The Acute Effects of the Atypical Dissociative Hallucinogen Salvinorin A on Functional Connectivity in the Human Brain
Scientific Reports October 2, 2020 Manoj K. Doss, Darrick G. May, Matthew W. Johnson et al. 52 citations
Salvinorin A, a κ-opioid receptor agonist and dissociative hallucinogen found in Salvia divinorum, alters human brain functional connectivity in ways similar to other hallucinogens. In a placebo-controlled, within-subject fMRI study, inhaled Salvinorin A tended to decrease functional connectivity within brain networks while increasing connectivity between networks, most notably attenuating the default mode network during peak effects. It reduced brainwide dynamic functional connectivity but increased brainwide entropic functional connectivity, though only the reduction survived statistical correction. Connectome-based classification models trained on dynamic connectivity accurately identified Salvinorin A scans, especially when using default mode network interactions. These findings suggest shared neural mechanisms across hallucinogen types.