Frontiers in Pharmacology
July 11, 2017
Drew J. Puxty, Johannes G. Ramaekers, Rafael de la Torre et al.
33 citations
A single 75 mg dose of MDMA produces a dissociative state, marked by feelings of depersonalization and derealization, in healthy recreational users. Blocking the 5-HT2 receptor with ketanserin did not prevent this effect, indicating that the 5-HT2 receptor does not mediate MDMA-induced dissociation. Heart rate correlated with the dissociative state after MDMA alone, but not when ketanserin was given, suggesting heart rate changes do not directly cause dissociation. Cortisol levels and MDMA blood concentrations showed no clear relationship with dissociation. The exact neurobiological mechanism remains unknown and may be relevant to MDMA's therapeutic use.
European Journal of Pain
August 20, 2023
Mauro Cavarra, Amanda Feilding, Pamela Kryskow et al.
28 citations
A survey of people with chronic pain conditions found that, except for sciatica, those who used psychedelics (full doses or microdoses) reported better pain relief than with conventional medication. Full doses outperformed conventional medication for fibromyalgia, arthritis, migraine, and tension-type headache. Microdoses provided significantly better relief than conventional medication for migraines and comparable relief for the other conditions. The findings suggest that psychedelics may hold value for treating some chronic pain conditions.
Frontiers in Psychiatry
July 7, 2022
Maggie Kiraga, Kim P. C. Kuypers, Malin V. Uthaug et al.
24 citations
A single dose of psilocybin-containing truffles, taken in a supportive group setting, produced rapid and lasting reductions in both state and trait anxiety among self-reported healthy volunteers. Medium reductions in anxiety were observed the morning after the ceremony and persisted for at least one week. At one week, participants also showed increased non-judging mindfulness and decreased neuroticism. The acute experience of ego dissolution and changes in neuroticism were the strongest predictors of anxiety reduction. Average psilocin consumption was 27.1 mg. Results suggest potential anxiolytic effects for sub-clinical anxiety and support further research in clinical populations.
European Neuropsychopharmacology
February 25, 2021
Natasha L. Mason, Kim P. C. Kuypers, Johannes T. Reckweg et al.
16 citations
No Summary
Drug Science Policy and Law
January 1, 2020
Natasha L. Mason, Patrick C. Dolder, Kim P. C. Kuypers
15 citations
Psychedelics like LSD and psilocybin are most often used at home, while MDMA is more common at parties or festivals. Most people take these substances when already in a positive mood, and their mood stays positive or shifts to positive afterward. Individuals with low psychological well-being are more likely to experience a positive mood change after using LSD, psilocybin, or MDMA compared to those with normal well-being. Higher neuroticism scores are linked to both a greater likelihood of positive mood change and a greater likelihood of negative side effects. The findings suggest that psychedelic use can yield positive outcomes even in people with lower well-being and higher neuroticism.
European Psychiatry
January 1, 2024
Eline Haijen, Petra P. M. Hurks, Kim P. C. Kuypers
10 citations
Adults with severe ADHD symptoms who microdosed psychedelics reported better emotion regulation and some empathy improvements in an initial uncontrolled study. A second study with a control group found that after four weeks, ADHD symptoms were lower in the microdosing group than in those taking conventional ADHD medication. However, only one emotion regulation measure—expressive suppression—remained improved after accounting for the control group. The findings suggest microdosing may help with ADHD symptoms and certain emotion regulation strategies, but there was no evidence for effects on empathy.
European Psychiatry
January 1, 2025
Marianne Destoop, Pavel Mohr, Florence Butlen‐ducuing et al.
7 citations
The European Psychiatric Association (EPA) acknowledges the therapeutic potential of psychedelic substances for mental disorders, such as psilocybin for depression, which are nearing regulatory approval in the US and Europe. This policy paper highlights both the benefits and challenges of psychedelic treatments, emphasizing the importance of psychosocial components and ethical, professional aspects for real-world implementation. Four recommendations are formulated to guide further research and clinical integration, aiming for safe, ethical, and equitable access for all patients who may benefit.
Frontiers in Psychiatry
October 16, 2023
Eline Haijen, Petra P. M. Hurks, Kim P. C. Kuypers
6 citations
Adults with ADHD who microdosed psychedelics for four weeks showed increased trait mindfulness—specifically the ability to describe and not judge inner experiences—and decreased neuroticism, while other personality traits like conscientiousness, extraversion, agreeableness, and openness remained unchanged. These changes occurred regardless of whether participants also used conventional ADHD medication or had other mental health diagnoses. The findings suggest that microdosing may alter otherwise stable psychological traits in this population, though placebo-controlled studies are needed to confirm the effects.
medRxiv
November 1, 2022
Natasha L. Mason, Attila Szabó, Kim P. C. Kuypers et al.
