Pubdate: Sat, 30 Sep 2006
Source: Science News (US)
Copyright: 2006 Science Service
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Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/403
Author: Bruce Bower
Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/topics/psilocybin
Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/hallucinogens.htm (Hallucinogens)

CHEMICAL ENLIGHTENMENT

Line Up for the Scientific, Psychedelic Mystical Tour

The comfortably furnished room in a corner of the Johns Hopkins 
University School of Medicine in Baltimore seems an unlikely setting 
for spiritual transcendence. Yet one after another, volunteers last 
year entered the living room--like space, reclined on the couch, 
swallowed a pill, and opened themselves to a profound mystical 
journey lasting several hours. For many of them, the mundane 
certainty of being a skin-bounded person with an individual existence 
melted away. In its place arose a sense of merging with an ultimate 
reality where all things exist in a sacred, unified realm. 
Participants felt intense joy, peacefulness, and love during these 
experiences. At times, though, some became fearful, dreading unseen dangers.

The pills that enabled these mystical excursions contained 
psilocybin, the active ingredient in so-called magic mushrooms that 
some societies have used for centuries in religious ceremonies. 
Psilocybin boosts transmission of the brain chemical serotonin, much 
as LSD and some other hallucinogenic drugs do.

Johns Hopkins psychopharmacologist Roland R. Griffiths and his 
colleagues have taken psilocybin out of its traditional context and 
far from the black-light milieu of its hippie-era heyday. Griffiths' 
team is investigating the drug's reputed mind-expanding effects in a 
rigorous, scientific way with ordinary people.

In the group's recent test, psilocybin frequently sparked temporary 
mystical makeovers in volunteers who didn't know what kind of pill 
they were taking. What's more, some of these participants reported 
long-lasting positive effects of their experiences.

As a control in the test, the researchers used methylphenidate--an 
amphetamine known as Ritalin when used to treat attention-deficit 
hyperactivity disorder. Methylphenidate rarely produced a mystical 
experience, although the researchers were intrigued that a few people 
did have that response.

Griffiths' study, published in the August Psychopharmacology, 
combines research on psychedelic-drug effects--which have received 
little attention in the past 40 years--with a burgeoning scientific 
interest in the roots of spirituality (SN: 2/17/01, p. 104: 
http://www.sciencenews.org/articles/20010217/bob7.asp). The new 
findings put psychedelic studies on the road back to respectability, 
Griffiths says. In the 1950s and 1960s, preliminary research had 
suggested that LSD and related substances--now regarded as powerful 
but nonaddictive drugs--aided in psychotherapy, addiction treatment, 
and creativity-promoting programs.

However, the excesses of researchers such as the late Harvard 
University psychologist Timothy Leary, as well as widespread illicit 
use of psychedelic drugs, led to legal restrictions that halted most 
psychedelic research.

Now, the scientific and clinical promise of drugs such as psilocybin 
can be fully explored, in Griffiths' view. "With careful preparation, 
you can safely and fairly reliably occasion a mystical experience 
using psilocybin that may lead to positive changes in a person," he 
says. "Our finding is an early step in what we hope will be 
scientific work that helps people."

Spirit Trips

Griffiths' recent work was inspired by an unusual 1963 investigation 
conducted by physician and minister Walter Pahnke. Half of 20 
Protestant seminarians randomly received psilocybin before listening 
to a radio broadcast of a Good Friday service. The rest took a B 
vitamin that caused the skin to flush.

After the service, many members of the psilocybin group reported 
unusual spiritual experiences. Four of them had full-blown mystical 
reactions, which they said included ecstatic visions and a feeling of 
oneness with God.

In interviews conducted 6 months and 25 years later, members of the 
psilocybin group attributed many more positive changes in attitude 
and behavior to the Good Friday service than vitamin takers did. 
Psilocybin-induced mental states had apparently triggered lasting 
improvements in people's lives, researchers concluded.

During Pahnke's study, however, participants sat together during the 
broadcast and could easily tell whether others were acting out of 
character. Such observations could have affected their reactions to 
what they had ingested. Griffiths' team tried to minimize the power 
of expectation by not telling most participants which drug they were 
taking and by administering pills to one volunteer at a time.

The team recruited 36 physically healthy adults, ages 24 to 64, who 
had no serious mental disorders themselves or in their immediate 
families. All but one volunteer had graduated from college. None 
cited any previous use of psychedelic drugs. Each reported at least 
occasional participation in religious or spiritual activities, 
including church services, prayer, and meditation.

At the start of the study, each volunteer met several times with a 
psychologist or social worker, who later sat with participants during 
drug sessions and offered support if needed.

Each of 30 randomly selected volunteers attended two 8-hour drug 
sessions, the second occurring 2 months after the first. At one 
session they received a strong dose of psilocybin and at the other a 
high dose of methylphenidate. No participant was told which drug he 
or she ingested--only that it might be either of the two substances.

