2023-05-13 04:04:44
Allan Malievsky He was studying his second year at George Washington University (USA) in 2012 when one day he noticed that he lacked the strength to continue living. She mightn’t breathe, nor did she have the energy to get out of bed, and the light of her world went out. She took a break in the course and went to visit her parents, Ekaterina Malievskaia y George Goldsmith. The months passed but Allan did not improve, he had depression and obsessive-compulsive disorder (OCD), but the medication was not having any effect. Eakaterina, who was a doctor, was relentlessly looking for what might help her son get out of that dark pit, and that’s how she came up with a very small clinical trial that showed that the psilocybin– a substance obtained from hallucinogenic mushrooms- it worked in the treatment of OCD. They took Allan to a session with a shaman-therapist who had been recommended to them by trusted research circles and, in a session of regarding six hours, with the help of psilocybin- administered in tea, the young man stopped feeling anguish and returned to his interest in life
The change was so shocking that Ekaterina and her husband decided to continue their research with psilocybin. In 2016 they founded their own company, Compass Pathways, that today is conducting the largest and most ambitious clinical trial to date to verify the effects of psilocybin on depression. “Right now Psilocybin is the psychedelic substance that is closest to being approved for therapeutic use in Europe. What has been seen is that it has a beneficial effect on depression, which is not only immediate– unlike treatment with antidepressants, which can take up to a month – but the improvement can last weeks, and even months, with a single dose, unlike esketamine – the first advance once morest depression in 30 years whose funding in Spain has recently been approved for the treatment of treatment-resistant depression (DRT) – which must be administered two or three times a week to achieve that its effect is maintained- explains Víctor Pérez- Alone, President of the Spanish Society of Psychiatry and Mental Health Foundation (Fepsm) and director of the Psychiatry Service of the Hospital del Mar, Barcelona.
Microdoses don’t work
The expert points out that for the administration of psilocybin there are two fundamental strategies: lthe microdoses (“that have no scientific evidence”), and the ‘full doses’ (“the highest doses are those that have been shown to work”). His hospital has participated with eight patients – the only Spaniards – in a trial recently published in the scientific journal New England of Medicine who has shown the Efficacy of this substance as monotherapy in the treatment of DRT– that which does not improve with treatment with antidepressants, and which, in Spain, affects 35% of people with this mental disorder. Another essential aspect is the professional and safe environment in which these substances must be administered to ensure that the patient does not have a “bad trip”. “Because of the great hallucinogenic effect they have, there must always be two psychologists trained in this therapy accompanying the patient who, before being administered the dose of psilocybin, is shown a video of a boat sailing through natural landscapes of great beauty so that they trust that the experience is going to be pleasant”, he highlights.
Another of those known as psychedelic drugs found in advanced stages of research is MDMA (or angel dust), which has demonstrated its benefit as an adjunct in psychotherapy sessions for the treatment of post-traumatic stress disorder (PTSD). In fact, The US Food and Drug Administration (FDA) is expected tofor its acronym in English) approve it this year. “We do not know what requirements the European Medicines Agency (EMA) will request to approve MDMA, because it does not have patent coverage – what is patented is not the substance but the training of therapists to work with it-. In the US It is not financed by the industry, but by private funds from donors, people with a lot of money who want to help improve the treatment of TPEP, which is a big health problem there,” says Pérez-Sola.
“We have known for decades that trauma-related memories are not recalled and kept intact, but rather, each time we bring them to light in front of a therapist, their emotional component changes. That is where MDMA comes in. , given that favor the reprocessing of traumatic memories and emotional participation in the therapeutic process. In this way, it is achieved that, when it is put back in a safe situation, it softens until, to put it in some way, it stops hurting. The groups that are working on these drugs are aware that They are as revolutionary as antidepressants were at the time”assures.
Finally, the psychedelic substance that is in an earlier phase of investigation is the dimetiltriptamina (DMT)a powerful hallucinogenic drug that is nicknamed “molecule of the spirit” or “molecule of God”. “Phase II clinical trials are now being carried out to verify its effect on the PTSD treatment. The mode of administration is similar to that of psilocybin, but in this case by aspiration, instead of in pills,” the psychiatrist describes.
have risks
The big question that arises with the advancement of psychedelic medicine is that if these substances have been known for centuries, and their effect on mental health can be so revolutionary, why have they not been investigated before using a scientific method? “For the most part, because of the risks, which are very important. On the one hand, there are the psychodysleptic effects that may have- that is to say, that it gives us a ‘bad trip’- and that make it essential that are always taken as part of a therapeutic protocol, in a safe environment and accompanied by qualified professionals. On the other hand, although these substances have a low risk of dependency if we compare it with others such as cocaine, heroin or tobacco, in people with a tendency to addiction if they can create a misuse. In these cases, which are very rare, the effects are catastrophic,” he warns.
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