Frontiers in Molecular Biosciences
February 18, 2026
Gabriella de Souza Gomes Ribeiro, Beatriz Aparecida Passos Bismara Paranhos, Fabiane Dörr et al.
1 citation
Even modest increases in DMT exposure from ayahuasca may intensify serotonergic effects in individuals taking SSRI antidepressants, suggesting a clinically relevant interaction. The study provides a mechanistic and quantitative framework for assessing interaction risks between ayahuasca alkaloids and SSRIs, supporting clinical decision-making and harm-reduction strategies where controlled drug-drug interaction studies are not feasible.
Psychiatry and clinical neurosciences
May 30, 2026
Nathalia Novaretti, Rebeca Mendes P Pessoa, Jaime Eduardo Cecílio Hallak et al.
Oral ketamine shows a favorable short-term safety profile across a range of uses, including depression, chronic pain, and pediatric sedation, based on a systematic review of 18 randomized controlled trials involving adults, children, and healthy volunteers. Adverse effects were predominantly mild and transient; in depression studies (427 participants), effects were mild, and pediatric premedication trials (239 participants) reported transient neurological effects without significant safety concerns. Pain and experimental studies (372 participants) showed mostly mild adverse events, with dissociative symptoms at higher doses. Dizziness, sedation, and dissociation were more common with ketamine, while serious adverse events were rare. However, the certainty of evidence is low, and long-term safety remains uncertain.