progress in Neuro-Psychopharmacology and Biological Psychiatry February 10, 2026 Chiranth Bhagavan, Olivia P. Carter, Alexander Bryson et al. 1 citation

Functional disorders, where symptoms lack an organic explanation, are difficult to treat with existing therapies. This review of 55 studies found that classic psychedelics, particularly LSD in older studies and psilocybin in newer trials, show potential for treating these conditions. 60.7% of studies reported improvement, primarily for functional neurological symptoms. However, the evidence is limited by mostly observational designs, few control groups, and a lack of long-term data. Adverse events included acute psychological and physical effects, and transient worsening of functional symptoms. Future research needs standardized protocols and better safety assessments.

A Randomised, Triple-Blind, Dose-Finding Study of the Impact of Psilocybin on Motor Function in Healthy Participants

medRxiv December 23, 2025 Chiranth Bhagavan, O. Carter, Glenn Nielsen et al. 1 citation

Movement tasks such as walking, reaching, and dexterity tests were feasible for healthy volunteers who took psilocybin doses up to 15 mg. At 20 mg, impairments appeared in tasks that combined movement with cognitive demands, such as the Box and Block Test and Digit Symbol Substitution Test. Nausea (62% of participants) and headache (54%) were the most common adverse events; no serious adverse events occurred. Participants and physiotherapists guessed the dose correctly only about half the time, indicating adequate blinding. These results suggest that psilocybin-assisted physical rehabilitation may be safe and feasible for future trials in people with movement disorders.

Psilocybin’s kinematic effect on manual dexterity

Psychopharmacology June 17, 2026 Pierre Klintefors, Chiranth Bhagavan, Richard Kanaan et al.

Low to moderate doses of psilocybin (5–20 mg) do not meaningfully disrupt manual dexterity or hand coordination in healthy adults. In a blinded trial, participants showed a modest biphasic dose-response pattern at higher doses (10–20 mg): slight impairment during peak effects and slight improvement 4.5 hours after administration, but effect sizes were small compared to baseline variability. Kinematic analyses found no substantial changes in movement smoothness or velocity, and the latent coordination structure remained stable, though finger movements showed a subtle increase in complexity. These results support the feasibility of combining psilocybin with active motor rehabilitation.

Sustained Effects of Low-to-Moderate Doses of Psilocybin on Brain Connectivity

medRxiv Preprint Server April 17, 2026 Chiranth Bhagavan, Orwa Dandash, Olivia Carter et al. preprint

Psilocybin, a classic psychedelic, acutely alters brain functional connectivity, and these changes are linked to therapeutic doses and subjective effects. Some evidence indicates that such changes persist beyond the acute drug administration period. However, the effects of lower doses on sustained connectivity changes remain unclear.