Neurocase
March 4, 2018
Vilayanur S. Ramachandran, Chaipat Chunharas, Zeve Marcus et al.
63 citations
A person with an amputated leg and phantom-limb pain experienced organized sensations in their phantom when a volunteer's foot was placed on or near it. Mirror-visual-feedback and phantom massage reduced the pain. Pairing psilocybin with mirror-visual-feedback produced synergistic effects, completely eliminating phantom-limb pain and reducing paroxysmal episodes. Touching the volunteer's leg where the person previously had external fixators evoked a sensation of nails boring through the leg; using a telescoping nail created an illusion of nail removal with corresponding pain relief. Artificial flames produced warmth in the phantom.
Pain
September 5, 2022
Matthew Lyes, Joel Castellanos, Timothy Furnish et al.
55 citations
Three individuals with chronic neuropathic pain, unresponsive to standard treatments and impairing quality of life, self-administered low doses of psilocybin. Despite differences in pain origin and preparation potency, all three achieved substantial pain relief without experiencing a psychedelic state or significant side effects. The analgesic effect was enhanced when combined with functional exercise, and in one case, repeated dosing appeared to increase relief, hinting at a possible long-term plasticity-mediated effect. The patients also reduced their reliance on conventional pain medications. These observations suggest psilocybin's therapeutic potential for chronic pain deserves further study.
Regional Anesthesia & Pain Medicine
August 5, 2024
Harman Chopra, Shravani Durbhakula, Alexander Shustorovich et al.
8 citations
A systematic review of 28 studies on psilocybin for chronic pain management found that most evidence is low or very low quality (76.2% of studies). Several moderate-to-low-quality studies used a 0.14 mg/kg dosing protocol. The results suggest promise for psilocybin in relieving chronic pain, but methodological weaknesses and a lack of high-quality evidence highlight the need for further research with standardized protocols.
Pain Medicine
December 10, 2024
Christopher L. Robinson, Pawan Solanki, S Snyder et al.
Psychedelics such as LSD and psilocybin primarily act as 5HT2A receptor partial agonists, influencing mood, perception, and decision-making. Research suggests they can promote synaptic growth, release oxytocin, and exhibit anti-inflammatory effects. MRI studies indicate psilocybin disrupts connections between the anterior hippocampus and the default mode network, potentially explaining therapeutic effects. From 2015 to 2020, psychedelic use among people over age 12 in the United States increased by over 40%, with over 7.1 million reporting use between 2019 and 2020. Despite this, formal training on psychedelics in medical education remains limited. The report outlines a proposed curriculum to prepare future clinicians for integrating psychedelics into practice, emphasizing the need for education on mechanisms, therapeutic uses, risks, and legal considerations.