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https://www.sdentertainer.com/lifes...ing-results-for-treating-ptsd-and-depression/
Magic Mushrooms Show Promising Results for Treating PTSD and Depression
By Austin Schoonmaker | February 10, 2019
Psilocybin, the psychoactive compound found in magic mushrooms, has been shown to be highly effective in treating post-traumatic stress disorder (PTSD) and depression. Psilocybin has long been utilized by those wishing to expand their spiritual revelation through the psychedelic journey it provides, but now, scientists are beginning to explore the unique relationship it has with our brains, and how it can be used as an effective treatment for mental health patients.
According to a 2013 study conducted at the University of South Florida, psilocybin has a profound effect in stimulating what is known as neurogenesis. This phenomena results in the growth and repair of brain cells in the hippocampus, which is said the be the center of emotion in memory in our brains.
In the study, researchers strived to understand the effect psilocybin has on the brain. To do this, researchers trained lab mice to be afraid of an auditory tone, followed by an electric shock using conditioning. Over time, the mice developed a fear of the tone, as they understood that it would be followed with an electric shock. The mice’s exhibited level of fear was documented by researchers, with some mice remaining immobile for prolonged periods of time, essentially stuck in a fear response. These responses were much like how veterans with PTSD would react to certain stimulus that trigger traumatic memories.
Photo by Timothy Dykes on Unsplash
Once the groups of mice were conditioned to fear this auditory tone, researchers split the mice into three groups. One group would be injected with low doses of psilocybin, another with a high dose, while the third group was injected with an inert saline solution. The three groups of mice were then reintroduced to the auditory tone to see how well they could relinquish their fear. Of the three groups, the one which received a low-dose of psilocybin were most successful in overcoming their fears.
This study is exceptional in that it provides compelling evidence in the effectiveness of psilocybin being used for alternative forms of therapy for those who suffer from PTSD. About 11-20 out of every 100 veterans suffer from PTSD. Non-veterans in the U.S. also suffer from PTSD, often stemming from a life experience involving serious accidents, life-threatening illness, physical or sexual abuse, or natural disasters. PTSD can be easily triggered with a memory or stimulus, causing intense fear and anxiety, and can be extremely debilitating.
Already, there are several trials taking place across the country utilizing psilocybin for treating PTSD and depression. Organizations like the Multidisciplinary Association for Psychedelic Studies are championing the study and use of psychedelic compounds like psilocybin in treating psychiatric disorders. The time of prohibition for the use of psychedelic compounds for medical treatment is nearing the end, and the potential it shows for treating patients gives us a glimpse of a promising future.
____________________
https://www.businessinsider.nl/john...al-schedule-5-2018-10?international=true&r=US
A team of Johns Hopkins researchers is calling for magic mushrooms to be made legally available as medicine
Erin Brodwin 11 Oct 2018 162
Foto: Shutterstock
But earlier this year, some of the leading researchers at Johns Hopkins University – people who’ve pioneered some of the highest-caliber studies on psychedelics’ therapeutic mental health potential – suggested that’s what should happen for a drug derived from magic mushrooms.
In a recent article published in the medical journal Neuropharmacology, four preeminent psychiatrists wrote that psilocybin, the active ingredient in magic mushrooms, should be placed in the most lenient category by the Drug Enforcement Administration and made legally available through clinicians, pending final data from several ongoing clinical trials.
In essence, they argue, the potential benefits presented by psilocybin outweigh its possible harms.
The available evidence suggests they’re correct.
Although the DEA currently considers psilocybin a Schedule I drug “with no medical use,” the past decade has seen a resurgence of research on psychedelics’ therapeutic possibilities for treating psychiatric diseases like anxiety and depression. A large recent survey also suggested that magic mushrooms could be among the safest recreational drugs.
That suggests to several experts – including the authors of the recent article – that psilocybin should be handled differently than, say, heroin or bath salts (other Schedule I drugs).
“It is the opinion of the authors of this review that the original placement of psilocybin was the result of a substantial overestimation of the risk of harm and abuse potential,” they wrote.
