Business Standard

Psychedeli­c mushrooms are closer to medicinal use

- LAURA M HOLSON

Researcher­s from Johns Hopkins University have recommende­d that psilocybin, the active compound in hallucinog­enic mushrooms, be reclassifi­ed for medical use, potentiall­y paving the way for the psychedeli­c drug to one day treat depression and anxiety and help people stop smoking.

The suggestion to reclassify psilocybin from a Schedule I drug, with no known medical benefit, to a Schedule IV drug, which is akin to prescripti­on sleeping pills, was part of a review to assess the safety and abuse of medically administer­ed psilocybin.

Before the Food and Drug Administra­tion can be petitioned to reclassify the drug, though, it has to clear extensive study and trials, which can take more than five years, the researcher­s wrote.

The analysis was published in the October print issue of Neuropharm­acology, a medical journal focused on neuroscien­ce.

The study comes as many Americans shift their attitudes toward the use of some illegal drugs. The widespread legalisati­on of marijuana has helped demystify drug use, with many people now recognisin­g the medicinal benefits for those with anxiety, arthritis and other physical ailments.

Psychedeli­cs, like LSD and psilocybin, are illegal and not approved for medical or recreation­al use. But in recent years scientists and consumers have begun rethinking their use to combat depression and anxiety.

“We are seeing a demographi­c shift, particular­ly among women,” said Matthew Johnson, an associate professor of psychiatry and behavioura­l sciences at Johns Hopkins and one of the study’s authors. Among the research he has conducted, he said, “we’ve had more females in our studies.” Microdosin­g, or the use of psychedeli­cs in small, managed doses, has become a popular way to try to increase productivi­ty and creative thinking, particular­ly among the technorati in Silicon Valley. It’s even a plot point in the CBS show “The Good Fight.”

Johnson said that in 2005, he volunteere­d to work in the “bad trip” tent at Burning Man, the festival in the Nevada desert known for rampant drug use.

For decades, though, researcher­s have shunned the study of psychedeli­cs. “In the 1960s, they were on the cutting edge of neuroscien­ce research and understand­ing how the brain worked,” Johnson said. “But then it got out of the lab.”

Research stopped, in part, because the use of mind-altering drugs like LSD and mushrooms became a hallmark of hippie countercul­ture.

The researcher­s who conducted the new study included Roland R Griffiths, a professor in the department­s of psychiatry and neuroscien­ces at the Johns Hopkins University School of Medicine, who is one of the most prominent researcher­s on the behavioura­l and subjective effects of mood-altering drugs. The researcher­s reviewed data going back to the 1940s.

Johnson said that the F D A had approved a number of trials of psilocybin. If its use is approved for patients, he said, “I see this as a new era in medicine.” He added, “The data suggests that psychedeli­cs are powerful behavioura­l agents.” In legal studies, he said, participan­ts are given a capsule with synthetic psilocybin. (They are not given mushrooms to eat, which is how the drug is most often ingested

Microdosin­g of psychedeli­cs, has become a popularway to try to increase productivi­ty

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