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Showing posts with label Psilocybin. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Psilocybin. Show all posts

Monday 1 March 2021

Medicinal Psychedelics for Neuroinflammatory conditions - Depression, Severe Headaches, OCD, Addiction and Autism

 

62 clinical trials with Psilocybin are registered


Today’s post is about treating a wide range of conditions that share neuroinflammation in common, by targeting the serotonin receptor 5-HT2A.

Severely disabling cluster headaches, that were seen as untreatable, have been resolved by monthly micro dosing with psilocybin.

Psilocybin is a naturally occurring prodrug compound produced by more than 200 species of fungus, including magic mushrooms. Psilocybin is quickly converted by the body into Psilocin.

 

Psilocin Binding Profile

Target

Affinity

Species

 

Ki (nM)

 

SERT

3,801.0

Human

 

5-HT1A

567.4

Human

 

5-HT1B

219.6

Human

 

5-HT1D

36.4

Human

 

5-HT1E

52.2

Human

 

5-HT2A

107.2

Human

 

5-HT2B

4.6

Human

 

5-HT2C

97.3

Rat

 

5-HT3

> 10,000

Human

 

5-HT5

83.7

Human

 

5-HT6

57.0

Human

 

5-HT7

3.5

Human

 

 

 

“The neurotransmitter serotonin is structurally similar to psilocybin.

Psilocybin is rapidly dephosphorylated in the body to psilocin, which is an agonist for several serotonin receptors, which are also known as 5-hydroxytryptamine (5-HT) receptors. Psilocin binds with high affinity to 5-HT2A receptors and low affinity to 5-HT1 receptors, including 5-HT1A and 5-HT1D; effects are also mediated via 5-HT2C receptors.

Various lines of evidence have shown that interactions with non-5-HT2 receptors also contribute to the subjective and behavioral effects of the drug. For example, psilocin indirectly increases the concentration of the neurotransmitter dopamine in the basal ganglia, and some psychotomimetic symptoms of psilocin are reduced by haloperidol, a non-selective dopamine receptor antagonist.

Taken together, these suggest that there may be an indirect dopaminergic contribution to psilocin's psychotomimetic effects. Psilocybin and psilocin have no affinity for dopamine receptor D2, unlike another common 5-HT receptor agonist, LSD. Psilocin antagonizes H1 receptors with moderate affinity, compared to LSD which has a lower affinity.”

  

A Canadian company, Pilz Bioscience, is trialing its version of psilocybin to treat autism.

We already know that micro dosing of Lysergic acid diethylamide (LSD) promotes social behavior via 5-HT2A/AMPA receptors and mTOR signaling.

  

The FDA is already onside

For those worrying about the law, the FDA is well aware of the therapeutic potential of low dose psychedelics like Psilocybin, and indeed LSD. 

FDA Grants Psilocybin Second Breakthrough Therapy Designation for Resistant Depression

The US Food and Drug Administration (FDA) has granted the Usona Institute breakthrough therapy designation for psilocybin for the treatment of major depressive disorder (MDD).

 

For really motivated readers, click on the link below to read the details of Psilocybin


https://www.usonainstitute.org/wp-content/uploads/2020/08/Usona_Psilocybin_IB_V3.0_08.31.2020_cc.pdf

   

Nova (Pilz Bioscience) Launches Preclinical Autism Spectrum Disorder Therapeutic Study

 

A treatment phase with its proprietary psilocybin compound is scheduled to begin in February 2021.    


https://pilzbioscience.com/

 

PILZ BIOSCIENCE

INNOVATION IN ASD

Though ASD symptoms are diverse, underlying causes converge on common biological mechanisms, priming development of a new approach to diagnostics and treatment. Scientific studies suggest a strong association between ASD and inflammation, as well as ASD and microbiota in the gut. Likewise, parallels exist between social cognition in autism and some of the key behavioral elements already being treated with psychedelic therapy.

