Experimental neurology
May 1, 2021
Fabrizio Schifano, Stefania Chiappini, Andrea Miuli et al.
49 citations
Several new psychoactive substances (NPS) can trigger serotonin syndrome, a dangerous condition of excessive serotonin activity marked by altered mental status, neuromuscular effects, and autonomic hyperactivity. A systematic review of three retrospective studies, two case series, and five case reports identified implicated substances including psychedelic phenethylamines (2C-I, 25I-NBOMe, 5-IT) and synthetic cathinones (mephedrone, MDPV, methylone, butylone, NRG3, AMT, MXP), as well as the antidepressant bupropion when misused at high doses or combined with other serotonergic drugs. Most substances were taken orally, though nasal insufflation and sublingual administration occurred. Psychiatric history was negative for most subjects. Clinicians should recognize NPS risks and diagnostic challenges due to undetectability in routine drug screenings.
Pharmaceuticals
December 31, 2022
Antonio Munafò, Davide Arillotta, Guido Mannaioni et al.
15 citations
Psilocybin shows promise as a transdiagnostic treatment for psychiatric disorders, with recent evidence indicating that psychedelic-assisted psychotherapy can provide significant and lasting relief from depressive symptoms. However, existing studies have limitations including small sample sizes, inadequate blinding, short follow-up periods, and highly selected treatment populations. Additional concerns involve practitioner experience, lack of standardized protocols, the legal status of psychedelics, ethical issues, and potential adverse psychological or medical effects. The authors suggest that newer evidence, more precise protocols, and policy changes may clarify psilocybin's therapeutic potential.
Brain sciences
April 22, 2025
Fabrizio Schifano, Stefania Bonaccorso, Davide Arillotta et al.
14 citations
Chemsex involves using drugs like synthetic cathinones, GHB/GBL, ketamine, methamphetamine, and others to enhance and prolong sexual experiences. Stimulants increase sexual arousal, performance, and social interactions; MDMA-like drugs foster emotional closeness; GHB/GBL promotes disinhibition, leading to condomless sex with multiple partners; ketamine facilitates receptive anal intercourse or fisting. Polydrug use can cause serotonergic syndrome, seizures, drug interactions, and sympathomimetic overstimulation, along with psychopathological conditions that may lead to misuse of opioids, gabapentinoids, or antipsychotics. Reducing stigma and providing multidisciplinary medical, psychological, and social support are key to managing these challenges.