Title: Psychedelic/Hallucinogens- Chpt 12
1Psychedelic/Hallucinogens- Chpt 12
- Primary effect is to produce perceptual changes
hallucinations - Can influence several sensory systems, perception
of time, space events
2Structure of hallucinogens
- Most Hallucinogenic drugs have either a
serotonin-like or a catecholamine-like structure - Serotonin-like are also known as indoleamine
- LSD, psilocybin, psilocin, DMT and 5-MeO-DMT
- Catecholamine-like aka phenenthylamine
- mescaline
- has structural similarities to NE amphetamine
DMT
5-HT
Mescaline
3Different Types of Psychedelics-based on their
neurochemical characteristics
- Serotonergic
- LSD
- Psilocybin/Psilocin
- DMT - Ayahuasca
- Bufotenine
- Ololiuqui (oh-low-lee-oo-kee)
- Catecholamine-like
- Mescaline
- MDMA (ecstasy)
- MDA
- MDE
- DOM
- Myristin and Elemicin
- Cholinergic
- Muscarine
- Scopolamine
- Glutamatergic
- PCP
- Ketamine
- Dextromethorphan
- Opioid
- Salvinorin A
4Pharmacology of Hallucinogenic Drugs
- Pyschedelic effects
- begin within 30-90
- min (oral)
-
- LSD or mescaline trip lasts for 6-12 hrs
Psilocybin dissipates sooner - DMT effects user within seconds and dissipates in
an hour or less
-
- Depicts the typical dose range taken by
recreational users (psilocybin is most potent and
mescaline is the least)
Drug Route of Admin Typical Dose Range
LSD Oral .05-.10 mg
Psilocybin Oral 10-20 mg
Mescaline Oral 200-500 mg
DMT Smoking 20-50 mg
5Physiological Responses
- Activation of the sympathetic nervous system
- Pupil dilation, small increases in heart rate,
body temp and blood pressure - Dizziness, nausea, and vomiting
6Psychological Effects
- State of intoxication usually called a trip
- Trip can be divided into four stages
-
-
- Other psychological effects include
depersonalization, anxious or fearful state,
disruption of logical thought. - Good trip versus Bad trip depends on dose,
users personality, expectations, previous
experiences, physical and social settings
1. Onset 30 min to 1 hour visual effects begin
2. Plateau next 2 hours sense of time slows, visual effects intensify
3. Peak after about 3 hrs and lasts 2-3 hours in another world, synesthesia
4. Come down 2 hours May take up until next day to feel normal again
7Neural mechanism
- Experimental animal studies
- Lack of relevant human studies
- Location of critical receptors
- Locus coeruleus (LC) NE neurons
- Receives/integrates input from all major sensory
systems - Sends information to cortex (sensory cortex)
- Activation of receptors
- How does it produce sensory/cognitive distortions?