 

 


 


 

Micro dose LSD for Autism? via activation of 5-HT2A/AMPA/mTORC1

  

LSD may offer viable treatment for certain mental disorders

Researchers from McGill University have discovered, for the first time, one of the possible mechanisms that contributes to the ability of lysergic acid diethylamide (LSD) to increase social interaction. The findings, which could help unlock potential therapeutic applications in treating certain psychiatric diseases, including anxiety and alcohol use disorders, are published in the journal PNAS.

Psychedelic drugs, including LSD, were popular in the 1970s and have been gaining popularity over the past decade, with reports of young professionals claiming to regularly take small non-hallucinogenic micro-doses of LSD to boost their productivity and creativity and to increase their empathy. The mechanism of action of LSD on the brain, however, has remained a mystery.

The researchers note that the main outcome of their study is the ability to describe, at least in rodents, the underlying mechanism for the behavioural effect that results in LSD increasing feelings of empathy, including a greater connection to the world and sense of being part of a large community. "The fact that LSD binds the 5-HT2A receptor was previously known. The novelty of this research is to have identified that the prosocial effects of LSD activate the 5-HT2 receptors, which in-turn activate the excitatory synapses of the AMPA receptor as well as the protein complex mTORC1, which has been demonstrated to be dysregulated in diseases with social deficits such as autism spectrum disorder,” as specified by Prof. Nahum Sonenberg, Professor at the Department of Biochemistry of McGill University, world renowned expert in the molecular biology of diseases and co-lead author of the study.

  

Lysergic acid diethylamide (LSD) promotes social behavior through mTORC1 in the excitatory neurotransmission


Significance

Social behavior (SB) is a fundamental hallmark of human interaction. Repeated administration of low doses of the 5-HT2A agonist lysergic acid diethylamide (LSD) in mice enhances SB by potentiating 5-HT2A and AMPA receptor neurotransmission in the mPFC via an increasing phosphorylation of the mTORC1, a protein involved in the modulation of SB. Moreover, the inactivation of mPFC glutamate neurotransmission impairs SB and nullifies the prosocial effects of LSD. Finally, LSD requires the integrity of mTORC1 in excitatory glutamatergic, but not in inhibitory neurons, to produce prosocial effects. This study unveils a mechanism contributing to the role of 5-HT2A agonism in the modulation of SB.

Abstract

Clinical studies have reported that the psychedelic lysergic acid diethylamide (LSD) enhances empathy and social behavior (SB) in humans, but its mechanism of action remains elusive. Using a multidisciplinary approach including in vivo electrophysiology, optogenetics, behavioral paradigms, and molecular biology, the effects of LSD on SB and glutamatergic neurotransmission in the medial prefrontal cortex (mPFC) were studied in male mice. Acute LSD (30 μg/kg) injection failed to increase SB. However, repeated LSD (30 μg/kg, once a day, for 7 days) administration promotes SB, without eliciting antidepressant/anxiolytic-like effects. Optogenetic inhibition of mPFC excitatory neurons dramatically inhibits social interaction and nullifies the prosocial effect of LSD. LSD potentiates the α-amino-3-hydroxy-5-methyl-4-isoxazole propionate (AMPA) and 5-HT2A, but not N-methyl-D-aspartate (NMDA) and 5-HT1A, synaptic responses in the mPFC and increases the phosphorylation of the serine-threonine protein kinases Akt and mTOR. In conditional knockout mice lacking Raptor (one of the structural components of the mTORC1 complex) in excitatory glutamatergic neurons (Raptorf/f:Camk2alpha-Cre), the prosocial effects of LSD and the potentiation of 5-HT2A/AMPA synaptic responses were nullified, demonstrating that LSD requires the integrity of mTORC1 in excitatory neurons to promote SB. Conversely, in knockout mice lacking Raptor in GABAergic neurons of the mPFC (Raptorf/f:Gad2-Cre), LSD promotes SB. These results indicate that LSD selectively enhances SB by potentiating mPFC excitatory transmission through 5-HT2A/AMPA receptors and mTOR signaling. The activation of 5-HT2A/AMPA/mTORC1 in the mPFC by psychedelic drugs should be explored for the treatment of mental diseases with SB impairments such as autism spectrum disorder and social anxiety disorder.

