Anxiety DisordersPsilocybin

Don’t Be Afraid, Try to Meditate- Potential Effects on Neural Activity and Connectivity of Psilocybin-Assisted Mindfulness-Based Intervention for Social Anxiety Disorder: A systematic review

This systematic review (2022) explores the potential mechanisms by which combined psilocybin and mindfulness treatment could adjust anomalous neural activity underlying social anxiety disorder (SAD) and exert therapeutic effects. Proposed mechanisms include changes in cognitive processes like biased attention to threats linked to SAD by modulating connectivity of the salience network and more.

Authors

  • Kim Kuypers

Published

Neuroscience and Biobehavioral Reviews
meta Study

Abstract

Background

Current first-line treatment for social anxiety disorder (SAD), one of the most prevalent anxiety disorders, is limited in its efficacy. Hence, novel treatment approaches are urgently needed. The current review suggests a combination of meditation-based interventions and the administration of a psychedelic as a future alternative treatment approach. While both separate treatments show promise in the treatment of (other) clinical conditions, their combination has not yet been investigated in the treatment of psychopathologies.

Aim

With a systematic literature review, we aim to identify the potential mechanisms by which combined psilocybin and mindfulness treatment could adjust anomalous neural activity underlying SAD and exert therapeutic effects.

Results

Thirty experimental studies investigating the neural effects of meditation or psilocybin treatment in healthy and patient samples were included. Findings suggest that psilocybin-assisted meditation interventions might change cognitive processes like biased attention to threats linked to SAD by modulating connectivity of the salience network, balancing the activity and connectivity of cortical-midline structures, and increasing frontoparietal control over amygdala reactivity.

Conclusions

Future studies should investigate whether psilocybin-assisted mindfulness-based intervention can provide therapeutic benefits to SAD patients who are do not remit following conventional therapy.

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Research Summary of 'Don’t Be Afraid, Try to Meditate- Potential Effects on Neural Activity and Connectivity of Psilocybin-Assisted Mindfulness-Based Intervention for Social Anxiety Disorder: A systematic review'

Editorial

βBlossom's Take

This review is useful because it asks a practical translational question, what neural changes might make psilocybin-assisted mindfulness relevant for social anxiety disorder. It is speculative, but it usefully frames psilocybin not as a stand-alone treatment idea, rather as something that may interact with attentional bias, salience processing and meditation training.

Study Details

Cited By (4)

Papers in Blossom that reference this study

Psychedelic-assisted psychotherapy: Where is the psychotherapy research?

Aday, J. S., Horton, D. M., Fernandes-Osterhold, G. et al. · Psychopharmacology (2024)

5 cited
Psychedelics and mindfulness: A systematic review and meta-analysis

Radakovic, C., Radakovic, R., Peryer, G. et al. · Journal of Psychedelic Studies (2022)

23 cited
Don’t Be Afraid, Try to Meditate- Potential... — Research Summary & Context | Blossom