by Maia Szalavitz
December 07, 2012
from
HealthLand.Time Website
Suspended for decades after controversial results, research on the
hallucinogen
Psilocybin
is showing early promise in a new series of
small studies.
In research presented at the annual meeting of the American
College of Neuropsychopharmacology (ACNP), scientists
highlighted the latest findings on the use of psilocybin, the
synthetic version of the active compound in “magic mushrooms,” as a
treatment for anxiety in terminal cancer patients, in smoking
cessation and as a treatment for alcoholism.
Some of the studies are not complete and have not yet been reviewed
by other experts, but they provide new information on psilocybin’s
effects.
Psilocybin is the active ingredient in
over 100 species of mushrooms in the Psilocybe class, used for
hundreds of years in
shamanic ceremonies and other rituals in South
America.
Research conducted during the 1950s and early ’60s into possible
therapeutic uses of drugs like LSD, another hallucinogen, and
psilocybin suffered from their popularity in the counterculture of
the time, which led to both the ban of recreational use of
psilocybin and an end to virtually all the medical studies on its
effects on people.
Early studies suggested the compounds
might help to fight addictions and ease end-of-life fears.
Pharmacologists continued to study the drugs, however, primarily in
animal models, leading to the recognition in the 1950s that LSD was
similar to the brain chemical
serotonin (indeed, LSD was later found
to act on certain serotonin receptors) and providing one of the
first hints that drugs could affect behavior by affecting particular
brain chemicals.
“[So] much of modern neurobiological
chemistry results from studying psychedelics,” said Dr. Charles
Grob, director of child psychiatry at Harbor-UCLA Medical
Center, who is studying the effects of psilocybin on anxiety in
terminal cancer patients.
In Johns Hopkins’ ongoing program of
psilocybin research, scientists have treated over 150 volunteers in
350 drug-trial sessions.
Although many participants experienced
at least some type of anxiety reaction while on the drug, none of
them reported lasting harm, and 70% rated the experience as one of
the top five most meaningful events of their lives, comparable to
the birth of a first child or the loss of a parent.
Like previous psychedelic experimenters, today’s volunteers often
report profoundly mystical experiences.
But modern researchers are far more
careful about documenting what the drugs actually do, avoiding the
exaggerated claims of early pioneers in the field (including Harvard
University’s Timothy Leary), which led to more skepticism and
criticism than productive investigation.
UCLA’s Grob studied 12 cancer patients with end-stage
disease, ages 18 to 70, all of whom were highly anxious in facing
death.
They were given preparatory therapy
sessions so that they would know what to expect while under the
influence of psilocybin and then had two sessions a month apart, one
with a placebo and one with psilocybin.
The vitamin
niacin was used in a high
dose as the placebo because it produces a physiological sensation of
burning or itching on the face that is harmless but produces some
“drug” effect.
During their drug sessions, participants listened to music on
headphones in a hospital room that had been upgraded with fresh
flowers and more colorful furnishings than the typical sterile
decor. They were asked to bring pictures of their loved ones and of
important life occasions or experiences as well.
During the sessions, therapists sat with
them but did not direct them to reflect on anything in particular
and only monitored the session and helped them to calm down if they
became anxious.
“Nobody had a significant anxiety
reaction or ‘bad trip,’” Grob reported, citing data he published
in the Archives of General Psychiatry on the research in 2011.
Six months later, participants showed
significant reductions in depression symptoms.
Curiously, however, although they didn’t
report actually feeling anxious less of the time, they no longer
considered themselves as being overly anxious or worried people.
The studies on smoking cessation and on alcoholism have only just
begun, but they show encouraging results in a small group of
volunteers.
Says Paul Kenny, associate
professor of neuroscience at the Scripps Research Institute in
Florida and a member of the program committee for the ACNP meeting:
“The potential beneficial effects of
psilocybin on addiction is an important question that should
[be] thoroughly explored. Nevertheless, it is important to sound
a note of caution.
Psilocybin is unlikely to be used to
treat addiction. As with other hallucinogenic drugs, it can have
worrying side effects such as psychological distress or even
psychosis.”
He adds,
“Nevertheless, the renaissance in
psilocybin research suggests that if we can understand the
biological mechanisms underlying its therapeutic actions, then
it may be possible to develop a new generation of drugs that
lacks the notable hallucinogenic properties of psilocybin but
that retains its beneficial effects.
This assumes, of course, that the
therapeutic and psychoactive properties of psilocybin can indeed
be separated.”
It remains to be seen, however, whether
that will be possible.
Kenny thinks it could be, noting that
the drug is relatively “promiscuous” and activates multiple brain
receptors but only causes hallucinatory effects by one of those
actions.
But in psychedelic therapy, it could
alternatively turn out that the psychological experience of the mind
is what matters for the brain changes seen after taking the drug.
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