The authors included Johns Hopkins University School of Medicine professors of psychiatry Matthew Johnson, Roland Griffiths, and Jack Henningfield; as well as Peter Hendricks, an associate professor of psychiatry at the University of Alabama at Birmingham’s School of Public Health.
A resurgence of interest in psychedelics as medicine
Foto: sourceDaiana Lorenz/Youtube
Over the past several years, a handful of studies have suggested that psychedelic drugs like psilocybin could help treat a range of mental illnesses, including anxiety, depression, drug addiction, and PTSD.
One of those studies – a clinical trial published in the Journal of Psychopharmacology in 2016 – was written by Griffiths and Johnson, two authors of the recent piece outlining why psilocybin should be made medically available. Griffiths’ and Johnson’s seminal work concluded that in people with a terminal cancer diagnosis, a single high dose of psilocybin appeared to help pull them out of severe depression and anxiety. On a press call after the study came out, Griffiths likened the treatment to “a surgical intervention” for the mental illnesses.
Since then, research into drugs like LSD, ecstasy, ketamine, and marijuana (which many experts consider to have psychedelic properties) has abounded. Last year, a study suggested that ecstasy could help veterans cope with PTSD symptoms. Another recent paper hinted that ketamine could be used to curb severe depression. Several more recent studies of psilocybin have suggested it might help treat obsessive-compulsive disorder as well.
“At this point, the data suggest that the potential therapeutic benefits of psilocybin-assisted therapy are real, and of potential medical and public health significance,” the four authors wrote in their recent article.
The findings on psychedelics are also garnering the attention of investors and tech moguls. Just last month, German entrepreneur Christian Angermeyer launched a new biotech company called Atai with the mission of backing more psychedelic mental health research. Compass Pathways, a research startup studying and producing psilocybin for depression, recently attracted backing from tech magnate Peter Thiel.
But the legal classifications of these drugs not be keeping adequate pace with the research or the investments.
‘Replacing fear and misinformation with scientifically based facts’
Despite the ongoing research, neither the Food and Drug Administration nor the DEA has announced an intent to reschedule psilocybin or any other psychedelic. But such a move could happen. It did recently with marijuana.
In June, the FDA approved the first medicine made with a compound from cannabis. Called Epidiolex, the drug treats two rare forms of epilepsy using CBD, a marijuana compound that’s not responsible for a high. As a result of the FDA’s green light, the DEA was forced to reclassify CBD.
“We don’t have a choice on that,” DEA public affairs officer Barbara Carreno told Business Insider in June. “It absolutely has to become Schedule 2, 3, 4, or 5.”
So this September, the DEA officially shifted its stance on marijuana for the first time in 46 years by putting CBD in Schedule 5 alongside substances like cough syrup and sleep aids – all drugs that the agency considers at the lowest risk of abuse or harm.
In their article on psilocybin, the authors write that it too should be placed in Schedule 5, pending its approval as a medicine. Some experts say that could happen as soon as 2027.
“Schedule I is for substances with a high potential for abuse, lack of therapeutic approval, and that cannot be used safely in medicine,” they write. “History of use and available scientific data show that the first criterion is questionable, and the third criterion is likely not true.”
Meanwhile, the research on psilocybin is continuing to blossom. Clinical trial results from Compass are expected before 2020; researchers at the University of California, San Francisco are currently enrolling patients in a study to see whether psilocybin could assist in group therapy to improve the mental health of long-term AIDS survivors; and scientists at New York University aim to study whether psilocybin could be used to treat alcoholism.
Johnson, Griffiths, Henningfield, and Hendricks seem to believe the future of those studies – and psilocybin’s potential – is bright.
“This area of regulatory science has the potential to facilitate innovative therapeutic breakthroughs by replacing fear and misinformation with scientifically based conclusions and facts,” they wrote.
