Disease: generalized anxiety

Down the rabbit hole – the psychological and neural mechanisms of psychedelic compounds and their use in treating mental health and medical conditions

Psychedelic compounds like psilocybin and LSD are showing significant promise for treating various mental health conditions including depression, anxiety, and PTSD. These substances appear to work through multiple mechanisms, including inducing profound mystical experiences and increasing neuroplasticity in the brain. Research indicates that environmental and contextual factors significantly influence how effective these treatments are, and even virtual reality experiences mimicking psychedelic effects show therapeutic benefits. The field is moving toward responsible, evidence-based clinical applications of psychedelics in psychiatry.

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The collective lie in ketamine therapy: a call to realign clinical practice with neurobiology

This article argues that ketamine therapy is commonly misunderstood as a consciousness-expanding psychedelic when it actually works through a completely different biological mechanism. The real therapeutic benefit comes from the brain’s natural reorganization in the days after treatment, not from the altered states people experience during the session itself. The authors call for medical practitioners to stop emphasizing the dissociative experience and instead focus on helping patients build healthy thought patterns during the recovery period when the brain is most ready to form new connections.

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