Translational Psychiatry
April 4, 2017
Felix Mueller, Claudia Lenz, Patrick C. Dolder et al.
124 citations
Lysergic acid diethylamide (LSD) reduces reactivity in the left amygdala and right medial prefrontal cortex when processing fearful faces, compared to a placebo. In a double-blind, randomized, crossover study, 20 healthy adults received either 100 μg of LSD or a placebo before undergoing functional magnetic resonance imaging (fMRI). Plasma LSD levels were measured before and after the scan. A significant negative correlation emerged between the reduced amygdala response to fearful stimuli and the subjective drug effects reported by participants. These findings indicate that LSD alters the engagement of brain regions involved in emotional processing.
Neuroscience & Biobehavioral Reviews
December 30, 2015
Felix Mueller, Claudia Lenz, Markus Steiner et al.
68 citations
Moderate use of MDMA (ecstasy) shows no convincing evidence of structural or functional brain alterations in neuroimaging studies. A review of 19 studies, each involving subjects with fewer than 50 lifetime episodes or under 100 tablets consumed, found no significant harmful effects. However, the lack of results is linked to high methodological variability in dosages and co-consumption of other drugs, low study quality, and small sample sizes.
NeuroImage Clinical
January 1, 2018
Felix Mueller, Francesco Musso, Markus K. London et al.
65 citations
A subanesthetic dose of S-Ketamine, an NMDAR antagonist, alters resting-state brain connectivity in healthy men. In the executive control network, ketamine increased connectivity with the anterior cingulum and superior frontal gyrus, but these changes did not correlate with clinical symptoms. In the salience network, ketamine decreased connectivity with the calcarine fissure, and this decrease correlated with negative symptoms measured by the PANSS (R² > 0.4). The findings suggest that reduced salience network connectivity may serve as a predictive biomarker for ketamine-induced negative symptoms relevant to schizophrenia research.
Neuroscience Applied
January 1, 2025
Matthias E. Liechti, Peter Gasser, Helena Aicher et al.
16 citations
Switzerland's limited access program for psychedelic/MDMA-assisted therapy, started in 2014 with two physicians, had grown to about 100 physicians by 2024, treating 723 patients (245 with MDMA, 130 with LSD, 348 with psilocybin). Approximately 1660 treatments occurred in 2024, with patients typically receiving 2-4 sessions within 12 months. The program is authorized by the Swiss Federal Office of Public Health for patients with mostly incurable diseases where the substance can alleviate suffering and no alternatives exist or have failed. The article describes the program's history, legal requirements, costs, professional roles, education, patient characteristics, outcomes, and adverse effects, comparing it to similar programs in Canada and Australia.