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Jovin Mueller

Psychedelic Research and Therapy Development, Department of Adult Psychiatry and Psychotherapy, Psychiatric University Clinic Zurich, University of Zurich, Zurich, Switzerland.

3 papers in the library · 81 citations · publishing 2023-2024

Papers

Potential therapeutic effects of an ayahuasca-inspired N,N-DMT and harmine formulation: a controlled trial in healthy subjects.

Frontiers in psychiatry January 1, 2023 Helena D Aicher, Michael J Mueller, Dario A Dornbierer et al. 34 citations

A standardized formulation combining the monoamine oxidase inhibitor harmine (100 mg orodispersible tablet) with incremental intranasal N,N-dimethyltryptamine (DMT, up to 100 mg) produced a psychedelic experience in 31 healthy male subjects, as measured by the 5D-ASC rating scale. The experience was characterized by psychological insights, emotional breakthroughs, and low scores on challenging experiences. Participants reported personal and spiritual significance and mainly positive persisting effects at 1- and 4-month follow-ups. No changes in trait personality, psychological flexibility, general well-being, or increases in psychopathology were observed. The formulation appears well tolerated and may support psychotherapy, but further studies in patients are needed.

Overcoming the clinical challenges of traditional ayahuasca: a first-in-human trial exploring novel routes of administration of N,N-Dimethyltryptamine and harmine.

Frontiers in pharmacology January 1, 2023 Dario A Dornbierer, Laurenz Marten, Jovin Mueller et al. 32 citations

Ayahuasca, an Amazonian plant medicine containing DMT and harmine, shows promise for mental health disorders but its oral use causes gastrointestinal side effects and unpredictable drug levels. This study tested new ayahuasca-analogue formulations in 10 healthy men: an oral capsule of purified DMT and harmine versus a combined oromucosal harmine tablet with intranasal DMT spray. The combined buccal/intranasal route significantly reduced variations in systemic exposure and attenuated common side effects like nausea, vomiting, and diarrhea compared to traditional oral ayahuasca. All preparations were well tolerated. This approach may enable safer, patient-friendly DMT/harmine administration for affective disorders.

Meditating on psychedelics. A randomized placebo-controlled study of DMT and harmine in a mindfulness retreat

Journal of Psychopharmacology September 27, 2024 Daniel Meling, Klemens Egger, Jovin Mueller et al. 15 citations

In a double-blind, placebo-controlled study over a 3-day meditation retreat, 40 experienced meditators received either DMT-harmine or a placebo. Those who took DMT-harmine reported greater mystical-type experiences, non-dual awareness, and emotional breakthrough during the acute substance effects, and greater psychological insight one day later after adjusting for baseline differences. Mindfulness and compassion did not differ significantly between groups. At one-month follow-up, the DMT-harmine group rated their experience as more personally meaningful, spiritually significant, and well-being-enhancing than the placebo group. The findings suggest specific synergistic effects of DMT-harmine during meditation.