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Kathleen J. Garrison

Friends Research Institute

3 papers in the library · 42 citations · publishing 2015-2019

Papers

Effects of MDMA on socioemotional feelings, authenticity, and autobiographical disclosure in healthy volunteers in a controlled setting

bioRxiv (Cold Spring Harbor Laboratory) June 23, 2015 Matthew J. Baggott, Jeremy Coyle, Jennifer D. Siegrist et al. 21 citations preprint

MDMA produces a prosocial syndrome that facilitates emotional disclosure by increasing feelings of authenticity and decreasing concerns about negative evaluation by others. In a within-subjects double-blind placebo controlled study of 1.5 mg/kg oral MDMA, the drug showed both sedative- and stimulant-like effects, including increased self-report anxiety, but positively altered self-evaluation and reduced social anxiety. MDMA also increased how comfortable participants felt describing emotional memories, consistent with the suggestion that it represents a novel pharmacological class.

Effects of the Psychedelic Amphetamine MDA (3,4-Methylenedioxyamphetamine) in Healthy Volunteers

Journal of Psychoactive Drugs March 15, 2019 Matthew J. Baggott, Kathleen J. Garrison, Jeremy Coyle et al. 20 citations

The drug MDA, an entactogen similar to MDMA (ecstasy), produces longer-lasting emotional and physiological effects than MDMA. In a controlled experiment with healthy volunteers, a single oral dose of 1.4 mg/kg MDA increased heart rate, blood pressure, and stress hormones (cortisol and prolactin) to levels comparable to those from a 1.5 mg/kg dose of MDMA. However, participants' self-reported drug effects from MDA remained elevated for at least 8 hours, whereas MDMA effects subsided by 6 hours. Blood measurements showed that MDA and its metabolite HMA reached peak concentrations of about 229 µg/L and 92 µg/L, respectively. Because the two drugs had similar blood-level profiles, the longer duration of MDA's effects likely stems from differences in how it acts on the brain rather than from slower elimination.

MDMA impairs response to water intake in healthy volunteers

bioRxiv (Cold Spring Harbor Laboratory) Matthew J. Baggott, Kathleen J. Garrison 1 citation preprint

MDMA (ecstasy) use can cause dangerously low blood sodium levels (hyponatremia), especially when people drink too much water. In two double-blind, placebo-controlled studies, healthy volunteers who took MDMA did not show increased levels of the hormone that normally regulates water balance (ADH or copeptin), but their blood sodium dropped more than with placebo when they drank standardized amounts of water. Women tended to have lower baseline sodium, but this did not significantly interact with MDMA. The findings indicate that consuming hypotonic fluids during MDMA use poses a significant risk of hyponatremia, which should be anticipated and managed in clinical and recreational settings.