OPEN Foundation

Background articles

Ketamine Reconsidered

Ketamine is causing a lot of ‘buzz’ inside neuropsychiatry at the moment. Duman and Aghajanian called the substance in Science (2012) “the biggest breakthrough in depression research in a half century”. The APA (American Psychiatric Association) is dedicating a surprisingly large amount of time discussing the new implications concerning ketamine in the 167th ‘annual meeting’ this year (2014). Abrams says in The Atlantic (2012) that the effects of ketamine suggest that depression isn’t caused by a chemical imbalance in the brain, as is believed by most neuropsychologist, but by damage to brain cells caused by chronic stress. Ketamine is said to stimulate the process of synaptogenesis (the formation of synapses in the brain), which repairs the damage caused by stress (Zarate 2006, Duman 2012). These findings could eventually become the base for a “synaptogenic hypothesis” of depression (Duman, 2012).

Ketamine is used very diversely in scientific studies [1], which shows well how contingent the ideas surrounding a substance can be. In 1962, eight years before the American president Nixon signed the Controlled Substances Act and shut the door for research of the effects of substances like LSD, psilocybin and mescaline, ketamine was synthesised in the Parke Davis Lab in Detroit. Ketamine is considered an arylcyclohexylamine in chemistry, the same category that phencyclidine (PCP) belongs to. Ketamine, then still CI581, was initially explained as a fast-acting anesthetic for general use. It was used in the instance of severe damage to the skin caused by radiation or burns. Children were given ketamine when they had bad reactions to other tranquilizing substances or when a more superficial anesthesia was called for. Ketamine’s effects were popular in animal medicine as well. In 1970 ketamine started playing a significant role in the Vietnam war. Upon return, many veterans told stories about odd mental experiences which they had during operations for their injuries. It’s only when ketamine started to be used recreationaly [2] that the dissociative effect, the literal separation of mind and body, came to the forefront.

In 1973, near the end of the Vietnam war, the Iranian psychiatrist E. Khorramzadeh published an article on the use of ketamine during psychotherapy in Psychosomatic Journal. In South-America, this led to the emergence of several therapies which used ketamine as a means for psychoanalytical regression. John C. Lilly published his phenomenological magnus opus The Scientist in 1978, which made his own experiments as well as that of others in the field available for philosophical scrutiny. Lilly came to the conclusion that ketamine opens the door for ‘metaprogramming’ [3], a process which he describes as the conscious manipulation of the synapses to cause changes in behavior and personality patterns. In that same year Journeys into the Bright World by Marcia Moore and her husband Howard Alltounian appeared, which explored the possibility of using ketamine in Jungian psychotherapy. Krupitsky brought ketamine together with addiction therapy in 1985. Krupitsky, head of the research laboratory for addiction and psychopharmacology in St. Petersburg, developed a ‘psychedelic therapy’ which, to his own surprise, resulted in complete abstinence of at least a year in 66% of his alcohol addicted patients (1995). In collaboration with Strassman, famous for his monumental study into DMT and the book The Spirit Molecule (2000) which followed it, Krupitsky published the results of a study into ketamine and heroin addiction. Although ketamine did not show lasting effects of abstinence, which the researchers sought, there was a noticeable improvement in the withdrawal process. They accredited these results to a positive transformation of the self-concept as well as in emotional, moral and spiritual attitudes.

Karl Jansen, eminent ketamine researcher and proponent of further psychotherapeutic integration of the experiences induced by ketamine, adds an important layer to the work of Krupitsky. He proposes that the experience which ketamine offers is therapeutic in itself. Jansen draws a comparison between ketamine and the state of consciousness that people experience ‘near death’. According to Jansen this experience, like with ketamine, has effects on personality; it increases altruistic behavior, decreases the fear of death and makes people less materialistic (2001).

Modern neuroscientist go a step further than Krupitsky; that ketamine is itself effectively therapeutic, according to them has got little to do with the psychedelic experience. The experience as therapeutic process is replaced with a neurochemical mechanism. The characteristics of the experience or the impressions which people extract out of it don’t account for the therapeutic effect, according to these neuroscientists the therapeutic effect is caused by an intervention outside of consciousness. The qualities which are desired in the eyes of psychonauts [4] are annoying side-effects which they have to get rid of to be able to use ketamine as an antidepressant. According to researchers of other psychedelic substances ketamine’s growing success is a good opportunity to get attention for their results. However, it remains to be seen if this doesn’t devalue research into the psychedelic experience.

