PSYCHIATRY STUDY GUIDE
Theme - ANSWERSHallucinations and psychiatry lecture
Can psychedelics have a role in psychiatry
once again?
BEN SESSA - ANSWERSPsychedelic or hallucinogenic drugs such
as lysergic acid diethylamide (LSD), 3,4,5-
trimethoxy-b-phenethylamine (mescaline),
psilocybin, 3,4-methylenedioxymethamphetamine
(MDMA), N,N-dimethyltryptamine
(DMT) and their relations occur in
abundance throughout the natural world,
and have been used by humankind for
thousands of years.
In some cultures they are important
tools for spiritual experiences, whereas in
others they are labelled as dangerous drugs
of misuse. What is less well known about
these substances is the role they played in
psychiatry for a brief historical interval.
This article offers a short overview of
this period and questions whether interest
in these compounds might be emerging
again.Initial
work explored the possibility that psychedelics
might be used as 'psychotomimetics',
to mimic the mental states of patients with
schizophrenia (Osmond, 1957), and many
health professionals were encouraged to
partake in self-discovery or shared psychedelic
experiences with their patients. Other
research looked into using psychedelic
drugs as adjuncts to psychotherapy. The
therapy took the form of two broad
types: first, psycholytic ('mind loosening')
psychotherapy involved taking low doses of
LSD as part of ongoing psychoanalytical
therapy. The drug had a loosening effect
,and facilitated the exploration of repressed
materialThe second type, psychedelic
('mind manifesting') psychotherapy involved
preparation sessions without LSD,
then one single large-dose session that
encouraged an intense reaction, followed
by further non-drug sessions to explore
the meaning of the material that emerged
(Grinspoon & Bakalar, 1997).
Charles S. Grob, M.D. 1998 - ANSWERSHallucinogens, throughout the breadth of time,
have played a vital albeit hidden and mysterious role.
They have often, in aboriginal and shamanic contexts,
been at the absolute center of culture and world view
(Dobkin de Rios, 1984). Opening up the doors to the
spiritual planes, and accessing vital information
imperative to tribal cohesion and survival,
hallucinogenic plants became what some scholars have
considered to be the bedrock of human civilization
(Wasson, 1968; Wasson et al, 1978; Huxley, 1978).
Within the context of shamanic society, these awe
inspiring botanicals were utilized to facilitate healing,
divine the future, protect the community from danger
and enhance learning (e.g. teaching hunters the ways of
animals) (Cordova-Rios, 1971).Hallucinogenic plants with magical as well as healing
properties were essential elements of this indigenous
pharmacopoeia. Members of the Solanaceae family
with their alkaloids atropine and scopolamine, including
a great number of species of the genus Datura, as well as
mandrake, henbane, and belladonna, had wide
application as agents of healing and transcendence
(Harner, 1973). In taking action against the indigenous
use of psychotropic plants, the Church sought to
eliminate a perceived threat to its oligarchic powers and
reassert its monopoly on legitimate access to the
supernatural (O'Neil, 1987).As plant hallucinogens were attributed to
have supernatural powers, they were quickly perceived
by the European invaders as weapons of the Devil
designed to prevent the triumph of Christianity over
traditional Indian religion (Furst, 1976). An early
Seventeenth Century Spanish observer of native
customs, Hernando Ruiz de Alarcon, wrote of the
idolatries he observed involving the consumption of the
morning glory: "Olouihqui is a kind of seed-like lentils
produced by a type of vine i
,The Psychotomimetic Model - ANSWERSPreoccupation with the hallucinogen induced
psychotomimetic model continued through the 1950's.
The psychotomimetic position was summarized by one
its leading proponents, Harvard psychiatrist Max
Rinkel: "The psychotic phenomena produced were
predominantly schizophrenia-like symptoms, manifested
in disturbances of thought and speech, changes in
affect and mood, changes in perception, production of
hallucinations and delusions, depersonalizations and
changes in behavior. Rorschach tests and concrete abstract
thinking tests showed responses quite similar to those obtained with schizophrenics"
(Rinkel and
Denber, 1958)., it became increasingly apparent,
however, that although an impressive array of
psychiatric researchers and theoreticians had elucidated
and elaborated upon the startling degree of resemblance
between schizophrenia and the hallucinogenic
experience, a growing consensus was emerging that the
dissimilarities between the two states essentially
obviated the value of the chemical psychosis model
(Grinspoon and Bakalar, 1979). Speaking at the First
International Congress of Neuropsychopharmacology in
1959, the legendary Manfred Bleuler enunciated the
central argument in opposition to the psychotomimetic
model. He stated that it was the gradual and inexorable
progression of a symptom complex that included
disturbed thought processes, depersonalization and
auditory hallucinations, evolving into a generalized
functional incapacitation that was characteristic of
schizophrenia. He concluded with the demonstrative
declaration that although the psychotomimetic drugs
may have strengthened our conceptual understanding of
organic psychoses, they have "contributed nothing to the
understanding of the pathogenesis of schizophrenia"
(Bleuler, 1959).
The Psycholytic Treatment Model - ANSWERSIn subjects given a relatively low dose of
LSD, there appeared to occur a release of repressed
psychic material, particularly in anxiety states and
obsessional neuroses. By allowing this otherwise
repressed and threatening material to flow effortlessly
into consciousness, investigators surmised that low dose
LSD treatment could facilitate the psychotherapy
process (Stoll, 1947). Application of the low dose
model in Europe as well as the United States ascertained
that psycholytic treatment had particular value with
, patients with rigid defense mechanisms and excessively
strict superego structures. By facilitating ego regressionuncovering early childhood
memories, and inducing an
affective release, psychiatrists claimed to have achieved
a breakthrough in reducing the duration and improving
the outcome of psychotherapeutic treatment (Chandler
and Hartmann, 1960).Problems arose with the
psycholytic paradigm, however, as critics noted that the
content of regressed material released from the
unconscious was extremely sensitive to the psychiatrist's
own analytic orientation, in most cases Freudian or
Jungian. Questions arose over whether the phenomena
observed in the psychotherapeutic sessions, including
the often positive treatment outcome, were not simply
attributable to the presence of heightened powers of
suggestibility. Moreover, with psycholytic treatments,
care had to be taken to utilize sufficiently low dosages of
the hallucinogen that the patient's ego would not be
overwhelmed to the point where verbal analysis would
be inhibited. When in the course of psycholytic
psychotherapy higher dosages were utilized, the
resultant experience could no longer be contained
within the intended theoretical framework, thus
necessitating delineation of an entirely new paradigm.In response to escalating fears
that hallucinogens
had bec
Franz X. Vollenweider and Michael Kometer 2010 - ANSWERSHowever, research into
psychedelics
did not begin until the 1950s after the
breakthrough discovery of the classical
hallucinogen lysergic acid diethylamide
(LSD) by Albert Hofmann2 (timeline). The
classical hallucinogens include indoleamines,
such as psilocybin and LSD, and
phenethylamines, such as mescaline and
2,5-dimethoxy-4-iodo-amphetamine
(DOI). Research into psychedelics was
advanced in the mid 1960s by the finding
that dissociative anaesthetics such as ketamine
and phencyclidine (PCP) also produce
psychedelic-like effects3 (BOX 1). Given
their overlapping psychological effects,
both classes of drugs are included here
as psychedelics.Depending on the individual taking the
drug, their expectations, the setting in which