Potential analgesic effects of psychedelics on select chronic pain conditions: A survey study

Author:

Cavarra Mauro1ORCID,Mason Natasha Leigh1,Kuypers Kim P. C.1,Bonnelle Valerie2,Smith Will J.2,Feilding Amanda2,Kryskow Pamela3,Ramaekers Johannes G.1

Affiliation:

1. Department of Neuropsychology and Psychopharmacology, Faculty of Psychology and Neuroscience Maastricht University Maastricht the Netherlands

2. The Beckley Foundation Oxford UK

3. Department of Family Medicine University of British Columbia Vancouver British Columbia Canada

Abstract

AbstractBackgroundChronic pain is a major cause of suffering and disability and is often associated with psychiatric complications. Current treatments carry the risk of severe side effects and may lead to limited or no relief at all in a relevant portion of this patient population. Preliminary evidence suggests that classical psychedelics (e.g. LSD and psilocybin) may have analgesic effects in healthy volunteers, and in certain chronic pain conditions and observational studies reveal that they are used in naturalistic settings as a means to manage pain.MethodsIn order to gain insight on the effectiveness of such compounds in chronic pain conditions, we set up a survey addressed to chronic pain patients inquiring about psychedelic use and the relief levels achieved with both conventional treatments, full psychedelic doses and microdoses. We analysed data related to five conditions selected based on diagnostic homogeneity within each of them: fibromyalgia, arthritis, migraine, tension‐type headache and sciatica.ResultsExcept for sciatica, volunteers reported that psychedelics led to better pain relief compared to conventional medication in all examined conditions. More specifically, full doses performed better than conventional medication. Microdoses led to significantly better relief compared to conventional medication in migraines and achieved comparable relief in the remaining three categories. Implications for future research are discussed.ConclusionsFull doses and microdoses may hold value in the treatment of some specific chronic pain conditions.SignificancePsychedelic substances are receiving increasing attention from the scientific literature because of evidence showing beneficial effects on several measures related to mental health in clinical samples and healthy volunteers samples. Previous evidence suggests that people suffering from chronic pain are using psychedelics to seek relief and the present paper presents the results of a survey study investigating their use and analgesic effects among individuals suffering from fibromyalgia, arthritis, migraine, tension‐type headache and sciatica.

Publisher

Wiley

Subject

Anesthesiology and Pain Medicine

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