The effects that ketamine appears to have on the mental condition of individuals with a depression diagnosis were introduced by researchers like John Krystal and Karl Jansen, but until Zarate et al. (2006) there weren’t any robust double-blind placebo controlled studies conducted. Zarate et al. found a strong and fast antidepressant effect with a single dose of ketamine. Unfortunately the amount of time that the effects lasted still varied too much, from two days to two weeks. They concluded that ketamine, at the present moment, should at least play a role in acute suicidal episodes. It’s still unknown if or how the antidepressant effect can be lengthened. Baumeister et al. conducted a meta-analysis, published in Therapeutic Advances in Psychopharmacology (2014), in which they present evidence for the effects of ketamine in the treatment of depression, even when study samples were still relatively small. In any case, the results support the further exploration of administering ketamine to individuals with a severe and therapy resistant depression diagnosis. Ruud Kortekaas, a Dutch neuroscientist at the UMCG (Universitair Medisch Centrum Groningen), is now conducting a study into the long term effects (twenty weeks) of ketamine administration to people who don’t react [5] to regular antidepressants. Kortekaas attributes the effects of ketamine in his patients to a heightened activity in the prefrontal lobe. “It’s like all of those rusty taps in the brain”, says Kortekaas in the Volkskrant (Mudde, 2012), “are completely opened in one go. Often patients experience a strong improvement within several hours. Substances like Prozac, if they work, only start having effects after weeks. Here there is an immediate effect which lasts for days, in small pilot studies in eight out of ten patients”. Ketamine stimulates, in rather low dosages, the process of synaptogenesis which increases the plasticity of the brain (Zarate 2006, Duman 2012). Rasmussen et al. published in Journal of Psychopharmacology (2013) that a low dose of ketamine intravenously is effective in alleviating depressive symptoms in half of their subjects. Rupert McShane, researcher at Oxford Health NHS Foundation Trust, even rapports an effect of several months in a small study published in Journal of Psychopharmacology (2012). In Kortekaas’s study the focus will be on examining the different nuances of different dosages. The study is unique because an oral form of administering ketamine was choses while most other studies based their results on intravenous, intramuscular or nasal forms. An oral form will, according to Kortekaas, result in a strong growth of ketamine’s applicability as antidepressant. Also, the low dosages which are used in the study are hardly psychoactive, and therefore will almost have no influence on normal functioning. The study is set up as a randomized controlled trial (RCT) with 100 participants (50 placebo) in which individuals will receive a functional magnetic resonance imaging scan (fMRI) before ketamine administration and after completing three weeks. “If this study is successful”, says Kortekaas, “it would mean the first step in getting a large amount of people, which don’t react to conventional substances, back into society”. “It’s exciting”, says psychiatrist and neurobiologist Duman (2012), “the hope is that this new information about ketamine is really going to provide a whole array of new targets that can be developed that ultimately provide a much better way of treating depression”.

There aren’t a lot of substances which had its utility reconsidered as often as ketamine. Moreover, the different paradigms surrounding ketamine aren’t mutually exclusive. It’s possible that the same substance could be regarded as an antidepressant in low dosages, a psychedelic in higher dosages and in the highest dosage range a total anesthetic. The nuances between these states must be carefully examined in the future, certainly when ketamine will become available to greater amounts of people as an antidepressant.


 
[1] Ketamine as a model for schizophrenia (Fletcher et al., 2006), ‘body ownership’ (Fletcher et al., 2011), analgesic (Menigaux et al., 2001), ‘sense of agency’ (Moore et al., 2013), perception of time (Coul et al., 2011), morphine synergism (Schulte et al., 2004).
[2] Recreational use of ketamine was first documented in the beginning of the 70s in the underground publication The Fabulous Furry Freak Brothers.
[3] He borrowed this term from computer science where metaprogramming is the writing of a computer program which itself is able to write or manipulate programs.
[4] Psychonautics refer to the paradigm in which the phenomenology of psychoactive substances is examined.
[5] Individuals that don’t react to SSRI’s (selective serotonin reuptake inhibitors) and TCA’s (tricyclic antidepressant).
 
