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Geovan Menezes de Sousa

4 papers in the library · 204 citations · publishing 2018-2022

Papers

Brief mindfulness-based training and mindfulness trait attenuate psychological stress in university students: a randomized controlled trial

BMC Psychology February 1, 2021 Geovan Menezes de Sousa, Geissy Lainny de Lima-Araújo, Dráulio Barros de Araújo et al. 90 citations

Higher trait mindfulness is linked to lower anxiety and perceived stress in university students. A brief mindfulness training reduced anxiety state and perceived stress and increased state mindfulness, while both mindfulness and active control groups showed reduced negative affect and cortisol. Changes in state mindfulness mediated increases in positive affect and decreases in perceived stress and cortisol regardless of trait mindfulness, but anxiety reduction occurred only in those with high trait mindfulness. The results suggest that brief mindfulness interventions can help reduce psychological distress in healthy young students.

The impact of a brief mindfulness training on interoception: A randomized controlled trial

PLoS ONE September 7, 2022 Geissy Lainny de Lima-Araújo, Geovan Menezes de Sousa, Thatiane Aparecida Mendes et al. 64 citations

A brief three-day mindfulness training increased interoceptive sensibility—the self-reported tendency to notice and attend to body signals—in 40 healthy young adults naive to meditation, compared with an active control group. Five of eight subdomains of interoceptive sensibility improved after the training, but interoceptive accuracy (objective performance on a heartbeat-detection task) did not change. The increase in interoceptive sensibility statistically mediated reductions in state anxiety, suggesting a plausible mechanism for the anxiolytic effects of brief mindfulness practices.

Acute effects of ayahuasca in a juvenile non-human primate model of depression

Brazilian Journal of Psychiatry November 21, 2018 Flávia S. Da Silva, Erick Allan Dos Santos Silva, Geovan Menezes de Sousa et al. 46 citations

In a juvenile marmoset model of depression, a single dose of ayahuasca reversed stress-induced hypocortisolemia within 24 hours, reduced stereotypic scratching in males, increased feeding in males, and restored body weight in both sexes, with behavioral effects lasting up to 14 days. Saline vehicle did not produce these effects. The findings suggest ayahuasca may have rapid and sustained antidepressant properties, supporting further research into psychedelics for early-onset depression.

Acute antidepressant effect of ayahuasca in juvenile non-human primate model of depression

bioRxiv (Cold Spring Harbor Laboratory) January 25, 2018 Flávia Santos Da Silva, Erick Allan Dos Santos Silva, Geovan Menezes de Sousa et al. 4 citations preprint

In a juvenile model of depression using common marmosets, a single dose of ayahuasca reversed depressive-like symptoms within 24 hours, including recovery of cortisol levels, reduced stereotypic scratching in males, increased feeding, and restored body weight in both sexes. The effects lasted 14 days. The study suggests ayahuasca produces faster and more durable antidepressant effects than the tricyclic antidepressant nortriptyline, supporting its potential as a treatment for early-age depression.