Everybody get your roll on?

DJ_KiDDvIcIOUs

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FDA Approves Large-Scale Clinical Trial for Ecstasy

Ecstasy isn’t only for ravers—a small series of clinical trials have demonstrated taking MDMA can be an effective treatment for post-traumatic stress disorder. On Tuesday, the Food and Drug Administration granted permission for large-scale, Phase 3 clinical trials for MDMA, which is the next step in the process to get it approved as a prescription drug.

While rolling on Molly might sound like fun and games to you, it changes lives. The New York Times spoke to C. J. Hardin, a veteran who served three tours in Iraq and Afghanistan, who suffered from severe PTSD that left him a divorced, suicidal alcoholic who cut himself off from the world. He tried psychotherapy, group therapy, and almost a dozen different psychiatric medications. “Nothing worked for me, so I put aside the idea that I could get better,” he said.

But in 2013, Hardin was lucky enough to join a small clinical trial studying MDMA as a PTSD treatment. “It changed my life. It allowed me to see my trauma without fear or hesitation and finally process things and move forward,” he told The New York Times.

This is a huge step for the community fighting to legalize the medical use of drugs like MDMA, LSD and marijuana. The Multidisciplinary Association for Psychedelic Studies, a non-profit founded in 1985 to advocate for the medicinal benefits of these illicit substances, has funded six Phase 2 studies that treated 130 PTSD patients with the drug. It will also sponsor the Phase 3 clinical trials, which will consist of at least 230 patients.

A 2012 study conducted in Charleston treated veterans, victims of sexual assault, police officers and firefighters who had struggled with PTSD symptoms for an average of 17 years. None of the patients responded to traditional PTSD treatments. “After three doses of MDMA administered under a psychiatrist’s guidance, the patients reported a 56 percent decrease of severity of symptoms on average,” The New York Times reported.

When the study ended, two-thirds of participants didn’t even meet the criteria for having PTSD. “On average, subjects maintained statistically and clinically-significant gains in symptom relief, although two of these subjects did relapse,” the study said.

Doctors have legitimate concerns when it comes to using MDMA as a prescription drug—after all, there’s a high risk for abuse, and in an era of rampant prescription opioid addiction, that’s scary.

So how does MDMA treat PTSD? Throughout a 12-week PTSD study, patients went through extensive psychotherapy, which involved three 8-hour MDMA sessions. In these sessions, psychiatric nurse Ann Mithoefer and her husband, Dr. Mithoefer, guided each patient through his or her past traumas, playing soothing music. The Mithoefer’s terrier mix Flynn often kept patients company throughout their journey.

“The medicine allows them to look at things from a different place and reclassify them. Honestly, we don’t have to do much. Each person has an innate ability to heal. We just create the right conditions,” Ann Mithoefer said.

The New York Times reports there’s also been research which shows that MDMA triggers “the brain to release a flood of hormones and neurotransmitters that evoke feelings of trust, love and well-being, while also muting fear and negative emotional memories that can be overpowering in patients with post-traumatic stress disorder.”

There are currently two drugs on the market approved to treat PTSD, both of which barely worked better than the placebo in trials. Edward Thompson, a firefighter traumatized by the frequent gory tragedies he responded to at work turned to benzos, alcohol and opioids to escape the persistent state of utter panic he felt trapped in. After taking MDMA in a clinical trial, Thompson was much better able to manage his PTSD and kick his drug addiction. He explained, “It gave me my life back, but it wasn’t a party drug. It was a lot of work.”

A promising step forward for our nation’s veterans who suffer in silence.

http://gizmodo.com/it-gave-me-my-life-back-fda-approves-large-scale-clini-1789497116

This is very interesting. I've had some very deep and meaningful experiences on X and can totally see how they would be able to help people overcome traumas they are having a hard time processing. I touched on it in another thread but there are similar experiences for helping the mind with LSD and other psychoactive substances.
 
No i would not participate. I am sorry. i could not be prepared to jeopardise my life for the medical industry and leave my family devastated at my loss. It is to dangerous!
 
