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Theresa M Carbonaro

Department of Psychiatry and Behavioral Sciences, Johns Hopkins University School of Medicine, Baltimore, MD, USA.

3 papers in the library · 299 citations · publishing 2018-2020

Papers

Double-blind comparison of the two hallucinogens psilocybin and dextromethorphan: similarities and differences in subjective experiences.

Psychopharmacology February 1, 2018 Theresa M Carbonaro, Matthew W Johnson, Ethan Hurwitz et al. 139 citations

Psilocybin and dextromethorphan (DXM) both produce powerful subjective effects, but their experiences differ profoundly. In a double-blind comparison with 20 participants, high doses of both drugs caused similar overall drug effect strength and time-course. Psilocybin uniquely fostered richer, more complex visual experiences—including more movement, brightness, and kaleidoscopic imagery—along with greater mystical-type and psychologically insightful experiences and deeper music absorption. DXM, by contrast, produced stronger feelings of disembodiment, nausea, and light-headedness. Both drugs increased blood pressure, heart rate, and pupil dilation while impairing motor performance and balance.

Double-blind comparison of the two hallucinogens psilocybin and dextromethorphan: effects on cognition.

Psychopharmacology October 1, 2018 Frederick S Barrett, Theresa M Carbonaro, Ethan Hurwitz et al. 109 citations

Classic psychedelics and dissociative hallucinogens may share some neuropsychological effects despite different pharmacology. In a double-blind, placebo-controlled study, 20 hallucinogen users received 10, 20, and 30 mg/70 kg psilocybin, 400 mg/70 kg dextromethorphan (DXM), and placebo across five sessions. Neither drug caused global cognitive impairment. Psilocybin produced dose-dependent effects on psychomotor performance, working memory, episodic memory, associative learning, and visual perception. DXM affected psychomotor performance, visual perception, and associative learning similarly to moderate-to-high psilocybin doses. Psilocybin affected working memory more than DXM, while DXM had greater effects on balance, episodic memory, response inhibition, and executive control.

Subjective features of the psilocybin experience that may account for its self-administration by humans: a double-blind comparison of psilocybin and dextromethorphan.

Psychopharmacology August 1, 2020 Theresa M Carbonaro, Matthew W Johnson, Roland R Griffiths 51 citations

Psilocybin produces stronger positive subjective effects than dextromethorphan (DXM) at comparable peak drug strength, which may explain its higher rates of non-medical use. In a double-blind study of 20 healthy participants with hallucinogen experience, psilocybin (10, 20, 30 mg/70 kg) and DXM (400 mg/70 kg) both increased ratings of overall drug effect, but psilocybin showed dose-related increases in nine domains linked to reinforcing effects—including liking, visual effects, positive mood, insight, social effects, appreciation of beauty, awe, meaningfulness, and mystical experience. For most ratings, the two highest psilocybin doses were significantly greater than DXM, and DXM never exceeded psilocybin. These differences matched participants' desire to take the drug again.