Bristol Post

Magic mushrooms ingredient may help depression therapy

- John HOUSEMAN bristolpos­tnews@localworld.co.uk

This ... confirms psilocybin could be a real alternativ­e approach to depression treatments

THE psychedeli­c compound found in magic mushrooms helps to open up depressed people’s brains and make them less fixed in negative thinking patterns, a study has suggested.

According to the study, psilocybin made the brain more flexible, working differentl­y from regular antidepres­sants, even weeks after use.

Researcher­s suggest the findings indicate that psilocybin could be a real alternativ­e approach to depression treatments.

They said patterns of brain activity in depression can become rigid and restricted, and psilocybin could help the brain to break out of the rut in a way traditiona­l therapies cannot.

Professor David Nutt, head of the Imperial Centre for Psychedeli­c Research, said: “These findings are important because for the first time we find that psilocybin works differentl­y from convention­al antidepres­sants – making the brain more flexible and fluid, and less entrenched in the negative thinking patterns associated with depression.

“This supports our initial prediction­s and confirms psilocybin could be a real alternativ­e approach to depression treatments.”

Professor Nutt, who grew up in Bristol and went to Bristol Grammar School, was at Bristol University in 2009 when he was forced to resign as the Government’s chief drugs adviser after he published a controvers­ial paper saying drugs such as ecstasy were less harmful than alcohol or tobacco.

The paper’s senior author Professor Robin Carhart-Harris, former head of the Imperial Centre for Psychedeli­c Research who is now based at University of California, San Francisco, said: “The effect seen with psilocybin is consistent across two studies, related to people getting better, and was not seen with a convention­al antidepres­sant.

“In previous studies we had seen a similar effect in the brain when people were scanned whilst on a psychedeli­c, but here we’re seeing it weeks after treatment for depression, which suggests a ‘carry over’ of the acute drug action.”

Psilocybin is one of a number of psychedeli­cs being explored as a potential therapy for psychiatri­c disorders.

The new findings are based on analysis of brain scans from around 60 people receiving treatment for depression, led by Imperial College London’s Centre for Psychedeli­c Research.

The team behind the study believes it may have untangled how psilocybin works on the brain.

The results, taken from two combined studies, reveal that people who responded to psilocybin­assisted therapy showed increased brain connectivi­ty not just during their treatment, but up to three weeks afterwards.

This opening up effect was associated with people reporting improvemen­ts in their depression.

According to the researcher­s, similar changes in brain connectivi­ty were not seen in those treated with a convention­al antidepres­sant – escitalopr­am – suggesting the psychedeli­c works differentl­y in treating depression.

Prof David Nutt

According to the team, the findings, published in the journal Nature Medicine, are a promising advance for psilocybin therapy, with the effects replicated across two studies.

But the authors caution that while the findings are encouragin­g, patients with depression should not attempt to self-medicate with psilocybin, as taking magic mushrooms or psilocybin in the absence of trial conditions may not have a positive outcome.

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