8Experimental receptor study
- Vollenweider (1998)
- Administration of antagonists
- Risperidone, Ketanserin (5-HT2A D2 DA)
- Decreased drug-induced visual illusions/hallucinat
ions - Haloperidol (Only D2 DA Not 5-HT2A)
- Completely failed to prevent hallucinogenic
effects - 5-HT2A is key mediator of hallucinogenic action
- Tolerance acquired via down-regulation of
receptors - Very rapid tolerance nearly complete in 4 days
9Receptor Activation
- Serotonergic system involved in process
- Perceptual and cognitive effects
- High affinity for 5-HT receptor subtypes (LSD)
- 5-HT1A,B,D, 5-HT2A,C, 5-HT5A, 5-HT6, 5-HT7
- LSD compared to phenyl-
- ethylamine drugs
- Only receptors in common
- 5-HT2A, 5-HT2C
10Two mechanism theories
- Administration of hallucinogenic drugs
- Aghajanian et al. (1999)
- Decrease spontaneous firing, enhanced excitation
- Drug intake ? LC more sensitive to sensory input
- Generation of hallucinations
- Vollenweider et al. (2001)
- Disrupt frontal cortex/striatum/thalamus
circuitry - Drug intake ? interfere with sensory info
gating - Information overload at cortical level
11Hallucinogenic drug problems
- Serious drug side effects
- Bad trip anxiety/panic
- Interaction between drug, emotional state,
environment - Flashbacks
- Re-experience perceptual symptom long after use
- Neural mechanism presently unknown
- Psychotic breakdown
- Most severe adverse reaction
- Mental state loss of contact with reality
- Typically occurs with psychiatric disorder
12SerotonergicPsychdelics
13Serotonergic Hallucinogens
- Lysergic acid diethylamide (LSD, Acid)
- Psilocybin-Psilocybe mushrooms-Shrooms
- Mescaline-Peyote cactus
- Ergine-Morning glory
- Harmaline-Ayahuasca,Yage
14 LYSERGIC ACID DIETHYLAMIDE (LSD)
- Lysergic acid Derived from ergot alkaloids
- Ergot is a poisonous fungus that infects rye
other grains grasses - Albert Hoffman 1938 - synthesized 25 in series
of new molecules doing ergot alkaloid chemistry - 1943 - returned to 25 making new batch
absorbed some through skin
15Aldous Huxley
16Albert Hofmann-Discovered LSD
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18Timothy Leary and Ken Kesey
19Doses of Acid
20Effects of LSD etc...
- Sympathomimetic
- Visual hallucinations
21Visual Hallucinations
- Enhanced color perception
- Flickering of the visual field
- Perception of motion
- Synesthesia
- Form constants
22Form Constants
23Form Constants
- Lattice Pattern
- Tunnel/Vortex
24Form Constants
- Lattice Pattern
- Tunnel/Vortex
- Spiral Explosion
25Visual Hallucinations
- Enhanced color perception
- Flickering of the visual field
- Perception of motion
- Synesthesia
- Form constants
26Form Constants
- Lattice Pattern
- Tunnel/Vortex
- Spiral Explosion
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31Effects of LSD etc...
- Sympathomimetic
- Visual hallucinations
- Altered consciousness
- Tolerance (but no dependence)
32Adverse Effects Myth Reality
- Birth defects/chromosome damage
- Myth!
- Acute Psychotic Reactions (Bad Trips)
- Fairly Common
- Use 7 times and legally insane
- Myth!
- Residual Psychosis
- Rare not certainly related to LSD
33Adverse Effects Myth Reality
- Flashbacks
- Fairly common among heavy users
- For some people, flashbacks are constant
- Rare, but true hallucinogen persisting
perception disorder - Stored in spine?
- MythCauses of flashbacks unclear
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35LSD in the USA
- Came to U.S. in 1950s in two ways
- Clinical usage Supplied to psychologists and
psychiatrists - encouraged their taking drug
- Military Usage U.S. military and CIA as
incapacitating agent and truth drug - U.S. government gave LSD to unsuspecting
individuals to study effects
36LSD in the USA
- 1960s - popular use advocates
- East Coast Timothy Leary (clinical psychologist
at Harvard) - West Coast Ken Kesey (noted author)
- graduate student in California got dose in
psychology study - shortly after this goes to work in psychiatry
- year later, writes One Flew Over The Cuckoo's
Nest
37LSD in the USA
- Spread through country with huge publicity until
peak 1968 to 1972 - Schedule I in 1968
- Stuffy politicians didnt know what to do because
LSD was used by white, middle to upper class,
college students - Early 1990s - LSD came back
38LSD Neurotransmission
- Binds to 5-HT2A receptors
- agonist effect
- Increases amount of sensory information getting
to cortex through overriding filter mechanisms - This is how the drug influences perception,
especially for vision
39Pharmacology of LSD
- Pharmacological Effects
- Effects heavily dependent on dose taken
- not just intensity of effects, but type of
effects - Low doses mild perceptual alterations
- comparable to effects of marijuana use, but
greater clarity -
40Effects of LSD
- High Doses
- progression through mental and emotional
experiences - 6-12 hrs duration
- Each trip unique, highly dependent upon