If I had PTSD and it had a good chance of helping me then sure. I've known people that have done it for fun without any lasting effects.
 
No i would not participate. I am sorry. i could not be prepared to jeopardise my life for the medical industry and leave my family devastated at my loss. It is to dangerous!

Ruth, you seem to not know what MDMA is our how it affects you. I can't even begin to calculate how much I've spent on X over the years and I'm still here.
 
Finally. More primitive cultures than ours have figured out how useful hallucinogenic drugs can be in treating mental illnesses (among other things).
 
Finally. More primitive cultures than ours have figured out how useful hallucinogenic drugs can be in treating mental illnesses (among other things).

I know I used it in a different way but it would weird me out to be chilling with a Doctor and whatnot rolling balls. I'd need some bass heavy music, tons of flashing lights and strobes and some Vicks haha.
 
Finally. More primitive cultures than ours have figured out how useful hallucinogenic drugs can be in treating mental illnesses (among other things).
But bare in mind that psychedelics can trigger mental problems if the person is predisposed to them, like schizophrenia or dementia.
For example, if they have a history of mental problems in the family, since those can be hereditary.

At least, that's what i took from several things i read about it.

The mental problems that the article refers to are PTSD and/or anxiety and things of the sort.
 
Isildur´s Heir;34506597 said:
But bare in mind that psychedelics can trigger mental problems if the person is predisposed to them, like schizophrenia or dementia.
For example, if they have a history of mental problems in the family, since those can be hereditary.

At least, that's what i took from several things i read about it.

The mental problems that the article refers to are PTSD and/or anxiety and things of the sort.

It's interesting that you mention that because for several years I was diagnosed as a schizophrenic. I always wondered if my family history of alcoholism and schizophrenia were exasperated due to using so much MDMA in my younger days. As it overloads the brain with serotonin and dopamine that causes the euphoria that's also one of the leading causes for schizophrenia.

I was also diagnosed very late for schizo (27) which is right at the end of when it typically happens for males. Once I got sober though I weened off the medication and haven't had any isues for several months now.
 
Just what people with anxiety and PTSD need...spinning rooms, flashing colors, hallucinations, and the feeling that time has stopped. Can't wait to read about those trials.
 
Just what people with anxiety and PTSD need...spinning rooms, flashing colors, hallucinations, and the feeling that time has stopped. Can't wait to read about those trials.

Uh, you obviously don't speak from any experience. None of that happens on MDMA and they've already completed to trials with great results as the article states.

They are about to enter phase 3 of clinical trials.
 
From what Ive witnessed in "private trials" with volunteers it makes a person feel like everything is amazing and wonderful. So I can see why it could be good for people with PTSD and high stress. On the other hand the come down isnt always great for some people and a person that has PTSD coming down from a fantastic MDMA high might feel even more depressed afterwords. But thats why we have trials to test things. I hope it works for some people. PTSD is a cruel heartless *****.
 
From what Ive witnessed in "private trials" with volunteers it makes a person feel like everything is amazing and wonderful. So I can see why it could be good for people with PTSD and high stress. On the other hand the come down isnt always great for some people and a person that has PTSD coming down from a fantastic MDMA high might feel even more depressed afterwords. But thats why we have trials to test things. I hope it works for some people. PTSD is a cruel heartless *****.

The comedown isn't hard at all. Most of the time one just feels what I call "left field" were everything seems fine but just a tad off. And that's with high doses of MDMA coupled with whatever else was mixed in the pills.

In a controlled dosage situation that would be much less apparent. There are also supplements you can take like 5HTP that help the brain regulate the flow of serotonin and dopamine a bit better than just cutting it off because it made way too much which is typically what happens after a roll.

For some reason, Gatorade really helps with your stomach feeling good the next day. But you have to drink while rolling to have the effect. If you don't do that it usually takes a day or two for your appetite to return.
 
About time. I've never taken drugs but I know not all of them are as evil as the DEA and other anti-drug advocates seem to think.
 
We should definitely wait to see what the trials produce. We don't want to jump the gun, that's for sure. I'd imagine Ruth's brother would be the most devistated of her family members.
 
