• Home
  • About OPEN
    • OPEN Foundation
    • Objectives
    • Annual Reports
      • 2011 (pdf)
      • 2010 (pdf)
      • 2009 (pdf)
  • Activities
    • Agenda
    • Overview
    • Mind Altering Science
    • Ayahuasca Symposium
    • ICPR 2012
  • Psychedelics
    • Publications
      • Recent publications
      • By substance
        • 2C-B
        • Ketamine
        • 5-MeO-DMT
        • LSD
        • Ayahuasca
        • MDA
        • DMT
        • MDMA
        • DOB
        • Mescaline
        • DOI
        • Psilocybin
        • DOM
        • Salvinorin A
      • By field
        • Anthropology
        • Psychiatry
        • Chemistry
        • Psychology
        • History
        • Psychopharmacology
        • Medicine
        • Sociology
        • Neuroscience
      • By subject
        • Addiction
        • Depression
        • Altered perception
        • Mystical experiences
        • Anxiety disorder
        • Novel substances
        • Cluster headache
        • PTSD
        • Creativity
        • Safety
    • Videotheque
      • OPEN Videos
      • Documentaries
    • Library
      • Recent book releases
      • Freely available e-books
    • Links
      • Research
      • Informative
      • Databases
      • Politics
      • Other links
  • Support us
    • Donate
    • Volunteer
  • Webshop
  • Contact
     
     
     
     
     
     

Acute, subacute and long-term subjective effects of psilocybin in healthy humans: a pooled analysis of experimental studies

Psilocybin and related hallucinogenic compounds are increasingly used in human research. However, due to limited information about potential subjective side effects, the controlled medical use of these compounds has remained controversial. We therefore analysed acute, short- and longterm subjective effects of psilocybin in healthy humans by pooling raw data from eight double-blind placebo-controlled experimental studies conducted between 1999 and 2008. The analysis included 110 healthy subjects who had received 1–4 oral doses of psilocybin (45–315mg/kg body weight). Although psilocybin dose-dependently induced profound changes in mood, perception, thought and self-experience, most subjects described the experience as pleasurable, enriching and non-threatening. Acute adverse drug reactions, characterized by strong dysphoria and/or anxiety/panic, occurred only in the two highest dose conditions in a relatively small proportion of subjects. All acute adverse drug reactions were successfully managed by providing interpersonal support and did not need psychopharmacological intervention. Follow-up questionnaires indicated no subsequent drug abuse, persisting perception disorders, prolonged psychosis or other long-term impairment of functioning in any of our subjects. The results suggest that the administration of moderate doses of psilocybin to healthy, high-functioning and well-prepared subjects in the context of a carefully monitored research environment is associated with an acceptable level of risk.

Erich Studerus, Michael Kometer, Felix Hasler and Franz X Vollenweider; "Acute, subacute and long-term subjective effects of psilocybin in healthy humans: a pooled analysis of experimental studies"; J. Psychopharmacology, published online 20 September 2010; http://dx.doi.org/10.1177/0269881110382466.

Select your language

OPEN Agenda

MAY
28

28.05.2013 - 02.06.2013
Science and Nonduality Conference - The Science and Mystery of Perception

JUN
04

04.06.2013 20:00 - 23:30
OPEN borrel - East of Eden

Full agenda

Recent publications

Hallucinogen persisting perception disorder: what do we know after 50 years?

Abstract 'Flashbacks' following use of hallucinogenic drugs have been reported for decades; they are recognized in DSM-IV as 'Hallucinogen Persisting Perception Disorder (Flashbacks)', or HPPD. We located...

A possibly sigma-1 receptor mediated role of dimethyltryptamine in tissue protection, regeneration, and immunity

Abstract N,N-dimethyltryptamine (DMT) is classified as a naturally occurring serotonergic hallucinogen of plant origin. It has also been found in animal tissues and regarded as an endogenous trace amine...

In Vivo Imaging of Cerebral Serotonin Transporter and Serotonin 2A Receptor Binding in MDMA and Hallucinogen Users

Context: Both hallucinogens and 3,4-methylenedioxy-methamphetamine (MDMA or “ecstasy”) have direct agonistic effects on postsynaptic serotonin 2A receptors, the key site for hallucinogenic actions....

The NMDA antagonist ketamine and the 5-HT agonist psilocybin produce dissociable effects on structural encoding of emotional face expressions

Rationale Both glutamate and serotonin (5-HT) play a key role in the pathophysiology of emotional biases. Recent studies indicate that the glutamate N-methyl-D-aspartate (NMDA) receptor antagonist ketamine...
  • 1
  • 2
  • 3
  • 4
  • 5
  • 6
  • 7
  • 8

User Panel

  • Forgot your password?
  • Forgot your username?
  • Create an account