Depressive DisordersAnxiety DisordersNeuroimaging & Brain MeasuresPersonality & Trait FactorsPsilocybinLSDDMTMescaline

Sustained effects of single doses of classical psychedelics in humans

This review (2022) explores the acute effects of classic psychedelics in clinical research with humans and summarizes behavioural, biochemical, neuroimaging and electrophysiological data in order to support the notion that the intriguing effects of psychedelics on the human brain and mind are based on neural plasticity.

Authors

  • Gitte Knudsen

Published

Neuropsychopharmacology
meta Study

Abstract

The serotonergic classical psychedelics include compounds that primarily activate the brain’s serotonin 2 A receptor (5-HT2AR), such as LSD, psilocybin, and DMT (ayahuasca). The acute effects of these compounds are well-known as are their ability to increase the emotional state both in healthy people and in those with neuropsychiatric disorders. In particular psilocybin, the psychoactive constituent in “magic mushrooms”, has shown great potential for the treatment of anxiety and depression. A unique and compelling feature of psychedelics is that intake of just a single psychedelic dose is associated with long-lasting effects. This includes effects on personality, e.g., higher openness, and amelioration of depressive symptoms. This review focuses on these stunning effects and summarizes our current knowledge on which behavioural, biochemical, neuroimaging, and electrophysiological data support that the intriguing effects of psychedelics on the human brain and mind are based on neural plasticity. The review also points to so far understudied areas and suggests research questions to be addressed in future studies which potentially can help to understand the intriguing long-term effects after intake of a single (or a few) psychedelic doses.

Available with Blossom Pro

Research Summary of 'Sustained effects of single doses of classical psychedelics in humans'

Expert Research Summaries

Go Pro to access AI-powered section-by-section summaries, editorial takes, and the full research toolkit.

Study Details

Cited By (7)

Papers in Blossom that reference this study

Psilocybin’s effect on human brain synaptic plasticity

Johansen, A., Plavén-Sigray, P., Madsen, M. K. et al. · Research Square (2025)

Acute Effects of Hallucinogens on Functional Connectivity: Psilocybin and Salvinorin-A

Bagdasarian, F. A., Hansen, H. D., Chen, J. et al. · ACS Chemical Neuroscience (2024)

Psychedelics and sexual functioning: a mixed-methods study

Barba, T., Kettne, H., Radu, C. et al. · Scientific Reports (2024)

19 cited
The Bodily Self from Psychosis to Psychedelics

Harduf, A., Panishev, G., Harel, E. V. et al. · Scientific Reports (2023)

Cortical structural differences following repeated ayahuasca use hold molecular signatures

Mallaroni, P., Mason, N. L., Kloft, L. et al. · Frontiers in Neuroscience (2023)

6 cited

Your Personal Research Library

Go Pro to save papers, add notes, rate studies, and organize your research into custom shelves.