Publications by authors named "Katrin Preller"

Article Synopsis
  • Serotonergic psychedelics, like LSD and psilocybin, alter consciousness and may help treat mental health issues, but how they work is still not entirely clear.
  • The study reviews subjective experiences, neuroimaging, and molecular actions, indicating LSD leads to more intense visionary experiences compared to psilocybin and alters brain connectivity patterns.
  • Findings suggest a complex relationship between different psychedelics' effects and highlight the need for standardized research methods to better understand these substances and their therapeutic potential.*
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Background: Persons with schizophrenia are excluded from psychedelic-assisted therapy due to concerns about the risk of triggering or worsening psychosis. However, there is limited meta-analytic data on the risk of psychedelic-induced psychosis in individuals with pre-existing psychotic disorders.

Methods: We conducted a systematic review, meta-analysis, and overview of reviews to assess the incidence of psychedelic-induced psychosis and symptom exacerbation in schizophrenia.

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This chapter offers a comprehensive overview of our current understanding of the neural mechanisms underlying the effects of psychedelic drugs, with a primary focus on human neuroimaging studies. Whenever possible, we explore the neurobiological mechanisms that may underly acute and subacute adverse effects and describe hypotheses on how these results may inform on the pathophysiology of psychiatric illnesses. We delve into the general effects of psychedelics on EEG, fMRI, and PET measurements, drawing insights from experiments that have assessed their acute biological mechanisms.

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Serotonergic psychedelics hold promise as a treatment modality for various psychiatric disorders and are currently applied in psychedelic-assisted psychotherapy. We investigated the learning effects of the serotonin receptor agonist psilocybin in a probabilistic cue-reward task with emotional cues in the form of neutral or fearful faces, presented either consciously or subconsciously. This study represents the first investigation into reinforcement learning with psilocybin.

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Visual alterations under classic psychedelics can include rich phenomenological accounts of eyes-closed imagery. Preclinical evidence suggests agonism of the 5-HT2A receptor may reduce synaptic gain to produce psychedelic-induced imagery. However, this has not been investigated in humans.

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Background: Ketamine has emerged as one of the most promising therapies for treatment-resistant depression. However, inter-individual variability in response to ketamine is still not well understood and it is unclear how ketamine's molecular mechanisms connect to its neural and behavioral effects.

Methods: We conducted a single-blind placebo-controlled study, with participants blinded to their treatment condition.

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Schizophrenia is a chronic mental illness that affects up to 1% of the population. While efficacious therapies are available for positive symptoms, effective treatment of cognitive and negative symptoms remains an unmet need after decades of research. New developments in the field of neuroimaging are accelerating our knowledge gain regarding the underlying pathophysiology of symptoms in schizophrenia and psychosis spectrum disorders, inspiring new targets for drug development.

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While there's been clinical success and growing research interest in hypnosis, neurobiological underpinnings induced by hypnosis remain unclear. In this fMRI study (which is part of a larger hypnosis project) with 50 hypnosis-experienced participants, we analyzed neural and physiological responses during two hypnosis states, comparing them to non-hypnotic control conditions and to each other. An unbiased whole-brain analysis (multi-voxel- pattern analysis, MVPA), pinpointed key neural hubs in parieto-occipital-temporal areas, cuneal/precuneal and occipital cortices, lingual gyri, and the occipital pole.

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Background: Serotonergic psychedelics, such as psilocybin, alter perceptual and cognitive systems that are functionally integrated with the amygdala. These changes can alter cognition and emotions that are hypothesized to contribute to their therapeutic utility. However, the neural mechanisms of cognitive and subcortical systems altered by psychedelics are not well understood.

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Article Synopsis
  • Digital therapeutics (DTx) are software products designed to prevent, manage, or treat medical conditions via apps or wearable devices; however, creating effective digital placebos for clinical trials is a challenge.
  • This review aimed to explore the use of digital shams in neuroscience-related DTx clinical research, highlighting the need for proper placebo designs in studies.
  • The literature search identified 461 neuroscience studies using 213 unique DTx, with most focused on stroke, depression, and anxiety, revealing that only a fraction (21.7%) employed digital shams in their methodology.
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Animal models indicate that the endocannabinoid system (ECS) plays a modulatory role in stress and reward processing, both crucially impaired in addictive disorders. Preclinical findings showed endocannabinoid-modulated synaptic plasticity in reward brain networks linked to the metabotropic-glutamate-5 receptor (mGluR5), contributing to drug-reinforcing effects and drug-seeking behavior. Although animal models postulate a link between ECS and cocaine addiction, human translational studies are lacking.

