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Tamar Glatman Zaretsky

James J. Peters Veterans Affairs Medical Center, New York, NY, USA.

2 papers in the library · 74 citations · publishing 2024-2026

Papers

The Psychedelic Future of Post-Traumatic Stress Disorder Treatment

Current Neuropharmacology January 5, 2024 Tamar Glatman Zaretsky, Kathleen M. Jagodnik, Robert Barsic et al. 73 citations

Post-traumatic stress disorder (PTSD) affects an estimated 12 million U.S. adults, and many remain symptomatic despite standard psychological and pharmacological treatments. Psychedelic compounds—including psilocybin, LSD, DMT, ayahuasca, MDMA, and ketamine—are being studied as potential therapies. This comprehensive review summarizes current PTSD treatments and their shortcomings, then examines clinical studies of psychedelic-assisted therapy for PTSD and related disorders. For each drug, the review covers history, psychological and somatic effects, pharmacology, and safety, along with proposed mechanisms for trauma treatment. It concludes with future directions to maximize therapeutic benefit and minimize risk for individuals and communities affected by trauma.

Balancing Innovation and Evidence: Reflections on Structured Protocols in MDMA-Assisted Therapy Versus a Principle-Guided, Patient-Directed Approach

Psychedelic Medicine March 10, 2026 Amy Lehrner, Miryam Sperka, Lauren Lepow et al. 1 citation

MDMA-assisted therapy for post-traumatic stress disorder has shown strong clinical effects, high response rates, and low dropout when using a principle-guided, patient-directed model that includes nondrug preparatory and integrative sessions. This perspective argues that embedding MDMA into highly structured, manualized cognitive-behavioral treatment protocols may misapprehend the therapy's synergistic nature, blunt its transformative effects, and potentially cause harm. The field should prioritize research on real-world evidence, treatment optimization, and mechanisms of action of this distinct patient-directed model rather than immediately adapting existing protocols.