   

D-Lysergic Acid Diethylamide (LSD) as a Model of Psychosis: Mechanism of Action and Pharmacology


Figure 1. D-Lysergic Acid Diethylamide (LSD) acts at different brain regions with a pleiotropic mechanism of action involving serotonin 5-HT1A, 5-HT2A, 5-HT2C, and dopamine D2 receptors in the Dorsal Raphe (DR); dopamine D2 receptor and Trace Amine Associate (TAAR1) receptors in the Ventral Tegmental area (VTA); and 5-HT2A in the Locus Coerules (LC). These three nuclei project to the prefrontal cortex (PFC), enhancing or inhibiting the release of neurotransmitters and ultimately medicating the psychotic-like effects and cognitive changes. mPFC: medial prefrontal cortex (mPFC); NMDA(NR2B): N-methyl-D-aspartate (NMDA) receptor subunit NR2B.

  

LSD vs Psilocybin

LSD and psilocybin have effects that overlap, but they are not identical.  Both are used by sufferers to treat cluster headaches. 

Why does low dose psilocybin provide long lasting protection from cluster headaches?  These headaches are often thought to be driven by ion channel dysfunctions (channelopathic).  Does psilocybin, or indeed LSD, directly or indirectly affect ion channels?  Nobody knows.

Regular readers will know that certain calcium/sodium channels are implicated in autism, epilepsy and MR/ID.  Some of these same ion channels are also associated with headaches.  So no surprise that some people with a mutation in one of these genes have additional problems to autism. 

 

Are all types of migraine channelopathies?

Familial hemiplegic migraine (FHM) is characterized by migraine attacks, which is with transient, unilateral motor weakness as its episodic aura. FHM is an autosomal dominant migraine, three encoding protein genes have been identified: CACNA1A encodes α1 subunit of calcium channel Cav2.1, ATP1A2 encodes α2 subunit of Na+/ K+-ATPase pump, and SCN1A encodes α subunit of sodium channel Nav1.1. All these proteins are specially expressed on nervous system, and all the mutations mainly cause brain dysfunction. Series studies on FHM indicated that mutations on Cav2.1 and ATP1A2 increased the concentration of glutamate in synapses and disturbed the excitatory and inhibitory balance, which induced the brain dysfunction. Although the same result has not yet been concluded firmly enough from the functional studies on sodium channels (Nav1.1) owe to the more perplexed expression and structure of Nav1.1 and its encoding gene SCN1A, it firmly concluded that all the mutations of the three genes cause brain dysfunction. All above indicate that FHM is a definitely channelopathy. Are other types of migraine channelopathies?

  

Conclusion

Tiny doses of psilocybin (magic mushrooms) have been used for years by a small number of people with severe headaches.  These headaches are not your typical migraine, they are totally disabling. Note that large doses of Psilocybin frequently cause headaches.

It appears that the same therapy has an effect on other neurological conditions ranging from depression to autism.  Take a look at all the trials to date:


https://clinicaltrials.gov/ct2/results?recrs=&cond=&term=psilocybin&cntry=&state=&city=&dist=


We know from anecdotes that many Aspies feel better when they activate the serotonin receptor 5-HT2A, but I suspect that may “overshoot” with dosing. It is a non-hallucinogenic effect that we are looking for.  The dose can be as little as a micro dose once a month.

Genuinely effective micro dosing is very attractive, because it is likely to be very safe and indeed very cheap.  Intermittent micro dosing, if therapeutic, would be even better.  

