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Christopher Gottschalk

Yale University

4 papers in the library · 182 citations · publishing 2015-2025

Papers

Indoleamine Hallucinogens in Cluster Headache: Results of the Clusterbusters Medication Use Survey

Journal of Psychoactive Drugs October 20, 2015 Emmanuelle A. D. Schindler, Christopher Gottschalk, Marsha J. Weil et al. 104 citations

Cluster headache is one of the most debilitating pain syndromes, and many patients do not respond to standard treatments. A survey of 496 people with cluster headache, recruited from websites and clinics, found that the indoleamine hallucinogens psilocybin, lysergic acid diethylamide, and lysergic acid amide were rated as comparable to or more effective than most conventional medications for aborting attacks and preventing them. These substances were also perceived to shorten or abort a cluster period and bring chronic cluster headache into remission more often than conventional medications. Even infrequent, non-hallucinogenic doses were reported as effective. The findings reinforce the need for further controlled studies of these compounds.

Exploratory investigation of a patient‐informed low‐dose psilocybin pulse regimen in the suppression of cluster headache: Results from a randomized, double‐blind, placebo‐controlled trial

Headache The Journal of Head and Face Pain November 1, 2022 Christina Luddy, Yutong Zhu, Hayley Lindsey et al. 75 citations

In an exploratory randomized, double-blind, placebo-controlled trial, a pulse regimen of three doses of psilocybin (0.143 mg/kg) given about five days apart did not significantly reduce cluster headache attack frequency compared to placebo. Over three weeks, attack frequency changed by −3.2 attacks per week with psilocybin (baseline 9.6) and 0.03 attacks per week with placebo (baseline 8.9), a difference that was not statistically significant. The overall effect size was moderate (d = 0.69), but large in chronic participants (d = 1.25) and small in episodic participants (d = 0.35). Changes in attack frequency were not linked to the intensity of acute psychedelic effects. Psilocybin was well-tolerated with no serious adverse events.

Psilocybin’s Effects on Headache Frequency are Not Related to Acute Psychedelic Effects or Measures of Mental Health: Secondary Analysis of Clinical Trials in Migraine and Cluster Headache (P7-12.001)

Neurology April 7, 2025 Emmanuelle A. D. Schindler, Christopher Gottschalk, Deepak Cyril D’souza 2 citations

In clinical trials of psilocybin for migraine and cluster headache, the strength of acute psychedelic effects did not predict reductions in headache frequency. Improvements in mental health measures were also not consistently linked to headache relief. The findings suggest that the therapeutic benefits of psilocybin on headache disorders may operate through mechanisms separate from its psychedelic or mood-altering properties.

Comparing single‐ and repeat‐dose psilocybin with active placebo for migraine prevention in an exploratory randomized controlled clinical trial

Headache The Journal of Head and Face Pain December 29, 2025 Emmanuelle A. D. Schindler, Christopher Gottschalk, Brian P. Pittman et al. 1 citation

In an exploratory randomized, double-blind, placebo-controlled trial, adults with migraine received either two doses of diphenhydramine placebo, one dose of psilocybin (10 mg) plus one dose of diphenhydramine, or two doses of psilocybin, each separated by 7 days. Over the two weeks after the sessions, the reduction in migraine days per week did not differ significantly among groups, though large effect sizes were seen for those receiving psilocybin. Over eight weeks, all groups showed similar reductions in migraine frequency of about 50%. Diphenhydramine partially mimicked psilocybin's acute effects, but blinding was incomplete. No serious adverse events occurred.