Psilocybin desynchronizes brain networks

Author:

Siegel Joshua SORCID,Subramanian SubhaORCID,Perry Demetrius,Kay BenjaminORCID,Gordon EvanORCID,Laumann TimothyORCID,Reneau Rick,Gratton Caterina,Horan Christine,Metcalf Nicholas,Chacko RaviORCID,Schweiger JulieORCID,Wong Dean,Bender David,Padawer-Curry JonahORCID,Raison CharlesORCID,Raichle MarcusORCID,Lenze Eric J.ORCID,Snyder Abraham ZORCID,Dosenbach Nico U.F.ORCID,Nicol GingerORCID

Abstract

1SummaryThe relationship between the acute effects of psychedelics and their persisting neurobiological and psychological effects is poorly understood. Here, we tracked brain changes with longitudinal precision functional mapping in healthy adults before, during, and for up to 3 weeks after oral psilocybin and methylphenidate (17 MRI visits per participant) and again 6+ months later. Psilocybin disrupted connectivity across cortical networks and subcortical structures, producing more than 3-fold greater acute changes in functional networks than methylphenidate. These changes were driven by desynchronization of brain activity across spatial scales (area, network, whole brain). Psilocybin-driven desynchronization was observed across association cortex but strongest in the default mode network (DMN), which is connected to the anterior hippocampus and thought to create our sense of self. Performing a perceptual task reduced psilocybin-induced network changes, suggesting a neurobiological basis forgrounding, connecting with physical reality during psychedelic therapy. The acute brain effects of psilocybin are consistent with distortions of space-time and the self. Psilocybin induced persistent decrease in functional connectivity between the anterior hippocampus and cortex (and DMN in particular), lasting for weeks but normalizing after 6 months. Persistent suppression of hippocampal-DMN connectivity represents a candidate neuroanatomical and mechanistic correlate for psilocybin’s pro-plasticity and anti-depressant effects.

Publisher

Cold Spring Harbor Laboratory

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