We should definitely wait to see what the trials produce. We don't want to jump the gun, that's for sure. I'd imagine Ruth's brother would be the only devistated of her family members.

:sly:
 
Magic Mushrooms Are Weirdly Effective at Making Cancer Less Miserable

The active ingredient in magic mushrooms, psilocybin, is remarkably effective at reducing feelings of anxiety, depression, and other forms of mental anguish in cancer patients, according to a pair of new studies.

New research published in the Journal of Psychopharmacology shows that a single dose of mind-altering psilocybin, in conjunction with psychotherapy, reduces depression, anxiety, and other emotional distress in patients with advanced cancer, while increasing feelings of well-being. Importantly, these effects lasted for months.

It’s a potent example of how psychedelics could be used to treat various illnesses, and how the medical community’s squeamishness about these drugs—not to mention the various government agencies which have banned them—is in need of a serious re-think. Small trials have shown psilocybin’s promise in treating alcoholism, opiate addiction, and depression. This latest research offers some of the most compelling evidence yet for the use of psychedelics to treat complex and profound emotional disorders, particularly in patients with life-threatening illnesses.

Researchers from NYU Langone showed that a one-time treatment with psilocybin quickly brought relief from emotional distress that lasted for more than six months in 80 percent of the 29 study subjects monitored. Participants were evaluated according to standard measures of depression and anxiety, such as blood pressure, heart rate, clinician-based tests, and self-reported questionnaires.

A similar study from Johns Hopkins reached the same conclusion. Because psilocybin is a banned substance, the US researchers had to acquire special federal waivers to conduct the trials.

“Our results represent the strongest evidence to date of a clinical benefit from psilocybin therapy, with the potential to transform care for patients with cancer-related psychological distress,” noted Stephen Ross, who led the NYU Langone study, in a statement. “If larger clinical trials prove successful, then we could ultimately have available a safe, effective, and inexpensive medication—dispensed under strict control—to alleviate the distress that increases suicide rates among cancer patients.”

During the treatments, half of the patients were given a 0.3 milligrams per kilo dose of psilocybin, and half were given one of two placebos, either a super low dose of psilocybin or the vitamin niacin (which produces a “rush” that mimics a hallucinogenic drug experience). The researchers chose these particular “placebos” because if they hadn’t, it would have been glaringly obvious to the participants that they were being duped with a bona fide placebo, such as a sugar pill (as anyone who has ever done shrooms before would know, the effects aren’t subtle).

During each session, participants laid on a couch, wore a blindfold, and listened to music. The researchers encouraged the patients to focus their attention on their inner experiences. Follow-up analysis showed that the single-dose treatment of psilocybin produced almost immediate results. In addition to quelling feelings of despair, anguish, and depression, the drug boosted measures of the quality and meaning of life, the acceptance of death, and optimism. Several patients reported feelings of spirituality, unusual peacefulness, and increased altruism.

Side effects were few and minor, including nausea, headache, and some residual anxiety (many of these patients are dying of cancer, so shrooms shouldn’t be expected to alleviate all emotional stress).

Roland Griffiths, who led the Hopkins trial, said the drug offers patients a sense of unity, and a feeling that everything is connected at some level.

“After this kind of experience, people feel that they’ve learned something that’s of deep meaning and value to them,” explained Griffiths in New Scientist. “They attribute changes in how they approach life, interact with people and to their value systems to that experience.”

The researchers caution that patients shouldn’t medicate themselves with magic mushrooms without supervision by a physician and a trained counselor. “Psilocybin therapy may not work for everyone, and some groups, such as people with schizophrenia, as well as adolescents, should not be treated with it,” noted Anthony Bossis, a psychiatrist at NYU Langone and co-author of the new study.

http://gizmodo.com/magic-mushrooms-are-weirdly-effective-at-making-cancer-1789554418

The plot thickens.
 
^^^ Ew at jealous people! Maybe ecstasy can help cure their jealousy too??? idk byee :)
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A Sia Spambot can't be affected by narcotics.
 
Whether this helps with PTSD or not... legalize the ****.
 

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