The remaining six participants received methylphenidate at the two 
sessions without being told what the pills contained. At a third 
session, they took psilocybin pills after being told what was in the tablets.

After taking psilocybin, 22 of the 36 volunteers described having 
mystical experiences, the scientists say. All but three of these 
cases occurred in volunteers who didn't know what kind of pill they 
were taking. Mystical events typically included a sense of merging 
with an overarching reality, perceiving unity in all things, 
transcending time and space, and basking in overwhelming feelings of 
love and other positive moods.

At the end of psilocybin sessions, 25 participants--including 3 who 
hadn't reported mystical encounters--rated the experience as among 
the five most meaningful and spiritually significant events in their lives.

After taking methylphenidate, four volunteers reported mystical 
experiences as well. They, too, ranked the experience among the top 
five in their lives.

Feelings of extreme fear or dread emerged in 11 of the 36 volunteers 
after taking psilocybin and in none after taking methylphenidate. 
Those who encountered negative reactions nonetheless completed the 
sessions with assistance from the psychologist or social worker.

Positive effects of psilocybin seemed to last beyond the sessions. 
Two months after their last drug session, 29 participants reported 
moderately or greatly increased well-being and satisfaction with 
their lives as a result of psilocybin experiences. The others cited 
no such changes, but none described any declines in well-being in 
response to the psilocybin use.

Interviews with family members, friends, and coworkers of each 
volunteer confirmed the reports of long-lived improvements in mood, 
attitudes, and behavior.

The researchers are now analyzing results of a 1-year follow-up of 
participants.

Griffiths also plans to explore how brain processes unleashed by 
psilocybin compare with neural activity in people who experience drug 
free spiritual epiphanies. "There's good reason to believe that 
similar brain mechanisms are at work during profound religious 
experiences, whether they're produced by fasting, meditation, 
controlled breathing, sleep deprivation, near-death experiences, 
infectious disease states, or psychoactive substances," he says.

Deep Hypnosis

Although it's not news that psilocybin stimulates mystical 
experiences, Griffiths' study offers important improvements over 
earlier studies, asserts psychologist Etzel Cardena of the University 
of Lund, Sweden. First, in most instances, neither the participants 
nor those assisting them knew which drug was being administered. This 
approach enabled researchers to distinguish genuine drug effects from 
placebo reactions. Second, the researchers verified participants' 
reports of psilocybin-induced improvements by talking to their 
families, friends, and coworkers.

Cardena studies yet another way that people enter life-changing 
spiritual realms. Some folks spontaneously undergo mystical 
experiences during periods of "deep hypnosis," he contends.

 From a group of 147 college students, Cardena identified eight women 
and four men who entered trance states with ease. Dubbed hypnotic 
virtuosos by Cardena, such individuals can direct their thoughts 
inward and, in no more than a minute or two, become hypnotized on 
their own. None of the 12 students in the study reported being in a 
meditation program or currently using psychedelic drugs, although 3 
had ingested such substances years ago.

In a silent, dimly lit room, each participant induced a self-hypnotic 
state under three conditions--while lying on a bed, pedaling a 
stationary bicycle at a comfortable rate, and sitting on a stationary 
bicycle equipped with a motor that propelled the pedals, moving 
participants' feet at a moderate rate. Sessions ran for 17 minutes.

Participants reported an initial period of moderate hypnosis 
characterized by spinning sensations, a feeling of lightness, loss of 
touch with the external world, and perceived bodily changes, such as 
enlarged hands.

They then reached a state of deep hypnosis, which became more intense 
when the students were lying still, Cardena says. The experiences 
while in deep hypnosis closely resembled mystical journeys taken in 
Griffiths' psilocybin sessions. Reports included a sense of floating 
or flying, of one's mind leaving one's body, of merging with a light, 
and of being one with everything, as well as powerful feelings of 
love, wonder, and freedom.

In another parallel to Griffiths' findings, participants occasionally 
noted that the unusual occurrences of deep hypnosis scared them.

Still, at the end of the experiment and 8 months later, the 
volunteers mentioned only positive effects of the deep hypnosis, 
Cardena reported in the January 2005 International Journal of 
Clinical and Experimental Hypnosis. Favorable results included 
increased personal insight, fewer nightmares, and enhanced inner 
peace. In other words, these people enjoyed the inner benefits of a 
self-induced mystical encounter without ingesting any mind-altering drugs.

"It's about time that psychology and related fields started taking 
seriously mystical and other anomalous experiences," Cardena says.

Life Changers

In 1935, a man named Bill Wilson cofounded Alcoholics Anonymous. He 
had recently undergone a self-described spiritual revelation that 
caused him to stop drinking alcohol. Two decades later, before legal 
restrictions largely ended studies on psychedelic drugs, Wilson 
backed research that suggested a use for drug-induced mystical 
experiences as part of alcoholism treatment.

Griffiths and his colleagues now plan to follow up on that research. 
They will try to determine whether psilocybin indeed fosters a 
spiritual insight that people can use to break alcoholism's grip. 
They also want to examine whether psilocybin sessions ease depression 
and anxiety in end-stage cancer patients.