References
Abrams, L. (2012). The Biggest Breakthrough in Depression Research in 50 years is… Ketamine? The Atlantic. Retrieved at: http://www.theatlantic.com/health/archive/2012/10/the-biggest-breakthrough-in-depression-research-in-50-years-is-ketamine/263400/
American Psychiatric Association. (2014). APA 167th annual meeting proceedings. Washington, DC: Author. Retrieved at: http://psychnews.psychiatryonline.org/newsarticle.aspx?articleid=1816463
Baumeister, D., Barnes, G., Giaroli, G., & Tracy, D. (2014). Classical hallucinogens as antidepressants? A review of pharmacodynamics and putative clinical roles. Therapeutic Advances in Psychopharmacology, 2045125314527985.
Coull, J. T., Morgan, H., Cambridge, V. C., Moore, J. W., Giorlando, F., Adapa, R., Corlett, P. R., Fletcher, P. C. (2011). Ketamine perturbs perception of the flow of time in healthy volunteers. Psychopharmacology (Berl) 218(3):543-56.
Diamond, P. R., Farmery, A. D., Atkinson, S., Haldar, J., Williams, N., Cowen, P. J., … & McShane, R. (2014). Ketamine infusions for treatment resistant depression: a series of 28 patients treated weekly or twice weekly in an ECT clinic. Journal of Psychopharmacology, 0269881114527361.
Duman, R. S., & Aghajanian, G. K. (2012). Synaptic dysfunction in depression: potential therapeutic targets. Science, 338(6103), 68-72.
Fletcher, P. C., Honey, G. D. (2006), Schizophrenia, ketamine and cannabis: evidence of overlapping memory deficits. Trends in the Cognitive Sciences 10(4):167-174.
Jansen, K. (2001). Ketamine: Dreams and Realities. MAPS (Multidisciplinary Association for Psychedelic Studies).
Khorramzadeh, E., & Lotfy, A. O. (1973). The use of ketamine in psychiatry. Psychosomatics, 14(6), 344-346.
Krupitsky E., Burakov, A., Romanova, T., Dunaevsky, I., Strassman, R., Grinenko A. (2002). Ketamine psychotherapy for heroin addiction: immediate effects and two-year follow-up. Journal of Substance Abuse Treatment, 23, 273-283.
Krupitsky, E. M. (1995). Ketamine psychedelic therapy (KPT) of alcoholism and neurosis. In: Yearbook of the European College for the Study of Consciousness (Leuner, H., ed.), pp.113-121. Berlin: Verlag Fur Wissenschaft und Bildung.
Lilly, C. J. (1978). The Scientist: A Novel Autobiography (1st ed.). Philadelphia: Lippincott.
Moore, M., & Alltounian, H. (1978). Journeys into the Bright World. Gloucester: Para Research Inc.
Moore, J. W., Dickinson, A., Fletcher, P. C. (2011). Sense of agency, associative learning, and schizotypy. Conscious Cogn 20(3):792-800.
Moore, J. W., Cambridge, V. C., Morgan, H., Giorlando, F., Adapa, R., Fletcher, P. C. (2013). Time, action and psychosis: using subjective time to investigate the effects of ketamine on sense of agency. Neuropsychologia 51(2):377-84.
Morgan, H. L., Turner, D. C., Corlett, P. R., Absalom, A. R., Adapa, R., Arana, F. S., Pigott, J., Gardner, J., Everitt, J., Haggard, P., Fletcher, P. C. (2011). Exploring the impact of ketamine on the experience of illusory body ownership. Biol Psychiatry 69(1):35-41.
Mudde, T. (2012). Trippen voor de Wetenschap. Volkskrant. Retrieved at: http://www.volkskrant.nl/vk/nl/2844/Archief/archief/article/detail/3327458/2012/10/06/Trippen-voor-de-wetenschap.dhtml
Rasmussen, K. G., Lineberry, T. W., Galardy, C. W., Kung, S., Lapid, M. I., Palmer, B. A. & Frye, M. A. (2013). Serial infusions of low-dose ketamine for major depression. Journal of Psychopharmacology, 2

Psychedelic Resurgence

This year’s first edition of The Journal of Psychoactive Drugs is a special issue dedicated to the resurgence of psychedelic research. In roughly five themes (LSD, MDMA , ayahuasca, cannabis, research issues and institutes) the journal provides a glance at past and present matters related to research and therapeutic uses of psychedelics.

