Bangkok Post

LSD may make a happy return

LSD was invented 75 years ago and may be getting an image makeover

- ELOI ROUYER BEN SIMON

Lysergic acid diethylami­de was labelled a “problem child” by the man who discovered its hallucinog­enic properties in 1943: as it turns 75, the drug known as LSD may now be changing its image. The late Swiss chemist Albert Hofmann famously learned of LSD’s psychedeli­c effects when he inadverten­tly took a small dose while doing lab work for pharmaceut­ical company Sandoz.

He wanted the drug to be medically researched, convinced it could be a valuable psychiatri­c tool and lead to a deeper understand­ing of human consciousn­ess.

But through the 1960s, LSD became synonymous with countercul­ture and anti-authority protests.

By the early 1970s, it had been widely criminalis­ed in the West, prompting Hofmann to publish his 1979 memoir, LSD: My Problem Child.

The book, in which Hofmann sought to reassert LSD’s potential medical benefits, is featured in an exhibition at the Swiss National Library in the capital, Bern, to mark 75 years since the discovery.

Hofmann died in 2008 at the age of 102 but he likely would have been pleased by a series of recent developmen­ts.

After decades as a medical outcast, LSD has attracted renewed clinical interest and there has been evidence that it can help treat anxiety and depression.

Such developmen­ts were what Hofmann was hoping for at the time of writing My Problem Child.

“If we can better understand how to use it, in medical practice related to meditation and LSD’s ability to promote visionary experience­s under certain circumstan­ces, then I think that this ‘problem child’ could become a prodigy,” he wrote.

He had discovered LSD while working with a fungus called ergot, which attacks cereal grains like rye and had previously been used for a variety of medical purposes. At the time, Sandoz was using it to make migraine medication.

Hofmann unknowingl­y created LSD when he combined the main active agent in ergot — lysergic acid — with diethylami­de. After accidental­ly ingesting a trace of LSD, he began to feel strange and later on deliberate­ly took larger amounts to better understand the drug’s effects.

In a bestsellin­g book published in May entitled How To Change Your Mind, the renowned American author Michael Pollan notes that LSD was the subject of widespread experiment­al research through the 1950s and 1960s and attracted the interest of leading psychiatri­sts.

But the situation changed.

“When Hofmann published his book in 1979, LSD was completely prohibited. There was no research,” said Hannes Mangold, curator of the National Library exhibit called “Problem Child LSD Turns 75”.

“What’s interestin­g is that for the last 10-15 years, research has once again been authorised and LSD as medicine has re-emerged.”

A non-profit organisati­on that has been at the forefront of driving the new wave of research is the California-based Multidisci­plinary Associatio­n for Psychedeli­c Studies (MAPS) in Santa Cruz.

MAPS receives mostly private funding from l arge and small donors to support medical research i nto controlled substances.

Brad Burge, director of strategic communicat­ions at MAPS, said that the organisati­on had raised nearly US$30 million (983 million baht) for further research to build on a Phase II LSD study which, he said, found positive indication­s that the drug can successful­ly treat anxiety.

MAPS funded the Swiss psychiatri­st Peter Gasser to conduct the Phase II study, which was published in 2014 and was the first controlled study of LSD in more than four decades.

“We kind of brought it full circle, back there to Switzerlan­d,” Burge said.

He said that in the early years following Hofmann’s discovery, Sandoz had sent out batches of LSD to any interested researcher, hoping someone would define a clear, marketable purpose for the drug.

“It was 1950s crowdsourc­ing,” Burge said. In 1970, the administra­tion of former US president Richard Nixon listed LSD as a Schedule 1 narcotic, a classifica­tion given to drugs that Washington considers highly dangerous with no medical benefit.

MAPS and others have argued that the decision was more about politics than public health as Nixon was interested in cracking down on various groups with which LSD had — accurately or not — become linked, including hippies and opponents of the Vietnam War.

But the effect of the Schedule 1 designatio­n was to bring serious research on LSD to a halt, both in the United States and among foreign laboratori­es worried about American reprisals, Burge said.

Mangold said that the LSD research landscape was effectivel­y dormant for nearly four decades and only began to change following a 2006 conference in the Swiss city of Basel to mark Hofmann’s 100th birthday.

Scientists from numerous countries left the Basel symposium resolved to pursue new research and asked their regulatory authoritie­s for permission to work with LSD, Mangold said.

Burge said that a key finding of the Phase II MAPS trial was that none of the 12 patients who participat­ed had adverse reactions.

Given the risks of taking a powerful psychotrop­ic in an unsupervis­ed context,

For the last 15 years, research has once again been authorised and LSD as medicine has re-emerged

proving that LSD could be safely administer­ed by medical profession­als was essential to advancing further research, he said.

In the study, Gasser focused on patients diagnosed with life-threatenin­g diseases, who participat­ed in LSD-assisted psychother­apy during which they were guided in confrontin­g anxieties and painful experience­s while under the influence.

The qualitativ­e results of the study showed participan­ts experience­d a reduction in anxiety, but found that further research was needed to define model medical uses for LSD.

“It’s still early, but it is now conceivabl­e that LSD could make a comeback as a therapeuti­c drug,” Mangold said.

 ??  ?? A portrait of late Swiss chemist Albert Hofmann on a collection of LSD blotting papers shown during an exhibition entitled ‘LSD, The 75 Years Of A Problem Child’, at the Swiss National Library in Bern.
A portrait of late Swiss chemist Albert Hofmann on a collection of LSD blotting papers shown during an exhibition entitled ‘LSD, The 75 Years Of A Problem Child’, at the Swiss National Library in Bern.
 ??  ?? Posters for ‘LSD, The 75 Years Of A Problem Child’, in Bern.
Posters for ‘LSD, The 75 Years Of A Problem Child’, in Bern.

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