Psychedelic iatrogenic structural dissociation: an exploratory hypothesis on dissociative risks in psychedelic use
- Author: mycolabadmin
- 3/4/2025
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Summary
Background
Dissociation is a disruption of normal subjective integration of behavior, memory, identity, and consciousness that often develops as a protective mechanism in response to psychological trauma. The trauma model of structural dissociation proposes that severe or early-life trauma creates a division between the apparently normal personality (ANP) managing daily functioning and the emotional personality (EP) storing unprocessed traumatic memories. With the resurgence of psychedelic research for therapeutic applications, understanding how these substances interact with dissociative processes in trauma-exposed individuals is critical.
Objective
This paper introduces the hypothesis of Psychedelic Iatrogenic Structural Dissociation (PISD) to explore how psychedelics may reactivate dissociated traumatic material and increase psychological destabilization risk in trauma-exposed individuals. The authors propose that psychedelics could disrupt the balance between ANP and EP functioning, either facilitating trauma integration or increasing vulnerability to structural dissociation depending on individual and contextual factors.
Results
Conclusion
- Published in:Frontiers in Psychology,
- Study Type:Theoretical Review,
- Source: 40104426