The first article is a review of the past, present and future status of Lysergic Acid Diethylamide (LSD; Smith, Raswyck, & Dickerson Davidson, 2014). The article comprises a chronological overview of how the psychoactive properties of LSD have led to positive and negative appraisal of the substance in therapeutic research, for military purposes, and recreational use. The article finishes with an overview of contemporary research projects. Another LSD-centered article in the journal, is a qualitative study that retrospectively assesses the long-term experiences of Czech psychologists and psychiatrists that involved in self-experimentation with LSD in the 1950’s – 1970’s (Winkler & Csémy, 2014). The article also serves to present arguments for self-experimentation.

Two review papers are dedicated to address the pro’s and con’s of using MDMA in a therapeutic setting and research issues related to the “Ecstacy Paradigm” (Cole, 2014; Parrott, 2014). A consideration of how psychiatry and psychedelics can benefit from each other, is provided by dr. Ben Sessa (2014), who has been working on MDMA-assisted psychotherapy.

In a qualitative study, Loizaga-Velder and Verres (2014) explored the therapeutic effects of ritual ayahuasca use in the treatment of substance abuse. In line with other studies that yielded promising results in exploring the competence of psychedelics in treating addiction (Heffter Institute, 2012; Krupitsky et al., 2007), the main finding was that participation in ritual ayahuasca sessions facilitated substance dependence treatment.

In New-Mexico, the first state that authorized the use of medicinal cannabis for releasing symptoms of Post-Traumatic Stress Disorder (PTSD), Greer, Grob, and Halberstadt (2014) acquired retrospective data in order to portray the result of this law adjustment. The researchers tentatively conclude that cannabis is associated with PTSD reduction in some patients, and express the need for a study with an experimental design.

An inspiring contribution to this special issue, are two articles dedicated to the past and present of the Heffter Research Institute and the Multidisciplinary Association for Psychedelic Studies (MAPS; Emerson, Ponté, Jerome, & Doblin, 2014; Nichols, 2014). As the editor of the journal, Terry Chambers, expresses in the introduction: ‘…this issue of the Journal is not a comprehensive presentation of the activity of those attempting to understand the properties and uses of psychedelic drugs, but it is an indication of the serious and interesting research being done on this subject.’ The resurgence is happening, and we expect that Dutch scientists will follow soon.

The journal is published online and the abstracts can be freely retrieved from our website.


 
References
Cole, J. C. (2014). MDMA and the “Ecstasy Paradigm.” Journal of Psychoactive Drugs, 46(1), 44–56. doi:10.1080/02791072.2014.878148
Emerson, A., Ponté, L., Jerome, L., & Doblin, R. (2014). History and Future of the Multidisciplinary Association for Psychedelic Studies (MAPS). Journal of Psychoactive Drugs, 46(1), 27–36. doi:10.1080/02791072.2014.877321
Greer, G. R., Grob, C. S., & Halberstadt, A. L. (2014). PTSD Symptom Reports of Patients Evaluated for the New Mexico Medical Cannabis Program. Journal of Psychoactive Drugs, 46(1), 73–77. doi:10.1080/02791072.2013.873843
Heffter Research Institute. 2012. Our Research. Available at: http://www. heffter.org/research-hucla.htm.
Krupitsky, E. M., Burakov, A. M., Dunaevsky, I. V, Romanova, T. N., Slavina, T. Y., & Grinenko, A. Y. (2007). Single versus repeated sessions of ketamine-assisted psychotherapy for people with heroin dependence. Journal of Psychoactive Drugs, 39, 13–19. doi:10.1080/02791072.2007.10399860
Loizaga-Velder, A., & Verres, R. (2014). Therapeutic Effects of Ritual Ayahuasca Use in the Treatment of Substance Dependence—Qualitative Results. Journal of Psychoactive Drugs, 46(1), 63–72. doi:10.1080/02791072.2013.873157
Nichols, D. E. (2014). The Heffter Research Institute: Past and Hopeful Future. Journal of Psychoactive Drugs, 46(1), 20–26. doi:10.1080/02791072.2014.873688
Parrott, A. C. (2014). The Potential Dangers of Using MDMA for Psychotherapy. Journal of Psychoactive Drugs, 46(1), 37–43. doi:10.1080/02791072.2014.873690
Sessa, B. (2014). Why Psychiatry Needs Psychedelics and Psychedelics Need Psychiatry. Journal of Psychoactive Drugs, 46(1), 57–62. doi:10.1080/02791072.2014.877322
Smith, D. E., Raswyck, G. E., & Dickerson Davidson, L. (2014). From Hofmann to the Haight Ashbury, and into the Future: The Past and Potential of Lysergic Acid Diethlyamide. Journal of Psychoactive Drugs, 46(1), 3–10. doi:10.1080/02791072.2014.873684
Winkler, P., & Csémy, L. (2014). Self-Experimentations with Psychedelics Among Mental Health Professionals: LSD in the Former Czechoslovakia. Journal of Psychoactive Drugs, 46(1), 11–19. doi:10.1080/02791072.2013.873158