Clearly, a standardized drug like PLZ-1013 from Pilz Bioscience is what many people will want.  It is very encouraging that these researchers and those at McGill University and the Usona Institute have engaged themselves.  But, prepare to wait a decade or two.

It is a pity we have to wait so long; LSD was first used as an autism therapy before I was born. LSD was then made a banned substance.  Clearly back in the days that Professor Lovaas was giving LSD to people with autism at UCLA in the 1960s, he was using the “wrong” dose, but he might have eventually stumbled upon the micro dose.  Here we are almost 60 years later, still with anecdotes.  Roll on the clinical trial of PLZ-1013.












Tuesday 15 December 2020

Fine tuning Social Behavior in Autism with an existing pediatric drug, Desmopressin?

 


There are two closely related hormones, vasopressin and oxytocin, that have been extensively researched in autism. 

With oxytocin you can modify social-bonding behavior. You can increase oxytocin in the brain either via a nasal spray containing oxytocin, or you can add a specific bacterium to your gut that triggers a signal to the brain to produce more of its own oxytocin.  The latter is my preferred method, because you can produce a mild long-lasting effect throughout the day.

Oxytocin has a very short life and it does not cross the blood brain barrier.

There is even a new study in the works that will compare these two methods of treating autism.

 

Probiotics and oxytocin nasal spray as neuro-social-behavioral interventions for patients with autism spectrum disorders: a pilot randomized controlled trial protocol

Autism spectrum disorder (ASD) is a complex neurodevelopmental disorder characterized by impairments in social interaction and communication. Oxytocin (OXT), as a neuropeptide, plays a role in emotional and social behaviors. Lactobacillus reuteri (L. reuteri) supplementation led to an OXT-dependent behavioral improvement in ASD mouse models. Despite some promising results from animal studies, little is known about the efficacy of supplementation with L. reuteri, alone or with exogenous OXT therapy, on social-behavioral functions in ASD patients. This paper presents a protocol for a pilot randomized controlled trial to evaluate the feasibility of conducting a full trial comparing oral supplementation of L. reuteri probiotics and intranasal OXT spray to placebo on the effect of social and behavioral functions in ASD patients. The study will also capture preliminary estimates of the efficacy of the proposed interventions in ASD patients.

Methods

This pilot trial is a two-staged, randomized, double-blind, placebo-controlled, parallel-group study. Throughout the study (0–24 weeks), 60 patients with ASD will be randomly assigned to receive either oral L. reuteri probiotics or placebo. In the second study stage (13–24 weeks), all participants will receive intranasal OXT spray. As primary outcomes, serum OXT levels will be assayed and social behaviors will be assessed via the Autism Behavior Checklist and the Social Responsiveness Scale which are validated questionnaires, an objective emotional facial matching test, and a new video-based eye-tracking test. Secondary outcomes include the GI-severity-index and Bristol Stool Chart to assess GI function and gut microbiome/short-chain fatty acids. All the outcomes will be assessed at baseline and weeks 12 and 24.

Discussion

This pilot study will provide important information on the feasibility of recruitment, blinding and concealment, treatment administration, tolerability and adherence, specimen collection, outcome assessment, potential adverse effects, and the preliminary efficacy on both primary and secondary outcomes. If successful, this pilot study will inform a larger randomized controlled trial fully powered to examine the efficacies of oral L. reuteri probiotics and/or intranasal OXT spray on social-behavioral improvement in ASD patients. 

My conclusion was to add two drops of L.Reuteri DSM 17938 (Biogaia Protectis) into the liquid part of my son's Polypill therapy. That way there are no extra pills to swallow and in theory the bottle should last 50 days, so I am not forever looking to buy more.  If you want a bigger effect, just add more drops.  The producer suggests a daily dose of 5 drops for babies, to promote GI health - the original intended purpose.

When it comes to Vasopressin it looks like you cannot avoid a nasal inhaler, unless you want to try transcutaneous electrical acupoint stimulation (TEAS).  There is a debate as to whether Vasopressin and its analogs (man-made modified versions) can cross the blood brain barrier and to what extent. 

