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Jitka Bušková

National Institute of Mental Health, Klecany, Czechia.

2 papers in the library · 54 citations · publishing 2020-2021

Papers

The Effects of Daytime Psilocybin Administration on Sleep: Implications for Antidepressant Action

Frontiers in Pharmacology December 3, 2020 Daniela Dudysová, Karolína Janků, Michal Šmotek et al. 37 citations

Psilocybin, a serotonergic psychedelic with antidepressant potential, altered sleep architecture in healthy volunteers the night after administration. In a randomized, double-blinded trial, 20 healthy adults (10 women, ages 28–53) received psilocybin or placebo. Psilocybin prolonged REM sleep latency and showed a trend toward reduced total REM sleep duration, with no changes in NREM sleep or whole-night EEG power spectra. Contrary to expectations, psilocybin suppressed slow-wave activity in the first sleep cycle, providing no evidence for sleep-related neuroplasticity. The findings suggest that psilocybin's antidepressant properties may involve sleep changes, possibly through different mechanisms than those of classical antidepressants.

Could sleep paralysis be pleasant?

Journal of sleep research June 1, 2021 Monika Kliková, Brian A Sharpless, Jitka Bušková 17 citations

About 23% of people with recurrent sleep paralysis report pleasant episodes, though these often include some fear. Pleasant episodes are more likely to involve illusory body movements (vestibular-motor sensations), and some individuals can intentionally induce these hallucinations. The ability to lucid dream and higher openness to new experiences are associated with pleasant episodes. Lower trauma symptoms or higher life satisfaction did not predict pleasant sleep paralysis.