European neuropsychopharmacology : the journal of the European College of Neuropsychopharmacology
March 1, 2024
Marcelo Falchi-Carvalho, Isabel Wießner, Sérgio Ruschi B Silva et al.
25 citations
Inhaled N,N-Dimethyltryptamine (DMT) produces dose-dependent increases in the intensity, positive valence, and perceptual effects of subjective experiences, with only mild, transient, and self-limited increases in blood pressure and heart rate. No changes in safety blood biomarkers or serious adverse events occurred. The acute effects last around 10 minutes, offering a potentially cost- and time-effective alternative to longer-acting oral psychedelics for clinical use in mood disorders. This open-label, single-ascending, fixed-order, dose-response study in 27 healthy volunteers tested five dose pairs (5/20 mg through 15/60 mg) of inhaled DMT (BMND01 candidate).
European neuropsychopharmacology : the journal of the European College of Neuropsychopharmacology
June 17, 2025
Isabel Wießner, Marcelo Falchi-Carvalho, Sophie Laborde et al.
7 citations
Inhaled vaporized DMT (60 mg) produces profound altered states of consciousness and is safe and well-tolerated in healthy adults. In a randomized, double-blind, placebo-controlled crossover trial with 25 participants, DMT significantly increased subjective intensity and most measures on the 5D-ASC, HRS, and MEQ questionnaires compared to an active placebo (0.6 mg DMT). Physiological parameters such as blood pressure and heart rate rose transiently within safe limits. Adverse events were predominantly mild and temporary. Biochemical changes were not clinically relevant. Physiological increases correlated with subjective experiences, suggesting a link between bodily responses and the psychedelic state.
Journal of Psychopharmacology
December 4, 2025
Natan Silva-Costa, Jéssica Andrade Pessoa, Kátia Cristina Andrade et al.
Ayahuasca produces profound changes in perception, cognition, and emotion, including mystical experiences and altered mind-wandering, while decreasing global alpha brain oscillations and increasing frontomedial delta and right posterior theta and beta. Lower theta during the experience is linked to stronger mystical experiences, and higher alpha is associated with less thought about nothing. Baseline brain activity before taking ayahuasca can predict some subjective effects: lower baseline theta predicts stronger bodily awareness and interoception, and lower baseline beta predicts greater positive emotionality.