There are 4 previous posts that looked at Vasopressin. 

https://epiphanyasd.blogspot.com/search/label/Vasopressin 

The Vasopressin showing good results in the trials at Stanford is the injectable pharmaceutical version of the hormone made into a nasal spray.  This kind of spray could be made easily at a compounding pharmacy.

It turns out that a synthetic analog of vasopressin, called desmopressin, has been widely used for over 40 years to treat nocturnal enuresis (night-time bed-wetting) among other more serious conditions.

 

Desmopressin in Autism 

Nocturnal enuresis is common in individuals with but to our knowledge, there are no reports that desmopressin enhances social functioning in ASD (or in any other clinical population). This may be because desmopressin is typically administered at bedtime (so prosocial effects would be less evident) and orally (oral desmopressin does not cross the blood-brain barrier). The most likely explanation, however, is that desmopressin acts selectively on AVPR2, rather than on AVPR1A”

 

From:

A randomized placebo-controlled pilot trial shows that intranasal vasopressin improves social deficits in children with autism

 

Desmopressin N=1 example 

I was recently contacted by the father of a young boy with autism who has been prescribed Desmopressin nasal spray by his neurologist.

The father noted major positive behavioral changes from the first dose.

This is of course great news.

Desmopressin is a widely available drug, seen as safe, and that is why it is prescribed to children.

In the US the nasal spray version is no longer widely used for children and they use the oral version.

In some countries it is used for people with MS (Multiple Sclerosis) with nocturnal enuresis.

 

Desmopressin Shortage

Before readers get too excited, Ferring Pharmaceuticals, the big producer of Desmopressin nasal sprays did voluntarily withdraw its brands (Minirin, DDAVP Nasal Spray, Desmopressin Acetate Nasal Spray) from the market in August 2020 due to a quality problem. 


https://www.fda.gov/safety/recalls-market-withdrawals-safety-alerts/ferring-us-issues-voluntary-nationwide-recall-ddavpr-nasal-spray-10-mcg01ml-desmopressin-acetate

  

There is now a shortage and so what was an easy to obtain drug, may be more difficult to get.  There is a Pfizer version called Presinex.  

From the above paper on vasopressin for autism:-

Vasopressin benefits 

“In conclusion, the present pilot study determined that 4-week intranasal AVP treatment compared to placebo enhanced social communication abilities, diminished anxiety symptoms, and reduced repetitive behaviors in children with ASD. On nearly all behavioral measures, participants with the highest pre-treatment blood AVP concentrations benefitted the most from AVP treatment, suggesting that pre-treatment blood AVP concentrations may be useful for setting dosing guidelines for this medication. Last, intranasal AVP treatment was well tolerated with minimal side effects in this pediatric study population. These preliminary findings suggest that intranasal AVP treatment has potential to enhance social abilities in an ASD patient population characterized by currently intractable social impairments” 

Transcutaneous electrical acupoint stimulation (TEAS) to raise vasopressin 

“there is evidence that nonpharmacological interventions may facilitate endogenous AVP release, for example, electroacupuncture stimulation increases brain AVP concentrations in rats. Transcutaneous electrical acupoint stimulation (TEAS) therapy improves social functioning and anxiety symptoms in children with ASD, particularly in those with the largest post-treatment increase in blood AVP concentrations. The authors of this prior report theorized that increased AVP signaling may be the mechanism by which the prosocial and anxiolytic benefits of TEAS treatment were achieved” 

 

Vasopressin with Bumetanide  - take great care

A while back, one reader did ask me about taking intranasal Vasopressin with Bumetanide.  His doctor in California thought this might not be wise since the two drugs have opposing effects.

·        Bumetanide (a diuretic) makes you pee more.

·        Vasopressin (the anti-diuretic hormone) makes you pee less.

