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Bruno Spinosa de Martinis

Universidade de São Paulo

3 papers in the library · 294 citations · publishing 2009-2020

Papers

Seeing with the eyes shut: Neural basis of enhanced imagery following ayahuasca ingestion

Human Brain Mapping September 16, 2011 Dráulio Barros de Araújo, Sidarta Ribeiro, Guillermo Cecchi et al. 241 citations

Ayahuasca, a hallucinogenic brew containing serotonergic agonists and reuptake inhibitors, triggers vivid visual imagery during ceremonies. Using functional magnetic resonance imaging while participants performed a closed-eyes imagery task, the brew produced a robust increase in activation across occipital, temporal, and frontal brain areas. In the primary visual area, activation levels matched those of natural image viewing with eyes open. This effect correlated with individual perceptual changes measured by psychiatric scales. Activity in areas BA30 and BA37, linked to episodic memory and contextual associations, was also potentiated. Modulation of BA10, involved in prospective imagination and working memory, was detected. The findings suggest Ayahuasca seeings arise from an extensive network for vision, memory, and intention, lending a sense of reality to inner experiences.

Disposition of MDMA and Metabolites in Human Sweat Following Controlled MDMA Administration

Clinical Chemistry January 23, 2009 Allan J. Barnes, Bruno Spinosa de Martinis, David A. Gorelick et al. 38 citations

In a controlled study, 15 healthy volunteers with prior MDMA use received placebo, low (1.0 mg/kg), and high (1.6 mg/kg) oral doses of MDMA in random order while wearing sweat patches for up to 7 days. MDMA was the main substance found in 59.7% of patches, with concentrations up to 3007 ng/patch; its metabolite MDA appeared in 29.4% of patches at lower levels, while other metabolites were undetected. At the 25-ng/patch threshold, 35% of patches were positive for MDMA. Sweat testing reliably detects MDMA use, but high variability in excretion means results should be interpreted qualitatively, not quantitatively.

Investigation of Ayahuasca β-Carboline Alkaloids and Tryptamine in Sweat Samples from Religious Community Participants by GC-MS

Journal of Analytical Toxicology January 21, 2020 Lidiane Silva Tavares, Fernanda Monedeiro, Dayanne Mozaner Bordin et al. 15 citations

Sweat can be used to detect the main active components of ayahuasca—harmine, harmaline, and N,N-dimethyltryptamine (DMT)—during religious rituals. A solid-phase extraction method under basic conditions showed high selectivity and extraction efficiency above 70%, with accuracy between 87.5 and 102.4% and precision below 10%. Detection limits were 15 ng/patch for harmine and harmaline and 10 ng/patch for DMT. Sweat offers a non-invasive, simple collection alternative that does not disrupt rituals, making it a viable matrix for monitoring ayahuasca use.