Journal of Psychopharmacology
March 20, 2023
Jordan Sloshower, Hamideh Safi-Aghdam, Surbhi Pathania et al.
153 citations
In a small exploratory study, 19 adults with moderate-to-severe major depression received placebo first, then 4 weeks later a single dose of psilocybin (0.3 mg/kg), both embedded in psychotherapy. Depression and anxiety improved after both placebo and psilocybin, with no statistically significant difference between the two conditions. However, antidepressant effect sizes were larger after psilocybin (d′ = 1.02–2.27) than after placebo (d′ = 0.65–0.99), and 66.7% of participants responded and 46.7% remitted following psilocybin. Improvements lasted about 2 months on average. The intensity of mystical-type experience during psilocybin did not correlate with antidepressant effects. The authors conclude that expectancy and therapy effects complicate interpretation but support further study of psilocybin for depression.
Scientific reports
April 17, 2024
Jordan Sloshower, Richard J Zeifman, Jeffrey Guss et al.
56 citations
Psilocybin-assisted therapy improves psychological flexibility, mindfulness, and values-congruent living in people with moderate to severe major depressive disorder, and these improvements are strongly linked to reductions in depression severity. In an exploratory placebo-controlled study, participants received placebo then psilocybin (0.3 mg/kg) four weeks later, with dosing sessions embedded in Acceptance and Commitment Therapy. Psychological flexibility, several facets of mindfulness, and values-congruent living significantly improved after psilocybin and were maintained through week 16. The findings suggest that increasing psychological flexibility may be a key mechanism underlying psilocybin's therapeutic effects.
Journal of Psychopharmacology
June 30, 2023
Jordan Sloshower, Hamideh Safi-Aghdam, Surbhi Pathania et al.
47 citations
A single dose of psilocybin (0.3 mg/kg) doubled electroencephalographic theta power—a marker of neuroplasticity—in the auditory cortex of people with major depressive disorder two weeks later, while placebo produced no such change. Greater increases in theta power correlated with greater reductions in depression symptoms measured by the GRID-HAM-D-17 scale. These results provide evidence that psilocybin can induce sustained changes in human brain plasticity, and the theta-power increase may serve as an EEG biomarker for its antidepressant effects.