Deccan Chronicle

Fear of dying? Mushrooms may help

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Dinah Bazer was diagnosed with ovarian cancer in the spring of 2010. The Brooklyn resident, an ice skating teacher and former bank IT programmer in her 60s, was devastated. Luckily, doctors were able to successful­ly treat her disease with chemothera­py, but the dread of a reoccurren­ce just wouldn’t go away. It was like waiting for the other shoe to drop. “I was totally consumed with fear and anxiety,” she said on a recent call with a group of reporters.

So in 2011, Bazer enrolled in a trial at New York University, where researcher­s were looking to test a substance that they hoped would have a seemingly ‘mystical’ ability to lift depression and anxiety connected to fear about life’s end. The drug they were testing wasn’t one dreamed up in a lab. It’s the essential component of psychoacti­ve magic mushrooms, psilocybin. In a living-room-like setting at the Bluestone Centre at the NYU College of Dentistry, accompanie­d by trained therapists, Bazer took a pill. At first she couldn’t know whether it was the drug or a placebo, but once the effects started to come on, it would be clear. Sure enough, within about 40 minutes, she started to ‘trip’. “I visualised my fear as physical mass in my body,” a black concentrat­ion, she said. She became angry, volcanic. She screamed. “Get the f-out!” And then this woman who said she had been an atheist her entire adult life and still is had a strange sensation. “I was bathed in God’s love, and that continued for hours,” she said. “I really had no other way to describe this incredibly powerful experience.” The feeling faded, but so did her fear, depression, and anxiety. They have not returned.

SPRING FOR PSYCHEDELI­CS

Bazer was a participan­t in one of two controlled clinical trials of the effects of psilocybin on patients dealing with depression and distress related to facing the end of life. Aside from a few smaller pilot studies, these two trials — one by researcher­s from Johns Hopkins University and the other, which Bazer participat­ed in, at NYU were the first major ones of their kind.

The results from both studies were published in the Journal of Psychophar­macology on December 1, along with 10 commentari­es by prominent experts in the field of psychiatry. The results from both trials were encouragin­g enough that the scientists involved hope they’ll be able to get consent from the Food and Drug Administra­tion to move forward to a large-scale Phase 3 study, the third and final set of human trials that is needed before the FDA considers approving a new drug. “This is a potential pathway to clinical approval,” said Roland Griffiths, a professor of psychiatry and behavioura­l sciences at JHU School of Medicine, who led the JHU study and is one of the pioneers in the modern era of psychedeli­c research. “But that (approval) requires the next step of going to the FDA and getting permission to move forward.” The recent announceme­nt that the FDA would allow trials using MDMA — the chemical name for the drug commonly known as Molly or Ecstasy to treat post-traumatic stress disorder to move to Phase 3 gives him hope, too, especially since he says MDMA might have even more ‘baggage’ than psilocybin when it comes to getting approval. — Source: www.scienceale­rt.com

The feeling faded, but so did her fear, depression, and anxiety. They have not returned again

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