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Benjamin J. Kopecky

University of Colorado Anschutz Medical Campus

1 paper in the library · 3 citations · publishing 2025

Papers

Assessing the Potential Cardiovascular Risk of Microdosing the Psychedelic LSD in Mice

ACS Pharmacology & Translational Science August 22, 2025 Devin P. Effinger, Serena S. Schalk, Jillian L. King et al. 3 citations

Microdosing involves taking psychedelics at doses too low to cause hallucinations, and is popular for supposed cognitive and emotional benefits. Psychedelics bind strongly to 5-HT 2B receptors, which can cause heart disease when chronically activated. In mice, researchers gave either serotonin or d-fenfluramine as positive controls, or low doses of LSD. Serotonin caused significant ventricular thickening at 4 and 8 weeks; d-fenfluramine caused aortic valve regurgitation at 4 weeks. No significant heart changes appeared in any LSD group. LSD, psilocybin, and norfenfluramine had similar affinity and potency at mouse and human 5-HT 2B receptors. Low-dose LSD produced substantial but short-lived receptor activation compared to d-fenfluramine. These data provide no evidence that prolonged low-dose LSD causes heart remodeling in mice.