setting and personal expectations - Can alter subjects emotional feelings during
trip by experimenters previous behavior - warm and supportive or suspicious and
nonsupportive
41Effects of LSD
- Effects of drug come on in about 30 min
- first signs are autonomic activation
- followed by overt behavioral signs - loosening of
emotional inhibitions - giddiness, laughter for no reason
- mood euphoric and expansive, but labile mood
swings notable - abnormal color sensations, luminescence
- colors reported as more brilliant
42Effects of LSD
- space and time disorders
- added depth with loss of perspective - up/down
altered - close in space influenced more than distant
- general slowing of time reported
43LSD Hallucinations
- gratings, latticework, honeycomb, chessboard,
- tunnels, funnels, alleys, cones, vessels, and
spirals - can be present with eyes open or closed
- involve bright light in center with figures
moving in from periphery - forms appear to move in depth and take on color
shades, red common - Sounds can take on visual forms
- music may take on enhanced meaning or intensity
44LSD Bad Trips
- Psychological impact - traumatizing, imagery
dark, insights appalling - Usually occur in novice users, feel out of
control - Generally negative set and setting are key
contributing factors - Can lead to suicide or prolonged psychotic
reaction - Can usually be talked down from a bad trip
45LSD Flashbacks
- Spontaneous recurrence of trip after period of
normalcy - can occur after long periods of abstinence
- more common after multiple high dose use
- prolonged afterimages for days and weeks after
- tripping mechanism unknown
- can be brought on by other drugs or setting
- most commonly reported in low light situations
- not intrinsically dangerous and usually go away
46Psilocybin/Psilocin
- Magic Mushrooms, Liberty Caps
- Central America and northwestern U.S.
- Last about 6-10 hours
- Need a lot to get same effect as LSD
- 5-HT2A agonist
- Same basic effects as LSD
- Mushrooms occasionally toxic
47Psilocybe Mushrooms-psilocybin
48Psilocybe Mushrooms-psilocybin
49Psilocybin, DMT, 5-MeO-DMT
- Psilocybin
- magic mushrooms or shrooms
- Fungi that manufactured alkaloids with
hallucinogenic properties - Per os
- Eaten raw, boiled in water to make tea, or cooked
with other foods to cover its bitter flavor - Major ingredients
- Psilocybin and related compound psilcon, the
actual psychoactive agent psilocybin is converted
to
50Psilocybin, DMT, 5-MeO-DMT (contd)
- DMT (dimethyltryptamine)
- Derived from plants in South America
- Devoid of psychoactivity when taken orally
- Except with ayahauasca, vine of the soul
- Vines contribute to alkaloids called
ß-carbolines - Hypothesized to inhibit the enzyme monoamine
oxidase which breaks down DMT - In solid powder form and smoked
- 5-MeO-DMT (5-methoxy-dimethyltryptamine)
- Foxy Methoxy
- Oral active synthetic DMT analog
51DMT
- Dimethyltriptamine
- 5-HT2A agonist
- Alkaloid
- Often smoked
- Main ingredient in Ayahuasca
- Same effects as LSD
52Bufotenine
- Dimethyl-serotonin
- A product of abnormal serotonin breakdown
- Like LSD and others
- Can occur in urine of people with psychiatric
disorders - Psychosis
- Paranoia
- Depression
53Ololiuqui
- Substance found in morning glory seeds
- Similar to LSD
- Significant nausea, vomiting and cramping
54Tolerance/Dependence
- Not significant producers of tolerance or
dependence - No withdrawal either
- People and animals do not self-administer
- Problems related to the things people do while
under the influence - Accidents
- Suicide
- Aggression/violence
- Toxic reactions
55Catecholamine-likePsychedelics
56Mescaline
- Active drug in peyote
- Structurally similar to NE
- However, most of the effect is mediated by our
friend, the 5-HT2A agonist action - Legal for members of the Native American Church
57Peyote cactus-mescaline
58Religious Use of Hallucinogens
- Right to peyote ritual is protected for Native
Americans - Supreme Court is reviewing religious use of
hoasca tea (DMT) now (November, 2005)
59Peyote cactus-mescaline
60Mescaline
- Peyote cactus
- Mescal (peyote) button
- Native to SW United States and N Mexico
- Administration
- Chewed raw or cooked and eaten
- Pure powder form
- High cost of synthesis and lacks a large market
61Ecstasy
- MDMA (methylene-dioxy-methamphetamine)
- Synthesized in 1912
- Structurally related to amphetamines
- Sympathomimetic
- Weak in altering perceptual functions
- But strong effects on emotions - empathogen
- Used in combo with psychotherapy
- Of interest http//www.biopsychiatry.com/intervie
w/index.html
62Methylated Amphetamines
- Methylenedioxymethamphetamine (MDMA, Ecstasy,
XTC) - Methylenedioxyamphetamine (MDA)
63Ecstasy (MDMA) Psychological Effects
- Increased alertness, arousal, insomnia--stimulant
effects - Euphoria, increased emotional warmth
- Increased empathy and insight?