Magic Mushrooms Show Promising Results for Treating PTSD and Depression
By Austin Schoonmaker | February 10, 2019
Psilocybin, the psychoactive compound found in magic mushrooms, has been shown to be highly effective in treating post-traumatic stress disorder (PTSD) and depression. Psilocybin has long been utilized by those wishing to expand their spiritual revelation through the psychedelic journey it provides, but now, scientists are beginning to explore the unique relationship it has with our brains, and how it can be used as an effective treatment for mental health patients.
According to a 2013 study conducted at the University of South Florida, psilocybin has a profound effect in stimulating what is known as neurogenesis. This phenomena results in the growth and repair of brain cells in the hippocampus, which is said the be the center of emotion in memory in our brains.
In the study, researchers strived to understand the effect psilocybin has on the brain. To do this, researchers trained lab mice to be afraid of an auditory tone, followed by an electric shock using conditioning. Over time, the mice developed a fear of the tone, as they understood that it would be followed with an electric shock. The mice’s exhibited level of fear was documented by researchers, with some mice remaining immobile for prolonged periods of time, essentially stuck in a fear response. These responses were much like how veterans with PTSD would react to certain stimulus that trigger traumatic memories.
Photo by Timothy Dykes on Unsplash
Once the groups of mice were conditioned to fear this auditory tone, researchers split the mice into three groups. One group would be injected with low doses of psilocybin, another with a high dose, while the third group was injected with an inert saline solution. The three groups of mice were then reintroduced to the auditory tone to see how well they could relinquish their fear. Of the three groups, the one which received a low-dose of psilocybin were most successful in overcoming their fears.
This study is exceptional in that it provides compelling evidence in the effectiveness of psilocybin being used for alternative forms of therapy for those who suffer from PTSD. About 11-20 out of every 100 veterans suffer from PTSD. Non-veterans in the U.S. also suffer from PTSD, often stemming from a life experience involving serious accidents, life-threatening illness, physical or sexual abuse, or natural disasters. PTSD can be easily triggered with a memory or stimulus, causing intense fear and anxiety, and can be extremely debilitating.
Already, there are several trials taking place across the country utilizing psilocybin for treating PTSD and depression. Organizations like the Multidisciplinary Association for Psychedelic Studies are championing the study and use of psychedelic compounds like psilocybin in treating psychiatric disorders. The time of prohibition for the use of psychedelic compounds for medical treatment is nearing the end, and the potential it shows for treating patients gives us a glimpse of a promising future.
____________________
https://www.businessinsider.nl/john...al-schedule-5-2018-10?international=true&r=US
A team of Johns Hopkins researchers is calling for magic mushrooms to be made legally available as medicine
Erin Brodwin 11 Oct 2018 162
Foto: Shutterstock
- A group of Johns Hopkins University scientists wrote in a recent journal article that psilocybin, the active ingredient in psychedelic magic mushrooms, has a low risk of harm and a high potential as a therapeutic drug.
- There’s been a resurgence of interest lately in psychedelics’ therapeutic potential for a variety of mental health applications, from depression to anxiety.
- Pending results from several ongoing clinical trials, the researchers called for psilocybin to be placed in the most lenient category by the Drug Enforcement Administration – alongside CBD, which was rescheduled last month, and cough syrup.
But earlier this year, some of the leading researchers at Johns Hopkins University – people who’ve pioneered some of the highest-caliber studies on psychedelics’ therapeutic mental health potential – suggested that’s what should happen for a drug derived from magic mushrooms.
In a recent article published in the medical journal Neuropharmacology, four preeminent psychiatrists wrote that psilocybin, the active ingredient in magic mushrooms, should be placed in the most lenient category by the Drug Enforcement Administration and made legally available through clinicians, pending final data from several ongoing clinical trials.
In essence, they argue, the potential benefits presented by psilocybin outweigh its possible harms.
The available evidence suggests they’re correct.
Although the DEA currently considers psilocybin a Schedule I drug “with no medical use,” the past decade has seen a resurgence of research on psychedelics’ therapeutic possibilities for treating psychiatric diseases like anxiety and depression. A large recent survey also suggested that magic mushrooms could be among the safest recreational drugs.
