Anesthesiology
October 1, 2023
Akash Goel, Yeshith Rai, Shayan Sivadas et al.
29 citations
Chronic pain affects about 1.5 billion people worldwide. Current treatments like opioids and non-opioid drugs can cause side effects, addiction, or fail to relieve pain. Psychedelics such as LSD and psilocybin may alter pain perception through serotonin receptor activation, anti-inflammatory effects, and synaptic remodeling. This scoping review identified 21 human studies on psychedelics for pain. Few clinical trials exist, and sample sizes are small, limiting clinical use. Overall, psychedelics show promise for analgesia in certain headache disorders and cancer pain. Future research should examine combining psychotherapy with psychedelics for chronic pain.
PloS one
January 1, 2024
Josh Martin, Fatemeh Gholamali Nezhad, Alice Rueda et al.
2 citations
Ketamine shows rapid antidepressant effects in major depressive disorder, including treatment-resistant depression, but many patients do not respond, and predicting who will benefit is difficult. This study will examine computational mechanisms behind changes in the auditory mismatch negativity response after intravenous ketamine, linking them to neural causes using a hierarchical Bayesian model and a neural mass model. Thirty patients with treatment-resistant depression will undergo EEG recordings during an auditory mismatch negativity task before three of four ketamine infusions, with depression, suicidality, and anxiety assessed throughout. The findings may improve understanding of treatment response and resistance, and model parameters could enable single-patient treatment predictions.
Canadian journal of anaesthesia = Journal canadien d'anesthesie
September 1, 2025
Mindy Lu, Victoria Tucci, Nandana Parakh et al.
Most patients with chronic pain at a Toronto pain clinic were willing to join a clinical trial testing MDMA-assisted therapy for pain relief. Among 42 patients surveyed, 76% expressed willingness to participate in the EASE-Pain trial, which compares MDMA with an active placebo. White/European participants were more likely to be willing than nonwilling. The main motivators were pain relief (62%) and seeking alternatives to ineffective treatments (26%). Common concerns included side effects (43%), impacts on comorbidities (19%), and stigma associated with MDMA (19%). The findings suggest that protocol modifications, such as better patient education on drug effects, may improve trial enrollment and acceptability.