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Robin von Rotz

4 papers in the library · 163 citations · publishing 2015-2025

Papers

Pharmacokinetics and pharmacodynamics of γ‐hydroxybutyrate in healthy subjects

British Journal of Clinical Pharmacology December 11, 2015 Matthias E. Liechti, Boris B. Quednow, Evangelia Liakoni et al. 57 citations

Gamma-hydroxybutyrate (GHB) produced mixed stimulant-sedative effects in healthy men, with higher doses causing more sedation and dizziness but no changes in heart rate or blood pressure. Plasma exposure to GHB rose disproportionately with dose—a 40% greater increase than expected from dose alone—indicating nonlinear pharmacokinetics. The psychotropic effects were closely tied to plasma concentrations, and no acute tolerance developed over time.

Psilocybin-assisted therapy for relapse prevention in alcohol use disorder: a phase 2 randomized clinical trial

EClinicalMedicine March 14, 2025 Raoul Bitar, Simon Halm, Christina Rossgoderer et al. 42 citations

A randomized controlled trial investigated whether psilocybin-assisted therapy could reduce relapse in patients with alcohol use disorder. The study compared psilocybin therapy against a control condition, finding that the psilocybin group showed a significantly lower rate of heavy drinking days over the follow-up period. The results suggest that psilocybin, when combined with psychotherapy, may be a promising intervention for relapse prevention in alcohol dependence, though further research is needed to confirm these findings.

Gamma-hydroxybutyrate enhances mood and prosocial behavior without affecting plasma oxytocin and testosterone

Psychoneuroendocrinology July 17, 2015 Oliver G. Bosch, Christoph Eisenegger, Jürg Gertsch et al. 42 citations

Gamma-hydroxybutyrate (GHB), a GHB-/GABAB-receptor agonist, produces euphoric, disinhibiting, and vitality-enhancing effects in healthy men. In a randomized, placebo-controlled crossover trial with 16 males, a single 20 mg/kg dose increased charitable donations and prosocial money distributions among participants who initially showed low prosociality. However, GHB did not alter emotion recognition, empathy, theory-of-mind, or basic cognitive functions. The drug raised plasma progesterone levels but left oxytocin, testosterone, cortisol, aldosterone, DHEA, and ACTH unchanged. These findings suggest that GHB's mood and prosocial effects may involve GHB-/GABAB-receptors and progesterone rather than typical social hormones like oxytocin or testosterone.

Neural underpinnings of prosexual effects induced by gamma-hydroxybutyrate in healthy male humans

European Neuropsychopharmacology March 8, 2017 Oliver G. Bosch, Michael M. Havranek, A Baumberger et al. 22 citations

Gamma-hydroxybutyrate (GHB), a drug used for narcolepsy and abused recreationally, has prosexual effects in healthy men. In two double-blind, placebo-controlled experiments, GHB increased subjective sexual arousal and desire, and made sexually neutral images of people seem arousing. Brain scans showed that GHB boosted activity in reward regions like the nucleus accumbens when viewing erotic pictures, and increased connectivity between the nucleus accumbens and the ventromedial prefrontal cortex. The findings indicate GHB enhances hedonic sexual functioning and lowers the threshold for perceiving erotic cues by sensitizing mesolimbic reward pathways.