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  1. A new study from the University of Victoria (UVic) has identified a segment of traumatic brain injury survivors who are using psychedelics to self-medicate for cognitive, mood and somatic symptoms such as headaches.   

    In a first-of-its-kind study, clinical psychology researchers analyzed more than 6,100 responses collected from the global psychedelic survey. Researchers found that nearly 1,200 respondents reported using psychedelics to treat or manage a physical health condition.  

    Of these, some 208 participants, or 3.4 per cent of the total sample, reported using psychedelics to manage brain injury-related symptoms.  

    The paper, Psychedelics for the management of symptoms of traumatic brain injury: Findings from the global psychedelic survey, was published Progress in Neuropsychopharmacology & Biological Psychiatry, co-authored by UVic clinical psychology professors Jill Robinson and Mauricio Garcia-Barrera.  

    Some 60 million people worldwide experience traumatic brain injuries (TBI) every year. Garcia-Barrera says there isn’t a one-size-fits all treatment for TBI survivors, and he says some are looking for alternative supports, including from psychedelics.   

    “Although research into using psychedelics to manage TBI symptoms remains quite limited, the field is gaining momentum as awareness grows around how widespread brain injury is globally and its impact on the quality of life of those who experience a TBI,” Garcia-Barrera says.  

    Baeleigh VanderZwaag, the UVic PhD student who led the study, said there is limited research from human participants when it comes to psychedelics and brain injury, with most research coming from animal models. This is the first time a study has examined traumatic brain injury survivors’ self-reported use of psychedelics to treat symptoms. 

    “I wasn’t expecting so many people to be using psychedelics at this point for brain injury—it’s really new information,” says VanderZwaag. “It was surprising to find that some people globally are experimenting with this, acquiring psychedelics by themselves to see how it works for them.”  

    Researchers found that respondents with TBIs most often used psilocybin every two to five months or every six months to treat their symptoms, using a mix of microdoses and larger doses. Other respondents reported self-medicating with LSD/acid and ketamine. 

    Not only are people with TBIs experimenting with psychedelics to manage mood, cognitive and somatic symptoms—they are finding relief. When asked to rate how effective their psychedelic use was on their TBI-related symptoms, 90 per cent of the sample self-reported some level of symptom improvement.    

    https://www.sciencedirect.com/science/article/pii/S0278584626000205?via%3Dihub

  2. Buzzsaw_Studio on

    My personal experience with psilocybin to address my neuro-inflammation post TBI is that its surprisingly beneficial. I can feel the lower inflammation in my brain, my brain fog has improved quite a bit, and my mood in general is a lot more positive. I’ve taken microdoses of 0.25 grams up to 1.5 grams and while it hasn’t been a full cure it has provided some symptom relief and that is huge win IMO. 

  3. Healthylife55 on

    the fact that we still treat psychedelics as schedule 1 while this data exists is wild

  4. There seem to be many benefits of psychedelic drugs. I have used shrooms in the past, and it seemed to alleviate my depression for a long period of time. I also have noticed that I have a calmer personality than I did before I took them.

  5. callthesomnambulance on

    > 90 per cent of the sample self-reported some level of symptom improvement

    ‚90% of people who think psychedelics improve their TBI symptoms think psychedelics improve their TBI symptoms‘

    I think there’s some decent evidence for psychedelic use in TBI and a few other areas but these self report surveys are not particularly helpful

  6. wasn’t there a study that showed both that the effects were temporary, and the amount required to obtain results goes up with repeated usage?

  7. It would be nice to see any kind of hypothesis on *why*? Do psychedelics merely help deal with the trauma and effects on a mental/emotional level or is there actually some degree of neuroplasticity benefit where the brain can maybe either reconstitute or just work around the damage better, or?

  8. ThatFireGuy0 on

    Who would guess. The brain injury survivors who _choose on their own to regularly use psychedelics for their symptoms_ somehow shockingly believe _it helps with their symptoms_!

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