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Article Synopsis
  • Research on psilocybin for treating psychiatric disorders is expanding, but the connection between brain changes and subjective experiences is not well established.
  • A study involving 70 healthy participants examined how different doses of psilocybin affect cerebral blood flow (CBF) and how individual characteristics relate to these effects.
  • Results indicated that personal baseline characteristics influenced the brain's response to psilocybin, linking subjective experiences to measurable brain changes and suggesting potential for personalized treatment strategies in psychedelic therapy.
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Article Synopsis
  • - Craving is a key issue in cocaine use disorder, leading to relapse, and current treatments lack effective pharmacological therapies to manage cocaine cravings.
  • - Animal studies suggest that disruptions in brain signaling and glutamate release are crucial for cocaine-seeking behavior, pointing to potential treatment targets in humans, although the specific neural disturbances remain unclear.
  • - A study using advanced imaging techniques revealed increased brain connectivity during craving states in individuals with cocaine use disorder, but these changes did not relate to glutamate levels; factors like obsessive thoughts and cocaine use intensity were linked to changes in neural responses.
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Background: While the exploration of serotonergic psychedelics as psychiatric medicines deepens, so does the pressure to better understand how these compounds act on the brain.

Methods: We used a double-blind, placebo-controlled, crossover design and administered lysergic acid diethylamide (LSD), 3,4-methylenedioxymethamphetamine (MDMA), and d-amphetamine in 25 healthy participants. By using spectral dynamic causal modeling, we mapped substance-induced changes in effective connectivity between the thalamus and different cortex types (unimodal vs.

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Article Synopsis
  • Recent studies suggest that both pharmacological (e.g., psilocybin and LSD) and nonpharmacological (e.g., hypnosis and meditation) methods can induce altered states of consciousness (ASCs) useful for treating psychiatric disorders, but a direct comparison of their neural effects was needed.
  • This research used functional connectivity MRI to analyze these four ASC methods, revealing that they have distinct neural connectivity patterns that can help predict individual responses.
  • The findings emphasize the importance of understanding how ASCs work at a neural level, which could enhance treatment strategies for psychiatric conditions.
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Exploring the neurobiology of the profound changes in consciousness induced by classical psychedelic drugs may require novel neuroimaging methods. Serotonergic psychedelic drugs such as psilocybin produce states of increased sensory-emotional awareness and arousal, accompanied by increased spontaneous electroencephalographic (EEG) signal diversity. By directly stimulating cortical tissue, the altered dynamics and propagation of the evoked EEG activity can reveal drug-induced changes in the overall brain state.

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Article Synopsis
  • * Our study focused on resting-state functional MRI data and found that spatial and temporal autocorrelation effectively explain various network topology measures.
  • * We discovered that changes in network topology due to aging and certain drugs are influenced by spatial autocorrelation, suggesting a way to relate complex measurements back to fundamental biological processes.
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Precision psychiatry aims to identify markers of interindividual variability that allow for predicting the right treatment for each patient. However, bridging the gap between molecular-level manipulations and neural systems-level functional alterations remains an unsolved problem in psychiatry. After decades of low success rates in pharmaceutical research and development for psychiatric drugs, multiple studies now point to the potential of psychedelics as a promising, fast-acting, and long-lasting treatment for some psychiatric symptoms.

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Background: Psilocybin has been suggested as a novel, rapid-acting treatment for depression. Two consecutive doses have been shown to markedly decrease symptom severity in an open-label setting or when compared to a waiting list group. To date, to our knowledge, no other trial compared a single, moderate dose of psilocybin to a placebo condition.

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Article Synopsis
  • Psychedelics are compounds that activate serotonin 2A receptors, causing significant changes in how people perceive, think, and feel.
  • The review explores the chemical properties of various psychoactive substances and how they interact with the nervous system, focusing on serotonin receptors and their signaling pathways for drug development.
  • It also examines how psychedelics affect brain activity and structure, supported by neuroimaging studies that reveal their influence on brain networks, particularly in relation to behavior.
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