Hallucinogenic
mushrooms have been found to help alleviate depression, even in severe
cases where other kinds of treatment fail to do the job, and new
research is providing insight into the secrets of how our brains
function.
Led
by Dr. Robin Carhart-Harris, researchers from Imperial College London
have used the psychoactive compound psilocybin, commonly found
in so-called magic mushrooms, to treat depression in patients and have
used brain scan techniques to observe how precisely the hallucinogen
influences the brain, according to a report by The Guardian.

Could Psychedelic Mushrooms Help Those Battling Depression?
The results were recognized as a major medical success.
"For the first time in many years,
people who were at the end of the road with currently available
treatments reported decreased anxiety, increased optimism and an ability
to enjoy things. This is an unparalleled success and could
revolutionize the treatment of depression," said Amanda Feilding,
co-director of the research.
During that initial test, however, the team observed
further research would be needed to understand how exactly the
psychoactive compound affects the human brain.
This year, the team gave the psilocybin compound to a group
of 20 patients and the treatment was found to be largely successful —
about half of the group reported feeling well just five weeks after the
ingesting the medication.
But this time, the team acquired additional data on mental activity via brain scans.
First, the scans confirmed the previous year's finding that
psilocybin reduces blood flow in the area of the brain called the
amygdala the area responsible for processing emotion — primarily those
qualitatively assessed as negative, such as anxiety and fear.
According to the BBC report,
the team found that the greater the reduction of activity in the
amygdala, the greater the improvement in reducing symptoms. According
to BBC, the interconnected brain structure known as the "default-mode
network" also became more stable after using the compound.

Survey Finds Magic Mushrooms Safest Recreational Drug, But Caution Still Advised
But brain scans performed after the treatment were
surprising, as, following the treatments, there turned out to be
enhanced connectivity between brain regions. Researchers describe the
effects by noting that psychedelics break old connectivity patterns and
boost the brain to create new and healthier mental structures.
This effect has been supported by the patients, who all reported some kind of welcomed mental reset.
According to Dr. Carhart-Harris, "Patients were very ready
to use this [computer reset] analogy. Without any priming they would
say, 'I've been reset, reborn, rebooted', and one patient said his brain
had been defragged and cleaned up."
This year's experiment has its weak sides, though,
since the test group was still quite small; there was also no control
group — a group of patients given the placebo treatment — to compare
results.
According to the Guardian, Professor David Nutt, director
of the neuropsychopharmacology unit in the division of brain sciences,
and senior author of the paper, said: "Larger studies are needed to see
if this positive effect can be reproduced in more patients. But these
initial findings are exciting and provide another treatment avenue
to explore."
"What is impressive about these
preliminary findings," said Professor Mitul Mehta from the Institute
of Psychiatry at King's College London, "is that brain changes occurred
in the networks we know are involved in depression, after just a single
dose of psilocybin."
"This provides a clear rationale to now look at the longer-term mechanisms in controlled studies," he said, cited by the BBC.
EmoticonEmoticon