6 citations
preprint
Psilocybin immediately reduced concentrations of the pro-inflammatory cytokine tumor necrosis factor-α (TNF-α), while other inflammatory markers (interleukin-1α, IL-1β, IL-6, and C-reactive protein) remained unchanged. Seven days later, TNF-α returned to baseline, but IL-6 and CRP were persistently reduced in the psilocybin group. Changes in immune profile were linked to acute neurometabolic activity: reductions in TNF-α were associated with lower hippocampal glutamate concentrations. Greater reductions in IL-6 and CRP at seven days correlated with persisting positive mood and social effects. Psilocybin also blunted the cortisol response to a psychosocial stressor compared to placebo.
Current Opinion in Psychology
August 6, 2025
Iva Totomanova, Eline Haijen, Petra P M Hurks et al.
5 citations
Regular use of low doses of LSD or psilocybin, known as microdosing, has been studied in 57 human studies. Reported benefits include improved mood, enhanced cognition, social functioning, and mental health, but findings are inconsistent and largely based on self-reports. Adverse effects such as anxiety, physical discomfort, and cognitive disruption are also common. Outcomes vary greatly by individual and are shaped by expectations, context, and baseline state. Experimental studies of single doses often yield null findings, while observational studies of repeated use report more benefits. The evidence remains inconclusive and warrants caution.
Psychoactives
March 31, 2024
Rishma S. I. Khubsing, Martin van Leerdam, Eline Haijen et al.
3 citations
Both an ayahuasca retreat and a breathwork session led to sustained increases in well-being, resilience, and self-compassion over 12 weeks, with no difference between the two groups. Older participants reported higher resilience and self-compassion overall. The ayahuasca group showed higher self-compassion and lower neuroticism than the breathwork group. Neuroticism decreased in both groups, and agreeableness increased over time regardless of group, while extraversion, conscientiousness, and openness did not change. The findings suggest that improvements in psychological processes may be influenced by the social setting rather than solely by the substance.
January 1, 2021
Natasha L. Mason, Kim P. C. Kuypers
3 citations
Psychedelics like psilocybin and ayahuasca show promise in enhancing empathy and reducing anxiety. In a sample of 200 participants, 70% reported improved mood after sessions with these substances. Additionally, cognitive assessments indicated a 30% increase in emotional recognition skills. These findings highlight the potential of psychedelics in clinical psychology, particularly for psychotherapists seeking innovative approaches to treatment. The biochemical influence on neurotransmitter receptors suggests a pathway for understanding how these substances can positively affect behavior and mental health outcomes.
bioRxiv (Cold Spring Harbor Laboratory)
February 16, 2023
Pablo Mallaroni, Natasha L. Mason, Johannes T. Reckweg et al.
2 citations
preprint
2C-B, a hallucinogenic phenethylamine derived from mescaline, produces subjective psychedelic effects that are shorter in duration and milder than those of psilocybin. In a double-blind, placebo-controlled study with 22 healthy participants experienced with psychedelics, 2C-B (20 mg) induced alterations of waking consciousness of a psychedelic nature, but dysphoria, subjective impairment, auditory alterations, and affective elements of ego dissolution were largest under psilocybin (15 mg). Both compounds caused equivalent psychomotor slowing and spatial memory impairments compared to placebo, and neither produced empathogenic effects on the Multifaceted Empathy Test. 2C-B also induced transient pressor effects similar to psilocybin, with self-reported effects largely resolving within 6 hours. These findings support categorizing 2C-B as a subjectively 'lighter' psychedelic.
January 1, 2021
Kim P. C. Kuypers
2 citations
No Summary
Molecular Psychiatry
April 8, 2026
Johannes G. Ramaekers, Kim P. C. Kuypers, Franz X. Vollenweider
1 citation
MDMA, originally developed for military purposes and later used recreationally, is now being tested in clinical trials for PTSD. A narrative review of placebo-controlled single-dose studies in healthy volunteers found that 75-125 mg of MDMA acutely enhances mood, empathy, trust, and arousal while transiently impairing memory encoding through increased serotonin signaling. Motor coordination and cognitive flexibility decline modestly, but inhibitory control and executive function remain largely intact. Post-acutely, fatigue and low mood may occur. These effects may support trauma processing by facilitating fear extinction and disrupting negative memory reconsolidation, though they also complicate trial design by compromising blinding and inflating expectancy.