The real problem is the risk of low sodium, hyponatremia.  This is always a risk with vasopressin and the risk might well increase if you took Bumetanide.  The risk is going to be dose dependent.

If you take Vasopressin and then drink large amounts of water this will disturb the volume of fluids in your body and in particular it will lower the level of sodium.  This may lead to seizures and ultimately worse.

Bumetanide does disturb the level of electrolytes, but nearly all the change usually occurs in Potassium, this is why you need to add back potassium via diet and add a supplement.  Sodium is not normally a problem, but always check all electrolytes when taking a blood draw.

If someone adds vasopressin to their existing bumetanide therapy, the doctor should definitely monitor the level of sodium.

In most people’s diet, sodium is one thing you are likely to have too much of and it is very easy to add a bit more sodium if the blood test suggests it is necessary.  In extreme cases of low sodium you need to use a special re-hydration drink, or an intravenous saline solution.  Monty has a relative who keeps going to hospital for the latter.

The diuretic action of Bumetanide is a side effect of the "autism effect" and so if you can reduce the diuresis of bumetanide that would be good thing.  Researchers are trying to find a better-bumetanide and their goal is to have no diuresis.

If combining vasopressin with Bumetanide is accompanied by both reduced diuresis and a matching reduction in fluid intake, this might actually work well.  Clearly, extra care needs to be taken and what might be perfectly safe in one person may not be safe in another person.

  

Conclusion

I do have to give a big thank-you to our reader who shared his experience with Desmopressin and to the neurologist for suggesting it.

Desmopressin looks like one of those autism therapies that needs only a very short trial to determine whether it is beneficial.  This is a big advantage.

You would hope the Stanford vasopressin researchers make a short trial of Desmopressin, just to compare the effect.  They probably will not.

All you have to decide is whether it is going to be the left nostril, or the right nostril.  With intranasal insulin there was a problem with irritation inside the nose, so alternating left and right sides might be best.  You hold your breath and then squirt the spray; the objective is not to breath the spray into your lungs.  An easy mistake to make.

Note that I am referring to the 10 mcg/0.1mL Desmopressin nasal spray.  The one used to treat kids that wet their bed at night.

There is also a much more potent 1.5 mg/mL version, called Stimate in the US.  This is used to treat von Willebrand’s Disease (Type I) and hemophilia/haemophilia.  You do not want that version.  This version is 15 times more potent than the anti bed-wetting variant. 

I have been suggesting to Aspies living in the US that they give Vasopressin a trial to counter the social deficits that some find troubling.  I think they are able to obtain this via a compounding pharmacy, with a helpful doctor’s prescription.

I think outside the US your doctor will think you are mad if you ask for a specially compounded vasopressin nasal spray, or indeed a compounded  oxytocin spray.

For people unable to get the intranasal vasopressin prescribed/compounded, Desmopressin is on option to discuss with your doctor. Maybe time to develop a bed wetting problem?

The Aspies in the Netherlands have the legal option of a tiny non-hallucinogenic dose of Psilocybin once a month, which seems an effective way to target Serotonin 5-HT2A receptor-mediated pathways and so improve social behavior. What caught my attention was that the effect of this tiny dose lasts a month and it can also be used to treat severe, otherwise untreatable, cluster headaches.

Psilocybin is the fancy name for magic mushrooms.

Psilocybin is also legal in Brazil and not surprisingly in Jamaica.  It looks like the US is moving in the same direction - medicinal magic mushrooms!


FDA grants Breakthrough Therapy Designation to Usona Institute's psilocybin program for major depressive disorder


The “medical” dose of Psilocybin is a tiny fraction of the “recreational” dose and is only taken when the effect of previous dose fades to zero.  It is not a crazy idea at all, just not currently a legal therapy in most countries.  More than half a century ago Lovaas was researching something very similar at UCLA, but using LSD.


All told, there are several potential ways to fine-tune social behavior in autism. Sulforaphane is yet another option.