New study may explain magic mushrooms' effects

New research by a group of mainly Britisch scientists, based on fMRI brain scans, has shown that the use of psilocybin (the active constituent of magic mushrooms) decreases the activity of certain parts of the brain in test subjects. Brain activity decreased especially in those parts that are involved in the managing and filtering of information.

This may explain why users often report that under the influence of magic mushrooms they experience impressions and feelings that were previously unnoticed. Logically, when the brain’s ability to filter and handle information is decreased, more information may reach our consciousness. This may also explain why users often report new insights after the use of magic mushrooms, sometimes having therapeutic effects.

Another indication for the therapeutic effects of magic mushrooms is that brain activity also decreased in the medial prefrontal cortex, a brain part that is often hyperactive in patients suffering from depression.

Remarkably, these new results confirm the ideas of Aldous Huxley (1894-1963). Huxley saw the brain as a ‘reducing valve’, filtering and making information more manageable for our consciousness. He posed that psychedelic drugs might decrease these reducing properties of the brain.

Click here for the abstract and a link to the full article.

Crowdfunding: Ayahuasca Treatment Outcome Project

An international scientific team – consisting of clinical psychiatrists and neuroscientists, medical doctors and anthropologists, epidemiologists and curanderos – is trying to set up an ambitious research project to study the effects of ayahuasca and how it affects addiction and other mental health issues. They have only 12 days left to reach their first funding goal of C$25.000, so please consider making a donation.

Since it can be a big challenge indeed to receive funding through traditional channels, OPEN supports funding serious research via other means. Donating means you are funding an interdisciplinary research design meeting contemporary high quality scientific standards, which involves thorough follow-up and a longitudinal assessment of treatment efficacy.

The team is being led by Dr. Brian Rush, Professor, Dept. of Psychiatry, University of Toronto, Canada and Scientist Emeritus at the Centre for Addiction and Mental Health, Toronto, Canada.

For more information and a video about this project have a look at their Indiegogo page.

Psychedelics linked to lower mental health risks

The use of LSD, magic mushrooms, or peyote does not increase a person’s risk of developing mental health problems, according to an analysis of information from more than 130,000 randomly chosen people, including 22,000 people who had used psychedelics at least once.

Researcher Teri Krebs and clinical psychologist Pål-Ørjan Johansen, from the Norwegian University of Science and Technology’s (NTNU), cleverly used data from a US national health survey to study the association between psychedelic drug use and mental health problems.

The researchers relied on data from the 2001-2004 National Survey on Drug Use and Health, in which participants were asked about mental health treatment and symptoms of a variety of mental health conditions over the past year. The specific symptoms examined were general psychological distress, anxiety disorders, mood disorders, and psychosis.

The study showed that lifetime use of psilocybin or mescaline and past year use of LSD were associated with lower rates of serious psychological distress. Lifetime use of LSD was also significantly associated with a lower rate of outpatient mental health treatment and psychiatric medicine prescription, although the nature of these relations were not demonstrated in the Norwegians’ study.

