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 Post-COVID trauma and the war in Ukraine means that millions of people
          are suffering or are at an increased risk of developing an ‘epidemic’
          of post-traumatic stress (PTSD). Now a new review suggests that
          combining established psychotherapy methods with newer
          pharmaceuticals may offer the best therapeutic approach to deal with
          the large-scale problems faced by the healthcare systems in different
          countries in coping with mass trauma. Psychedelic medications
          including MDMA (‘ecstasy’) and psilocybin (‘magic mushrooms’) show
          the greatest promise. This work is published in the August edition of
          the peer-reviewed journal European
          Neuropsychopharmacology.
 
 The study is the first to review the use of novel treatments
          alongside already accepted psychotherapy and psychological
          counselling. It shows that combining these therapies seem to offer
          the best hope for treatment, particularly in cases of mass trauma
          where there are limited resources, such as we are seeing at present.
 
 The most prominent effect of trauma is PTSD, which is a persistent
          and severely distressing neuropsychological condition triggered by
          witnessing or experiencing a traumatic event. Symptoms include
          intrusive memories, recurrent nightmares, avoidance, mood swings, and
          changes in physical and emotional reactions.
 
 Lead author Dr. Xenia Gonda (Semmelweis University, Budapest,
          Hungary) said:
 
 “Psychotherapy is
          still the first choice for PTSD treatment. There is no effective
          established pharmacological treatment specifically for PTSD. However,
          psychotherapies may have a limited availability, are very lengthy and
          expensive. In addition, there are several different psychotherapeutic
          methods and only very few evidence-based interventions.
 
 We are beginning to
          see new approaches to PTSD treatment, which combines psychotherapy
          and medication. Both the psychotherapy and the drug treatment have an
          effect independently, but they often work together synergistically.
           There are several such drugs in development, but our review
          shows that newer psychedelic drugs seem to be the stand-out
          candidates in this treatment. It’s important to say that it’s not the
          psychedelic nature of the drugs that seem to have the beneficial
          effect in PTSD, these drugs seem to work, at least in part, by
          enhancing the actions of psychotherapy at a neurological level”.
 
 There are several
          treatments in development for use alongside psychotherapy in treating
          PTSD. The most promising drugs are psychedelics, such as MDMA
          (3,4-methylenedioxy-methamphetamine, commonly known as ‘ecstasy’, and
          psilocybin (4-phosphoryloxy-N,N-dimethyltryptamine, commonly known as
          ‘magic mushroom’). The review found that MDMA-assisted psychotherapy
          showed the greatest promise so far, with 4 trials showing
          significantly superior outcomes to those experience by patients
          receiving only psychotherapy. Trials on the use of psilocybin, found
          naturally in certain mushrooms, also show promise, though additional
          data are still needed to validate the therapeutic benefits of
          psilocybin in the treatment of PTSD”.
 
 Commenting, Dr Santiago Madero (Hospital Clinic, Barcelona)
          said:
 
 “This review
          article comes at a moment where President Biden’s administration has
          said they anticipate regulators approving MDMA within the next two
          years for designated breakthrough therapies for PTSD, surely to be
          followed by the European regulatory agencies. If this is so, as the
          author states: “MDMA may revolutionize the treatment of PTSD and may
          provide much needed novel pharmacotherapy that provide therapeutic
          benefits beyond all current and existing pharmacotherapies”.
 
 This is an independent comment, Dr Madero was not involved in this
          work.
 
 The paper Invisible
          wounds: Suturing the gap between the neurobiology, conventional and
          emerging therapies for posttraumatic stress disorder
          (authors Xenia Gonda, Peter Döme, Berta Erdelyi-Hamza, Sandor Krause
          and Livia Priyanka Elek from Semmelweis University in Budapest,
          Hungary;  Samata Sharma and Frank Tarazi from Harvard Medical
          School in Boston, USA), is published in European Neuropsychopharmacology.
          The paper can be seen at: https://www.sciencedirect.com/science/article/abs/pii/S0924977X22002103
 
 European
          Neuropsychopharmacology is an official journal of the
          European College of Neuropsychopharmacology (ECNP).
 
 
 
 
 
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