- Hallucinogenic effects are largely absent
64Ecstasy (MDMA) Physiological Effects
- Sympathomimetic
- Bruxism Trismusteeth grinding jaw clenching
(pacifiers) - Dehydration/Overhydration
- Hyperthermia
- Tachycardia
- Collapse/Overdose death
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66Ecstasy and the brain
- MDMA increases release and blocks reuptake of
serotonin - MDMA also increases release of dopamine, and
norepinephrine - Long term/Permanent depletion of serotonindamage
to serotonin neurons in nonhumans
67Ecstasy and the brainPreclinical research
- Serotonin depletion, damage to serotonergic
neurons reported in several species including
rats and primates (see Morton, 2005 for a review)
- Effects were present in primate brain 7 years
after MDMA exposure Hatzidimitrious et al., 1999)
- Mechanism of these effects?
68Ecstasy and the brainThe Retraction
- Ricaurte et al. (2002) reported in Science that
MDMA produced severe dopamine neurotoxicity in
primates at doses in the range commonly
encountered by human users. - Ricaurtes 2003 retraction and the fallout
69Are doses used in preclinical research too high?
- Although neurotoxic doses in non-humans (5-20
mg/kg twice or more/day for several days) are
generally higher than would be typical of human
use, people often take several tablets at a time
or throughout an nights binge and a tablet may
contain up to 300 mg 4-5 mg/kg in an average
person.
70Clinical Research Ecstasy in humans
- Topp et al. (1999) Australia study
- Physical side effects
- Loss of energy (65)
- Muscular aches (60)
- Hot/cold flashes (48)
- Numbness (47)
- Profuse sweating (43)
- Tremors (42)
71Ecstasy in humans
- Topp et al. (1999) Australia study Psychological
side effects - Irritability (63)
- Sleep difficulty (56)
- Depression (56)
- Confusion (47)
- Anxiety (45)
- Paranoia (40)
72Clinical Research Ecstasy in humans
- McCann et al. (1999)--MDMA users performance
impaired in tasks of attention and
STM--decreased serotonin in CSF - Semple et al. (1999)--decreased serotonin
transporter activity and cognitive impairment - Holes in the brain?
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74Ecstasy in humans
- Morgan (2000) review Heavy users more
depression, sleep disorders, memory problems than
controls
75Ecstasy in humans
- Morgan (2000) Heavy users more depression, sleep
disorders, memory problems than controls - What is the proper control group?
- Parrott et al. (2001) Heavy ecstasy users more
depression than non-users, but not more than
other drug users.
76Ecstasy in humans
- Morgan (2000) Heavy users more depression, sleep
disorders, memory problems than controls - What is the proper control group?