A few treatment-focused investigations of psilocybin are already 
under way. In pairs of 6-hour sessions separated by 1 month, 
psychiatrist Charles Grob of the University of California, Los 
Angeles administers either psilocybin or placebo pills to patients 
with life-threatening cancer. Patients then typically lie still with 
their eyes covered while listening to relaxing music. Grob and two 
assistants sit with each patient during these sessions.

Grob has studied six patients so far, tracking them for 6 months 
after completing the sessions. He plans to investigate six more 
patients before publishing his findings.

"Even without having a classic mystical experience, these patients do 
pretty well after psilocybin sessions, and their anxiety often 
decreases," Grob says.

Another study, directed by psychiatrist Francisco Moreno of the 
University of Arizona in Tucson, is examining psilocybin as a 
treatment for obsessive-compulsive disorder. This condition is marked 
by anxiety and a need to perform repeatedly certain behaviors, such 
as hand washing. Results are promising, Moreno says, although he 
won't discuss the findings in detail until their upcoming publication 
in the Journal of Clinical Psychiatry.

In the meantime, Griffiths' paper has attracted some surprising 
supporters. Psychiatrist Charles R. Schuster of Wayne State 
University School of Medicine in Detroit says that the new 
investigation will hasten explorations of the neural basis of 
drug-induced altered states of consciousness. Schuster, the former 
director of the National Institute on Drug Abuse, calls the treatment 
of drug addiction with psychedelic substances "entirely conceivable."

Psychiatrist Herbert D. Kleber of Columbia University in New York 
City agrees. Former director of the White House Office of National 
Drug Control Policy, Kleber cautions that only well-prepared 
individuals--such as those in Griffiths' study--are likely to reap 
lasting benefits from drug-related mystical states.

Kleber looks forward to investigations of whether mystical 
experiences triggered by methylphenidate and psilocybin activate the 
same brain regions. Activity in the brains of people who show minimal 
reactions to psilocybin should also prove intriguing, he says.

Not everyone finds Griffiths' study enlightening, however. The new 
data simply confirm the longstanding knowledge that psychedelic 
substances disturb perception, cause disorientation, and sometimes 
instigate fear and paranoia, remarks David Murray, special assistant 
to the current director of the White House Office of National Drug 
Control Policy. Clinical benefits of psilocybin have yet to be 
demonstrated, he asserts.

"Psilocybin might grow hair on bald men--we just don't know," Murray 
says with a chuckle.

Even ardent proponents of psychedelic-drug research acknowledge that, 
after lying dormant for decades, the field faces many unanswered 
questions. It's been a long, strange trip, and it's far from over.

References:

Cardena, E. 2005. The phenomenology of deep hypnosis: Quiescent and 
physically active. International Journal of Clinical and Experimental 
Hypnosis 53(January):37-59. Abstract available at 
http://taylorandfrancis.metapress.com/link.asp? id=3Dta2j5ayye2l3109p

Griffiths, R.R., et al. 2006. Psilocybin can occasion mystical-type 
experiences having substantial and sustained personal meaning and 
spiritual significance. Psychopharmacology 187(August):268-283. 
Abstract available at http://dx.doi.org/10.1007/s00213-006-0457-5

Kleber, H.D. 2006. Commentary on: Psilocybin can occasion 
mystical-type experiences having substantial and sustained personal 
meaning and spiritual significance by Griffiths, et al. 
Psychopharmacology 187(August):291-292.

Schuster, C.R. 2006. Commentary on: Psilocybin can occasion 
mystical-type experiences having substantial and sustained personal 
meaning and spiritual significance by Griffiths, et al. 
Psychopharmacology 187(August):289-290.

Further Readings:

Bower, B. 2001. Into the mystic. Science News 159(Feb. 17):104-106. 
Available at http://www.sciencenews.org/articles/20010217/bob7.asp

Strassman, R. 2001. DMT: The Spirit Molecule--A Doctor's 
Revolutionary Research into the Biology of Near-Death and Mystical 
Experiences. Rochester, N.Y.: Park Street Press.

Sources:

Etzel Cardena

Department of Psychology

University of Lund

P.O. Box 213

SE-221 00 Lund

Sweden

Roland R. Griffiths

Department of Psychiatry and Behavioral Sciences

Johns Hopkins University School of Medicine

5510 Nathan Shock Drive

Baltimore, MD 21224-6823

Charles S. Grob

University of California, Los Angeles

Psychiatry & Biobehavioral Sciences

1000 West Carson Street

Los Angeles, CA 90095-1768

Herbert D. Kleber

Division on Substance Abuse

New York State Psychiatric Institute

1051 Riverside Drive

Unit 66, Room 3713

New York, NY 10032

Francisco Moreno

University of Arizona

Department of Psychiatry

1501 North Campbell Avenue

P.O. Box 245002

Tucson, AZ 85724-5002
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