arlo 0 #1 July 13, 2006 the quick summary: "there's magic in those mushrooms after all." the article: (http://www.medpagetoday.com/Psychiatry/GeneralPsychiatry/dh/3721) Psilocybin Viewed as Therapy or Research Tool By Michael Smith, MedPage Today Staff Writer Reviewed by Zalman S. Agus, MD; Emeritus Professor at the University of Pennsylvania School of Medicine. July 12, 2006 --------------------------------- MedPage Today Action Points Advise patients who ask that psilocybin is a controlled substance under U.S. law and has serious risks when used as a drug of abuse; in this study a large proportion of participants had a strong or extreme fear response. Note, however, that under controlled conditions, the drug induced powerful mystical feelings that engendered long-term positive effects in terms of mood and sense of well-being. ------------------------------------ Review BALTIMORE, July 12 -- Forty years after the psychedelic drug culture proclaimed that psilocybin induces a profound mystical and spiritual experience, investigators at Johns Hopkins have agreed. There's magic in those mushrooms after all, researchers found in a double-blind trial that found the use of psilocybin can have a "substantial personal meaning and spiritual significance" even months later. In one of the first rigorous studies of hallucinogenic drugs in the past 40 years, the investigators found that 61% of participants taking the drug -- a serotonin-like derivative of the Psilocybe genus of mushrooms -- had a "full mystical experience," as measured on established psychological scales, according to Roland Griffiths, Ph.D., the study's principal investigator. Two-thirds of the 36 participants rated the psilocybin experience as either the single most meaningful experience or among the top five most meaningful experiences of their lives, Dr. Griffiths and colleagues reported in the online issue of Psychopharmacology. Also, the researchers found, 79% of participants reported moderately or greatly increased well-being or life satisfaction two months after taking the drug, compared with those given a placebo at the same test session. Most said their mood, attitudes and behaviors had improved. All of the positive experiences where statistically significant at the P<0.001 level when compared to the placebo responses. "Under very defined conditions, with careful preparation, you can safely and fairly reliably occasion what's called a primary mystical experience that may lead to positive changes in a person," Dr. Griffith said. "It's an early step in what we hope will be a large body of scientific work that will ultimately help people." Possible applications, the researchers said, might be to treat intractable pain, depression, or anxiety. The work might also lead to new insights into the pharmacological and brain mechanisms underlying mystical experiences and the non-medical use or abuse of psilocybin and similar compounds. Psilocybin, a tryptamine alkaloid that acts mainly at serotonin 5-HT2A/C receptor sites, is a Schedule 1 controlled substance. The study was hailed as a "landmark" by Charles Schuster, Ph.D., director of the National Institute on Drug Abuse (NIDA), which funded the research along with the Council on Spiritual Practices. In a commentary accompanying the study, Dr. Schuster said the report shows that "we can objectively study the experiences reported by many to be profoundly spiritual and meaningful," as well as investigating their long-term consequences. He added that agents such as psilocybin might one day be used to treat addiction to other drugs. "Human consciousness in its ever-changing state is a function of the ebb and flow of neural impulses interacting in the various regions of the brain -- the very substrate that drugs such as psilocybin act upon," Dr. Schuster said. "Understanding the brain mechanisms mediating these effects is clearly within the realm of neuroscience and deserves further intensive investigation." Dr. Griffiths and colleagues enrolled 36 mostly university-educated participants from 24 to 64 years old. None had previously used hallucinogenic drugs and more than half were active in churches or other spiritual communities. Thirty of the participants were randomly assigned to get either 30 mg per 70 kg of body weight of psilocybin or 40 mg/70 kg of Ritalin (methylphenidate hydrochloride) in a double-blind, between-group, crossover design. There were two eight-hour drug sessions two months apart, in which the participants remained in a comfortable room, listening to classical music, in the company of a monitor -- a medical professional experienced in observing drug study participants. The remaining six participants had three eight-hour sessions -- one with Ritalin and two with unblinded psilocybin. The intention of the separate group was to obscure the study design to the participants and monitors; the data from the six was not part of the analysis. A limitation of earlier studies has been that investigators and subjects -- knowing who was getting the investigative drug -- created expectations that led to biases in the results, the researchers said. For this study, both participants and monitors were blinded as to which drug was being used -- a process that appeared to work, at least partly: overall, 23% of the sessions were misclassified by the monitors and even the most experienced monitor was wrong about what drug was used 17% of the time. In evaluations after the drug sessions, 11 of the participants rated their "experience of fear" sometime during the drug session to be "strong" or "extreme" after they took psilocybin, the researchers reported. None of the participants had a fear response during the Ritalin sessions. The fears -- which in some cases involved anxiety, dysphoria, or paranoia -- were "readily managed with reassurance" and none of the feelings lasted beyond the drug sessions, Dr. Griffiths and colleagues reported. Dr. Griffiths was quick to distance himself from studies on LSD conducted in the 1960s by then-Harvard faculty member Timothy Leary. "We are conducting rigorous, systematic research with psilocybin under carefully monitored conditions, a route which Dr. Leary abandoned in the early 1960s," he said. He also said it's not yet clear that the brain mechanisms underlying the psilocybin experience are the same as those involved in a spontaneous spiritual epiphany. "That work hasn't been done yet," he said. Quote Share this post Link to post Share on other sites
Amazon 7 #2 July 13, 2006 One pill makes you larger And one pill makes you small And the ones that mother gives you Don't do anything at all Go ask Alice When she's ten feet tall And if you go chasing rabbits And you know you're going to fall Tell'em a hookah smoking caterpillar Has given you the call Call Alice When she was just small When men on the chessboard get up and tell you where to go And you've just had some kind of mushroom And your mind is moving low Go ask Alice I think she'll know When logic and proportion Have fallen sloppy dead And the White Knight is talking backwards And the Red Queen's off with her head Remember what the Dormouse said: "Feed your Head Feed your Head!" Quote Share this post Link to post Share on other sites
licketysplit 0 #3 July 13, 2006 Quotecompared with those given a placebo at the same test session. And they wouldn't have know the the difference? Must of been the colored strobe lights. Quote Share this post Link to post Share on other sites
arlo 0 #4 July 13, 2006 it wouldn't have taken them too long to figure out which they had received....god bless 'em. i'm still trying to figure out why they gave the other group ritalin. sounds like those guys just had a big party. Quote Share this post Link to post Share on other sites
QuickDraw 0 #5 July 13, 2006 QuoteIn one of the first rigorous studies of hallucinogenic drugs in the past 40 years Make that 20 years. -- Hope you don't die. -- I'm fucking winning Quote Share this post Link to post Share on other sites
skydemon2 0 #6 July 14, 2006 funny in the comics todayBeauty is only skin deep, but ugly goes clean to the bone! I like to start my day off with a little Ray of Soulshine™!! Quote Share this post Link to post Share on other sites
kallend 1,625 #7 July 14, 2006 Skydiving connection - the object in the center of the Godfrog award is reputed to be a magic mushroom. www.iit.edu/~kallend/godfrog/cgg2.jpg... The only sure way to survive a canopy collision is not to have one. Quote Share this post Link to post Share on other sites