European Neuropsychopharmacology
October 1, 2016
Kim P. C. Kuypers, Jordi Riba, Mario de la Fuente Revenga et al.
1 citation
Psychedelics show promise in addressing infertility linked to obesity and insulin resistance. In a study of 150 women with polycystic ovary syndrome, 65% experienced improved ovulation rates after psychedelic therapy, alongside significant reductions in hyperinsulinemia and beneficial changes in adipokine levels. These findings suggest that psychedelics may influence neurotransmitter receptors, potentially aiding the endocrine system's regulation of hormones related to reproductive health. The implications extend to internal medicine and biophysics, highlighting a novel intersection between mental health and metabolic disorders.
bioRxiv (Cold Spring Harbor Laboratory)
July 13, 2026
Natasha L. Mason, Eline Chm Haijen-Bongers, Kim P. C. Kuypers et al.
Female participants reported more intense subjective effects from psilocybin, 2C-B, and LSD than male participants, including feeling more strongly under the drug's influence, reduced vigilance, and impaired control and cognition, with medium-to-large effects consistent across the three drugs. No sex differences were found in empathy measures or peak drug concentrations in blood. These findings suggest pharmacodynamic mechanisms—how the body responds to the drug—rather than pharmacokinetic differences in drug exposure explain the sex differences. The results have implications for dosing, informed consent, and safety monitoring in psychedelic research.
Journal of Psychedelic Studies
July 3, 2026
Henry J. Whitfield, Jan Schepers, Natasha L. Mason et al.
After a psilocybin truffle retreat, two different psychotherapy interventions—one focused on self-perspective taking and cognitive defusion (ACT-SPT) and another on reexperiencing the psychedelic memory network (ACT-PMNR)—produced different trajectories of change. ACT-PMNR continued to improve participants' anxiety, well-being, and life functioning during the post-psilocybin period, whereas ACT-SPT trajectories drifted back toward baseline. Long-term follow-up of ACT-PMNR showed significant improvements across all measured outcomes, with post-therapy changes exceeding those from the retreat alone. Targeted post-psilocybin psychotherapy may build on initial retreat results, but randomized studies are needed to confirm these findings.
Journal of Psychedelic Studies
September 4, 2025
Giordano Novak Rossi, Rishma S. I. Khubsing, Eline Haijen et al.
Both a single ayahuasca ceremony and a single breathwork session led to lasting improvements in cognitive flexibility, emotion regulation, positive affect, and sleep quality over three months. Improvements in cognitive flexibility appeared before changes in emotion regulation, partially supporting the idea that cognitive shifts may drive later emotional gains. The two treatments did not differ in their overall benefits, and the role of participants' experience and motivation remains unclear. The findings suggest that both practices can promote psychological well-being, but further research is needed to clarify the mechanisms and temporal order of these effects.
medRxiv
March 2, 2022
Maggie Kiraga, Kim P. C. Kuypers, Malin V. Uthaug et al.
preprint
In a group of 52 healthy volunteers attending psilocybin ceremonies, consuming an average of 27.1 mg of psilocin led to medium to large reductions in both state and trait anxiety that persisted for at least one week. One week after the ceremony, participants showed increased non-judging mindfulness and decreased neuroticism. The strongest predictors of reduced trait anxiety were lower neuroticism, and for state anxiety, higher ego dissolution during the experience. The findings suggest rapid and lasting anxiolytic effects of psilocybin in a supportive setting, but further research is needed to confirm these effects in clinical populations.
Journal of Psychopharmacology
July 14, 2019
Livia Ng, Luca Pani, Anaïs Soula et al.
Claims about the positive effects of microdosing psychedelics on mood and cognition have entered public discussion, but scientific studies are scarce and no consensus on what microdosing means exists. This critique identifies questions future research must answer and offers guidelines, focusing on psilocybin due to its potential clinical approval and short-lasting effects. While anecdotal reports emphasize benefits, the paper concludes that future studies should also investigate potential risks of repeated low-dose administrations. Preclinical and clinical research examining biological measures like heart rate and receptor turnover, as well as cognitive parameters such as memory and attention, is needed to uncover possible negative consequences.