- Parrot et al. (2001) Heavy ecstasy users more
depression than non-users, but not more than
other drug users. - Croft et al. (2001) Memory deficits in MDMA
users, but also in group matched for THC use that
used no MDMA
77Ecstasy in humans
- Thomasius et al. 2003 Psychopharmacology
- Compared 30 current 31 ex-MDMA users with 29
polydrug users (no MDMA) and 30 non-users - No differences in psychopathology between MDMA
and PD groups (all showed more than NU) on
Symptom Check List
78Ecstasy in humans
- Thomasius et al. 2003 Psychopharmacology
- Compared 30 current 31 ex-MDMA users with 29
polydrug users (no MDMA) and 30 non-users - No differences in cognitive battery between MDMA
and PD groups
79Ecstasy in humans
- Thomasius et al. 2003 Psychopharmacology
- Compared 30 current 31 ex-MDMA users with 29
polydrug users (no MDMA) and 30 non-users - PET scans showed reduced serotonin transport
availability in some brain regions only in
current MDMA userssuggests recovery after a
period of abstinence (see also DeWin et al, 2004
McCann et al, 2005)
80Why differing outcomes?
- Sampling issues and difficulties in matching
controls - Different behavioral neurochemical measures
- Problems with self-report (e.g., many different
drugs are sold as MDMA (dancesafe.org)
81Ecstasy and the brain What do we know?
- MDMA increases release and blocks reuptake of
serotonin (increased release of DA and NE as
well) - Long term alterations of serotonin activity in
nonhumans humans--
82Ecstasy and the brain What do we need to know?
- What levels of use produce the serotonin effects
and how long-term are they? - Is there functional significance?
- Human dataMemory? Affect?
- Clinical trial for PTSD
83Ecstasy and the brain What do we need to know?
- Animal dataDoes MDMA produce learning and memory
deficits in rats the UNCW project - Student investigators Laura Bullard, Miles
Hulick, Brooke Poerstal, Becky Rayburn-Reeves,
Andrea Robinson
84History
- Patented by Merck in 1914
- Advocated by some as adjunct to psychotherapy
(1970s-80s) - Picked up the name ecstasy became significant
street drug (1980s) - Schedule I drug (1986)
- Prototype club drug (1990s)
85MDMA Prototype Club Drug
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87Pharmacodynamics
- Monoamine neurotransmission
- increase synaptic DA and 5-HT
- blocks 5-HT transporter
- enters neuron and causes release of 5-HT
88Ecstasy Effects
- Stimulant effects typically noted shortly after
ingestion - increased heart rate
- increased blood pressure
- dry mouth
- decreased appetite
- increased alertness
- elevated mood
- jaw clenching
89Ecstasy Effects
- Subjective Effects
- euphoria
- increased physical and emotional energy
- heightened sensual awareness
- subjective feeling of increased closeness or
enhanced communication - Cognitive Effects
- memory loss
90X Tox
- Malignant hyperthermia and dehydration
- Idiopathic toxic response (not common but nasty)
- Renal failure
- Rhabdomyolysis disintegration of muscle tissue
- Street X is even more of a problem because its
not always X or may have other drugs
91X Tox
- Potent neurotoxin
- 1-2 times street dose
- depletes forebrain 5-HT (not DA)
- Kills the transporter receptor (SSRI)
- Degeneration of 5-HT terminals
- Fine axons from dorsal raphe
- Can get 30 loss with single injection
- Up to 80 with repeated injections
- Can induce psychiatric disturbance in vulnerable
individuals. Treatment refractory depression
92MDMA MDA neurotoxicity
5-HT immunoreactive fibers in rat parietal cortex
MDA
PCA
Normal
9.9
93Squirrel monkeys 18 mo post-trtmt
Control
5-HT immuno- reactivity
Caudate
Hippocampus
Neocortex
MDMA
McCann et al. (1997)
94What is PMA?
- Paramethoxy-amphetamine
- "Death" "Mitsubishi Double Stack"
- "Killer" "Red Mitsubishi"
- Substitute for MDMA
- Cheaper to make
- Slower, longer effects
- More hallucinogenic
- Incidence of toxic side effects much higher than
MDMA (narrow safety margin)
95Designer Psychedelics
- DOM, MDA, DMA, MDE, TMA, AMT, 5MeO-DIPT
- All structurally related to mescaline and
methamphetamine therefore MDMA. - MDA is a metabolite of MDMA. May be responsible
for much of the MDMA effect.
