Emotion and Cognition - Lecture 6 notes

Lecture 6: Comeback of Psychedelic Renaissance - Enhancing mood & cognition

 

History

  • Probably oldest drugs known to man (evidence for use in about 10.000 BC)
  • Psychedelic = “mind revealing”
  • Widely found in nature:
    • Psilocybin (magic mushroom)
    • DMT (found in every human)
    • Mescaline (contained in cactuses)
    • 5- MEO DMT (found in certain toads)…
    • LSD: only chemically extracted psychedelic
  • LSD was discovered by Albert Hoffman (1943)
  • More than 40,000 patients were administered LSD alongside therapy between 1950 and 1965. Non-toxic, non-addictive and effective clinical tools
  • Understanding of mental illness: models psychosis Psychological transformation in psychotherapy Military use
  • 1953 -Similarity found between serotonin in the brain and LSD - the birth of Neuroscience (Dr Woolley)
  • 1960’s Contra-culture - Vietnam War anti-millitary attitudes
  • 1970 Controlled Substances Act: psychedelics scheduled as illegal
  • Renamed as psychotomimetics/halucinogens a suggesting that they are resembling psychosis (Hoffer, 1967).

The psychedelic experience

  • Mood: high arousal
  • Perception: geometric visual patterning morphing, abstract imagery
  • Cognition: unconstrained cognition dream-like states loss of Ego/loss of sense of self divine/spiritual presence

How do these drugs affect the brain?

  • Most important receptor for all class of psychedelics: serotonin 2A – the more potent the drug, the more sticky it is with this receptor
  • If 2A receptor is excited by LSD, rats learn faster
  • 5-HT2AR agonism stimulate neuroplasticity in the hippocampus and the neocortex
  • Expression of 2A receptors: mostly higher cortical areas (layer V of grey matter)
  • Increase of serotonin will increase secretion of GABA (inhibitor) to Thalamus
  • Thalamus: in charge of filtering out irrelevant information from the outside world
  • Psilocybin decreases activity in higher cortical areas but brain connectivity is high (parts of the brain are more connected)
  • In a psychedelic state: more flexible neurological traffic

Default Mode Network

  • Highly interconnected network
  • Active when you daydream, think of the past/future, in self-chatter
  • Consumes 40% more glucose than any other part of the brain
  • If this network is disintegrated, there is a feeling of losing sense of self

Entropic brain theory

  • Our brain throughout development always tries to minimize uncertainty
  • As children, we don’t put things into coherent categories yet, so we think more things are possible
  • In older age, we are better at predicting reality, but it can lead to rigidity
  • Our consciousness is positioned between flexibility and resistance
  • In our sleep or in psychosis: more flexible, unconstraint thoughts
  • Psychedelic state: regression to more child-like state – curiosity, surprise, more delusional etc
  • Increasing flexibility (chaos) benefit disorders with rigid pattern of behavior (OCD, Depression or Addictions)

Why are Psychedelics clinically interesting?

  • Griffiths et al. (2006):  67% said the psychedelic experience was in the top 5 most meaningful experiences in their life,  62% had complete mystical experience
  • Increase in the personality trait “Openness” MacLean (2011)
  • 80% abstinence from smoking because of psychedelics(Johnson et al. 14)
  • Decreased drinking at 9 months follow-up  (Bogenschutz et al. 15)
  • Reduction of symptoms of OCD (Moreno et al. 2006)
  • Decreased anxiety at 12 months in life threatening illness (Gasser et al. 14)
  • Reduced distress & suicidality in US population (Hendricks et al. 15)
  • Decrease in depression  (Rucker, 2016)

Basic mechanisms for SSRI vs Psychedelics

  • Function of serotonin remains elusive
  •  5-HT1A and 5-HT2A two most prevalent serotonin receptors
  •  SSRI ➔ 5-HT1A reuptake blocking
  • Psychedelics ➔ increase in signaling of 5-HT2A neurons
  • 2A signaling downregulates 5-HT2AR receptors and thus ➔ less anxiety and improved general well-being during the post-acute ‘after glow’
  • SSRIs: passive coping – numbing feelings by making you more tolerant to stress
  • Psychedelics: active coping – adaptive change
  • 5-HT1AR-mediated stress moderation may be the brain’s default response to adversity – passive coping
  • 5-HT2AR-mediated plasticity – applied when adversity reaches critical point and adaptation and flexibility is required – active coping
  • Psilocybin reduces reaction to threatening images, and to feeling hurt when socially excluded, while increasing empathic feelings

Overprediction

  • Sensory input is not essential for perceptual experience
  • Brain will try to extract meaningful signal from environment
  • Brain predict what is happening based on our previous experiences.
  • Hallucinations are a result of prediction error imposed on noisy data.

 

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