Boulder Weekly 11.16.2023

Page 55

WEED BETWEEN THE LINES

FIGHTING CHANCE Research suggests psychedelic therapy can reduce PTSD symptoms and improve cognitive function for ‘Special Ops’ personnel BY WILL BRENDZA

T

he most dangerous and delicate military operations are reserved for Special Operations Forces (SOF). Every military branch has its own elite teams; of the U.S. Military’s 1.4 million personnel, more than 33,800 are SOF. SOF soldiers conduct high-stakes offensive raids, demolitions, reconnaissance, search-and-rescue and counterterrorism missions. The high-intensity situations they encounter repeatedly can be drawn out over days or weeks. Many of them experience trauma — physical and mental — more than once in their careers, making them particularly vulnerable to post-traumatic stress disorder (PTSD) as well as cognitive impairment linked to traumatic brain injury (TBI) and chronic traumatic encephalopathy (CTE). New research from The Ohio State University (OSU) may point to a solution on both fronts. In an experiment that tested the efficacy of the psychedelics ibogaine and Dimenthyltryptamine (more commonly known as DMT) researchers found that treatment with these substances lowered rates of depression and anxiety among SOF

BOULDER WEEKLY

soldiers, and improved their cognitive function. Both substances have been decriminalized in Colorado. “What sets this group apart from some other veterans and civilians is that often, they are exposed to repeated traumatic events as a routine part of their jobs,” Alan Davis, lead author of the study, said in a press release. “This build-up of exposure to these difficulties seems to produce a cluster of challenges that include traumatic brain injury, which we know in and of itself predisposes people to mental health problems.” Davis is an associate professor and director of the Center for Psychedelic Drug Research and Education (CPDRE) in OSU’s College of Social Work. He’s worked in academic medical centers, university clinics, community programs and long-term acute care hospitals offering psychotherapies to individuals diagnosed with substance use, traumarelated, mood and anxiety disorders. Davis’ study, published in the American Journal of Drug and Alcohol

Abuse, examined 86 SOF veterans with a history of trauma exposure. They all completed pre-treatment online surveys that assessed a range of mental health symptoms, satisfaction with life, anger levels and suicidality. Then they all underwent psychedelic clinical treatment and took the surveys again at one, three and six months. From a baseline, one-month followup subjects showed significant improvements in self-reported PTSD symptoms, depression, anxiety and insomnia severity. Interestingly, it also showed that subjects had better post-concussive symptoms, self-reported satisfaction with life, psychological flexibility and general cognitive functioning.

“Improvements in cognitive functioning linked to brain injury were probably the most striking results because that’s something we didn’t predict, and it’s very new ... in terms of how psychedelics might help in so many different domains,” Davis said in the release. While it is a novel observation, it isn’t the first time that scientists have

considered the idea that psychedelics could help treat TBI. In a mini-review published in Frontiers in 2021, researchers found that existing in vitro, in vivo and case report studies indicate that “psychedelic pharmacotherapies may influence the future of brain injury treatment through modulation of neuroinflammation, hippocampal neurogenesis, neuroplasticity and brain complexity.” Previous research has also connected insightful and mystical psychedelic experiences with changes to psychological flexibility, as reported by this study’s respondents. It was certainly an insightful and mystical experience for most of Davis’ test subjects. Almost half of them reported that the psychedelic experience was the most spiritually significant or psychologically insightful of their lives. “I think we’re seeing a similar picture emerging here where the more one is psychologically flexible, the more likely it is that one’s mental health symptoms will be reduced or ameliorated,” Davis said in the release. Davis and his team note that the observed improvements to cognitive functioning demand further research. But this study points in a positive direction. There could be a new form of treatment that could help the military’s 33,800 SOF personnel, as well as the wider 1.4 million military members, and, of course, the civilian population of the U.S. at large.

NOVEMBER 16, 2023

55


Turn static files into dynamic content formats.

Create a flipbook

Articles inside

Weed Between the Lines

1min
pages 54-55

Nibbles & Flash in the Pan

1min
pages 50-53

Astrology & Savage Love

1min
page 48

Events & Live Music

1min
pages 44-47

I Love Local Guide to the Holidays

1min
pages 16-40

Arts & Culture

1min
pages 13-15, 41-42, 49

Boulder County News

1min
pages 6-11

Commentary & Letters

1min
pages 4-5

FIGHTING CHANCE

2min
page 55

AN ERUPTION OF FLAVOR

2min
pages 53-54

SUSTAINABLE FEASTING

5min
pages 50-52

HISTORY STARTS HERE

1min
page 49

LAUGH IT UP

18min
pages 42-48

‘CHUBBY BEHEMOTH’

3min
page 41

I LOVE LOCAL GUIDE TO THE HOLIDAYS HOLIDAY CALENDAR

7min
pages 35-40

TICKETS

1min
pages 32-34

I LOVE LOCAL GUIDE TO THE HOLIDAYS

1min
pages 30-31

I LOVE LOCAL GUIDE TO THE HOLIDAYS

2min
pages 28-29

I LOVE LOCAL GUIDE TO THE HOLIDAYS

3min
pages 24-27

I LOVE LOCAL GUIDE TO THE HOLIDAYS

2min
pages 22-23

I LOVE LOCAL GUIDE TO THE HOLIDAYS

2min
page 21

Save Our Soil

0
pages 19-20

IMAGE AND SOUND

7min
pages 14-15

LAUGHING THROUGH TIME

4min
page 13

A PLACE TO GO

8min
pages 9-12

BALLOT BREAKDOWN

5min
pages 6-7

WRITERS ON THE RANGE

5min
page 5

Sid Goodloe and Dave Foreman

1min
page 4
Issuu converts static files into: digital portfolios, online yearbooks, online catalogs, digital photo albums and more. Sign up and create your flipbook.