96Myristin and Elemicin
- Found in nutmeg and mace
- Structurally similar to mescaline
- Significant nausea and vomiting
- The sick usually limit use
97GlutamatergicPsychedelics
98Anesthetic Hallucinogens
- Phencyclidine (PCP, Angel dust, Lovely)
- Ketamine (Special K)
99Anesthetic Hallucinogens
- Glutamate antagonists
- Euphoria, numbness, loss of motor coordination,
blurred vision - Nystagmus
- Distortions of body image, not visual
hallucinations - High rate of psychotic episodes some long-term
100Phencyclidine
- PCP
- NMDA receptor antagonist
- Blocks the function of glutamate
- Used as an analgesic and anesthetic
- Can be administered by any route
- Oddly enough, animals self-administer
(euphoria) - Induces amnesia and true psychosis
- Hallucinations, paranoia, agitation, dissociation
- Higher doses lead to stupor, coma
seizures, death - A perfect example of a Schedule I drug
101Ketamine
- Special K
- Very similar to PCP, not as powerful
- Liquid, but can be powdered for snorting or
smoking - But just as dumb, stupid, useless and unsafe
- Another perfect example of a Schedule I drug
102Subjective Effects of PCP/Ketamine
- Sensations of light coming through the body
and/or colorful visions - Complete loss of time sense
- Bizarre distortions of body shape or size
- Altered perception of body consistency
- Sensations of floating or hovering in space
- Feelings of leaving ones body
- Visions of spiritual or supernatural beings
- Emotions ranging from euphoria to hositlity
- Dalgarno Shewan (1996)
103Dextromethorphan
- Active ingredient in most OTC cough medicine
- NMDA receptor blockade at high doses
- Mostly teenage males abuse it
- Like PCP and K at 20-30 X OTC dose
- Coricidin Bad news
104CholinergicHallucinogens
105Anticholinergic hallucinogens
- Atropine-from the Deadly nightshade, Datura,
Jimson weed, and Mandrake - Scopolamine-from Datura, Jimson weed, Mandrake
and Henbane
106Datura
107Jimson weed
108Muscarine/Muscimol
- Found in mushrooms (Amanita Muscaria)
- Muscimol is a GABAA agonist
- Trance-like, dreamy state with dreamlike
illusions - Like Ambien
- Muscarine is an Acetylcholine agonist (muscarinic
receptors) - Not psychotropic
- Peripheral effects sweating, limb twitching,
seizure activity
109Atropine Scopolamine
- Found in Atropa belladonna, Datura Stramonium,
Henbane - Acetylcholine receptor (muscarinic) antagonists
- Dissociatives that induces delirium ,
hallucinations, and amnesia - Classic anti-cholinergic symptoms
- Hot as hell
- Dry as a bone
- Mad as a hatter
- Blind as a bat
- Red as a beet
- Used in the treatment of motion sickness to
dilate pupils during eye-exams.
110Anticholinergic effects
- Dry mouth, blurred vision, loss of motor control
- Dream-like trance state
- Little or no memory of experience
111Opioid Hallucinogen - Salvinorin A
- Comes from a plant in the mint family
- Salvia Divinorum
- Affinity for kappa opioid receptors
- Agonist action
- Like LSD and psilocybin
- Fresh leaves are chewed and left in mouth
- Dried leaves smoked
- Not effective if taken orally
- Most potent, but not most powerful, of all
naturally occurring hallucinogens - Its still legal, but not likely for long
112Salvia Divinorum
- Plant used by the Mazatec people of Southern
Mexico Diviners sageleaves chewed or smoked - Active drug salvinorum A (affects Kappa
receptors)--most potent natural hallucinogen (100
microgram ED50) - Brief (30-60 min) intense trip visual
hallucinations, dissociative state, some bad
trips, recent highly publicized suicide - Marketed legally in US (in most states) as herbal
dietary supplementcurrently under DEA review