That suggests to several experts – including the authors of the recent article – that psilocybin should be handled differently than, say, heroin or bath salts (other Schedule I drugs).
“It is the opinion of the authors of this review that the original placement of psilocybin was the result of a substantial overestimation of the risk of harm and abuse potential,” they wrote.
The authors included Johns Hopkins University School of Medicine professors of psychiatry Matthew Johnson, Roland Griffiths, and Jack Henningfield; as well as Peter Hendricks, an associate professor of psychiatry at the University of Alabama at Birmingham’s School of Public Health.
A resurgence of interest in psychedelics as medicine
Foto: sourceDaiana Lorenz/Youtube
Over the past several years, a handful of studies have suggested that psychedelic drugs like psilocybin could help treat a range of mental illnesses, including anxiety, depression, drug addiction, and PTSD.
One of those studies – a clinical trial published in the Journal of Psychopharmacology in 2016 – was written by Griffiths and Johnson, two authors of the recent piece outlining why psilocybin should be made medically available. Griffiths’ and Johnson’s seminal work concluded that in people with a terminal cancer diagnosis, a single high dose of psilocybin appeared to help pull them out of severe depression and anxiety. On a press call after the study came out, Griffiths likened the treatment to “a surgical intervention” for the mental illnesses.
Since then, research into drugs like LSD, ecstasy, ketamine, and marijuana (which many experts consider to have psychedelic properties) has abounded. Last year, a study suggested that ecstasy could help veterans cope with PTSD symptoms. Another recent paper hinted that ketamine could be used to curb severe depression. Several more recent studies of psilocybin have suggested it might help treat obsessive-compulsive disorder as well.
“At this point, the data suggest that the potential therapeutic benefits of psilocybin-assisted therapy are real, and of potential medical and public health significance,” the four authors wrote in their recent article.
The findings on psychedelics are also garnering the attention of investors and tech moguls. Just last month, German entrepreneur Christian Angermeyer launched a new biotech company called Atai with the mission of backing more psychedelic mental health research. Compass Pathways, a research startup studying and producing psilocybin for depression, recently attracted backing from tech magnate Peter Thiel.
But the legal classifications of these drugs not be keeping adequate pace with the research or the investments.
‘Replacing fear and misinformation with scientifically based facts’
Despite the ongoing research, neither the Food and Drug Administration nor the DEA has announced an intent to reschedule psilocybin or any other psychedelic. But such a move could happen. It did recently with marijuana.
In June, the FDA approved the first medicine made with a compound from cannabis. Called Epidiolex, the drug treats two rare forms of epilepsy using CBD, a marijuana compound that’s not responsible for a high. As a result of the FDA’s green light, the DEA was forced to reclassify CBD.
“We don’t have a choice on that,” DEA public affairs officer Barbara Carreno told Business Insider in June. “It absolutely has to become Schedule 2, 3, 4, or 5.”
So this September, the DEA officially shifted its stance on marijuana for the first time in 46 years by putting CBD in Schedule 5 alongside substances like cough syrup and sleep aids – all drugs that the agency considers at the lowest risk of abuse or harm.
In their article on psilocybin, the authors write that it too should be placed in Schedule 5, pending its approval as a medicine. Some experts say that could happen as soon as 2027.
“Schedule I is for substances with a high potential for abuse, lack of therapeutic approval, and that cannot be used safely in medicine,” they write. “History of use and available scientific data show that the first criterion is questionable, and the third criterion is likely not true.”
Meanwhile, the research on psilocybin is continuing to blossom. Clinical trial results from Compass are expected before 2020; researchers at the University of California, San Francisco are currently enrolling patients in a study to see whether psilocybin could assist in group therapy to improve the mental health of long-term AIDS survivors; and scientists at New York University aim to study whether psilocybin could be used to treat alcoholism.
Johnson, Griffiths, Henningfield, and Hendricks seem to believe the future of those studies – and psilocybin’s potential – is bright.
“This area of regulatory science has the potential to facilitate innovative therapeutic breakthroughs by replacing fear and misinformation with scientifically based conclusions and facts,” they wrote.
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