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Wim van den Brink

8 papers in the library · 781 citations · publishing 2001-2024

Papers

Instability of the ecstasy market and a new kid on the block: mephedrone

Journal of Psychopharmacology September 8, 2010 Tibor M. Brunt, Anneke Poortman, Raymond J.m. Niesink et al. 217 citations

The ecstasy market in the Netherlands became unstable in 2009, with more than a 50% drop in tablets containing MDMA. A new substance, mephedrone, partially replaced MDMA in tablets sold as ecstasy, at doses between 96 and 155 mg. Based on reports from 70 regular ecstasy users, mephedrone produced enjoyable effects similar to other amphetamine-type stimulants, including MDMA, but unlike MDMA it induced strong cravings in most users. If the unstable market continues, mephedrone may substantially substitute for MDMA, raising health concerns.

Cortical Serotonin Transporter Density and Verbal Memory in Individuals Who Stopped Using 3,4-Methylenedioxymethamphetamine (MDMA or "Ecstasy")

Archives of General Psychiatry October 1, 2001 Liesbeth Reneman, Jules Lavalaye, Ben Schmand et al. 192 citations

MDMA may cause lasting memory problems even after its toxic effects on serotonin neurons in the brain's cortex reverse. The study suggests that damage to memory function from MDMA use can persist over the long term, while the neurotoxic effects on serotonin-producing neurons might be reversible.

Adverse events in clinical treatments with serotonergic psychedelics and MDMA: A mixed-methods systematic review

Journal of Psychopharmacology August 26, 2022 Joost J. Breeksema, Bouwe Kuin, Jeanine Kamphuis et al. 171 citations

A systematic review of 44 clinical studies (34 quantitative, 10 qualitative) involving 598 patients treated with MDMA or serotonergic psychedelics (psilocybin, LSD, ayahuasca) found that treatments were generally well tolerated, though adverse events were often not systematically assessed. Common acute adverse events across diagnoses and compounds included nausea, headaches, and anxiety. Late adverse events included headaches (psilocybin, MDMA), fatigue, low mood, and anxiety (MDMA). One serious adverse event occurred during MDMA administration (increased premature ventricular contractions requiring brief hospitalization); no other events required medical intervention. Qualitative studies suggested that psychologically challenging experiences may be therapeutically beneficial. The authors conclude that adverse events are poorly defined and likely underreported due to study design and sample selection.

Neuroimaging findings with MDMA/ecstasy: technical aspects, conceptual issues and future prospects

Journal of Psychopharmacology March 1, 2006 Liesbeth Reneman, Maartje M. L. de Win, Wim van den Brink et al. 85 citations

Heavy ecstasy (MDMA) use may cause injury to the brain's serotonin system. Neuroimaging techniques like SPECT, PET, and proton magnetic resonance spectroscopy have been used to study this potential neurotoxicity in living humans. The few available studies suggest that heavy users risk reductions in serotonin transporter (SERT) densities in subcortical and possibly cortical brain regions, a marker of serotonin neurotoxicity. These reductions appear dose-dependent and transient, with females possibly more vulnerable than males. Proton magnetic resonance spectroscopy seems less sensitive for detecting ecstasy's neurotoxic effects. Whether lower exposure also leads to SERT loss remains unknown. Most studies are retrospective, providing indirect evidence, so longitudinal studies are needed for definitive conclusions.

Patient perspectives and experiences with psilocybin treatment for treatment-resistant depression: a qualitative study

Scientific Reports February 5, 2024 Alistair Niemeijer, Erwin Krediet, Jeanine Kamphuis et al. 50 citations

Patients with treatment-resistant depression who received psilocybin in a clinical trial described challenges with trust-building and expectation management, the need to navigate intense experiences often guided by music, and a desire for a more comprehensive treatment including multiple psilocybin sessions and sustained therapy. Distrust in mental healthcare generally, but trust in study therapists, was a key subtheme. The findings suggest that optimizing psilocybin treatment for this population requires individualized preparation, investment in trust-building, additional sessions, and access to ongoing psychotherapy with trusted therapists.

Investigating the potential neurotoxicity of Ecstasy (MDMA): an imaging approach

Human Psychopharmacology Clinical and Experimental December 1, 2001 Liesbeth Reneman, Jan Booij, Charles B.l.m. Majoie et al. 50 citations

Human users of MDMA (Ecstasy) may be at risk of developing MDMA-induced neuronal injury. Previously, no methods were available for directly evaluating neurotoxic effects in the living human brain, but the development of in vivo neuroimaging tools has begun to provide insights. This review highlights contributions of brain imaging studies on the potential neurotoxic effects of MDMA and functional consequences. An overview of PET, SPECT, and MR spectroscopy studies shows evidence of neuronal injury in MDMA users. Different neuroimaging tools have investigated potential functional consequences of MDMA-induced 5-HT neurotoxic lesions. Brain imaging will play a crucial role in understanding MDMA's short- and long-term effects in the human brain.

A comparative study of the harms of nitrous oxide and poppers using the MCDA approach

Drug Science Policy and Law January 1, 2022 Plinio Ferreira, Adam Winstock, Anne Katrin Schlag et al. 9 citations

Nitrous oxide (laughing gas) and alkyl nitrites (poppers) rank among the least harmful recreational drugs when assessed on 16 criteria including dependence, injury, and economic cost. An expert panel using Multi-Criteria Decision Analysis scored nitrous oxide at 6 and poppers at 5 on a 0–100 overall harm scale, placing them just above magic mushrooms (psilocybin). Nitrous oxide scored higher for dependence, environmental damage, mental impairment, and family adversities; poppers scored higher for injury, drug-related damage, economic cost, and mortality. The findings aim to inform UK policy decisions, as nitrous oxide possession is not currently controlled under the Misuse of Drugs Act.

Psychedelic-assisted therapy for people with gambling disorder?

Journal of Behavioral Addictions March 26, 2024 Pedro Romero, Andrea Czakó, Wim van den Brink et al. 7 citations

Gambling disorder is a severe mental health and behavioral problem with harmful financial, relationship, and mental health consequences. This paper initiates discussion on using psychedelics combined with psychotherapeutic support as a potential treatment option. Recent studies have shown promising results with psychedelic-assisted therapy (PAT) for anxiety, depression, post-traumatic stress disorder, and various substance use disorders. Given similarities in underlying psychosocial and neurobiological mechanisms between gambling disorder and other addictions, the authors suggest PAT could be effective for gambling disorder. The paper underscores the need for further research into its viability and effectiveness.