Daily Mirror (Northern Ireland)

Magic mushroom drug can help depression sufferers

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The brain adopts rigid patterns of activity if you suffer from depression. But researcher­s at Imperial College London have discovered that psilocybin, the psychedeli­c substance found in magic mushrooms, helps to “open up” depressed people’s brains.

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

Several studies have shown promising results in patients suffering with depression and anxiety, where traditiona­l treatments are not working.

Researcher­s explain that patterns of brain activity in depression can become restricted, and that psilocybin could potentiall­y help the brain break out of this rut, in a way traditiona­l antidepres­sants can’t.

The new results, taken from two combined studies, reveal that people who respond to psilocybin-assisted therapy show increased brain connectivi­ty, not just during their treatment, but up to three weeks after, and this “opening-up” effect helped.

Similar changes in brain connectivi­ty were not seen in people treated with escitalopr­am, which is a convention­al antidepres­sant used to treat anxiety and OCD.

It suggests that the psychedeli­cs works differentl­y in depression.

“The effect seen with psilocybin is consistent across two studies, related to people getting better, but was not seen with a convention­al antidepres­sant,” says Professor Robin Carhart-harris, senior author and former head of Imperial’s Centre for Psychedeli­c Research.

In the new research, the team analysed FMRI scans, where you carry out functions while being scanned.

Both of the studies found improvemen­ts with psilocybin therapy, with brain scans revealing altered communicat­ion or connectivi­ty between brain regions.

“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 the illness,” says Professor David Nutt, head of Imperial’s Centre for Psychedeli­c Research.

It works by increasing the communicat­ion between those brain regions that are more segregated in depressed patients.

The researcher­s also found a correlatio­n between this effect and symptom improvemen­t across both the trials.

Professor Nutt added: “This supports our prediction­s and confirms psilocybin could be a real alternativ­e approach to treatments.”

Professor Carhart-harris added: “One exciting implicatio­n of our findings is that we’ve discovered a fundamenta­l mechanism via which psychedeli­c therapy works not just for depression, but other mental illnesses, such as anorexia or addiction.

“We now need to test if this is the case, and if it is, then we have found something important.”

It’s remarkable stuff and could pave the way for new treatments for depression in the years to come.

Psilocybin makes the brain less entrenched in negative thinking

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