Interestingly, the results of this study confirm the outcomes of recent clinical trials that likewise do not demonstrate lasting harmful effects from the use of psychedelics in a clinical setting. It further shows that even when used non-clinically, psychedelic substances might be able to play a role in alleviating mental health issues.

The results are published in the journal PLOS One and are freely available online.

In Memory of Andrew Sewell

The sad news has reached us that Andrew Sewell passed away on Sunday July 21st while he was recovering from surgery. R. Andrew Sewell, MD, was assistant professor of Psychiatry at Yale University where he conducted fascinating research on psyche

delics. We had the pleasure of meeting Andrew at our 2010 Mind Altering Science Conference, where he presented his research as one of our invited speakers.

We will remember Andrew Sewell as a cheerful, optimistic and talented researcher with a gift for inspiring others through his lectures. We feel that his passing away is a great loss for the psychedelic research community. Our deepest sympathies go out to Andrew’s friends and family.

Among other things, Andrew was responsible for writing the well read and sobering manual on how to become a psychedelic researcher, entitled ‘So you want to become a psychedelic researcher?’, a must read for aspiring scientists wanting to study psychedelic substances.

Thank you Andrew, for your contributions to psychedelic research and for your inspiring lectures, filled to the brim with information, delivered at high speed. You’ll be missed.

Article in university magazine Folia about psychedelic research

folia_trippen

University magazine Folia devoted an article to psychedelic research. The cover is entirely dedicated to the article ‘Trippen op recept’ (Tripping on prescription). Visitors of the Interdisciplinary Conference on Psychedelic Research will recognize the interviewed experts. Ben Sessa talks about his experience in an fMRI scanner when he participated in a study into the effects of psilocybin on the brain. Robin Carhart-Harris, a researchers at Imperial College London, talks about initial findings of this study. Matthew Johnson, psychopharmacologist at Johns Hopkins University School of Medicine (United States) is interviewed as well. He talks about his research into the use of psilocybin in the treatment of tobacco addiction.

You can find the Folia magazine at various locations at the University of Amsterdam. You can also find it digitally on the Folia website.

Dutch plans for ibogaine research

iboga_big

An article in Dutch newspaper de Volkskrant shows there are plans to study the effectiveness of ibogaine in the treatment of addiction in Nijmegen.

The research team, consisting of addiction doctor Maarten Belgers and psychiatrist Toon van Oosteren, works in cooperation with the Radboud University in Nijmegen – to study whether ibogaine can – under strict medical conditions – be used effectively in the treatment of substance dependence. Despite various studies in animals, there has yet been no clinical study in humans. This study would be the first.

In de Volkskrant, Toon van Oosteren states that the researchers intend to subject ten to fifteen people with substance dependence to a treatment with ibogaine. Presently, the team is looking for ibogaine that is pure enough to comply with the rigorous scientific standards for medicines.

Read the whole article in Dutch here.

LSD effective in the treatment of alcohol addiction

alcoholismLSD can be effective in the treatment of alcoholism, according to a new study of a Norwegian research team. This study, published in the Journal of Psychopharmacology, shows that administration of LSD in alcoholics can contribute to the success of the treatment.

In this meta-analysis, the results of six randomized clinical trials that were published between 1966 and 1970 were used. In these studies LSD was administered in a total of 325 cases, and a placebo in 211 cases. Of the patients that received LSD 59% percent improved during the treatment, compared to only 38% of the persons receiving a placebo. The researchers conclude that there is evidence for a positive effect of LSD in the treatment of alcoholism.

Psychedelic research in popular literature

Kijk2The Dutch KIJK magazine printed an article on research on psychedelics. “Tripping away your problems: a slow revival of drugs as medicine”. Reporter Jop de Vrieze interviewed scientists among whom psychiatrists Andrew Feldmár en Charles Grob. Upon the interviews he based that nowadays psychedelics are a “full grown part of scientific studies”. XTC is therapeutically used for emotional illnesses, psilocybine and LSD with treating life quality in terminal illnesses, ketamine is effective with depression and ibogaine with addictions. These positive effects have been known to scientists for decades, yet only recently has public research slowly been allowed again. Both Multidisciplinary Association for Psychedelic Studies (MAPS) and The OPEN Foundation are brought forth in the article as promoting these studies.

The first part of the article (in Dutch) can be read here.

30 April - Q&A with Rick Strassman

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