重新思考神经性厌食症的治疗策略:来自迷幻医学和动物模型的启示。

Focus (American Psychiatric Publishing) Pub Date : 2024-07-01 Epub Date: 2024-06-28 DOI:10.1176/appi.focus.24022012
Claire J Foldi, Paul Liknaitzky, Martin Williams, Brian J Oldfield
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引用次数: 0

摘要

在所有精神疾病中,神经性厌食症(AN)的死亡率最高,但现有的药物治疗基本上没有效果,部分原因是人们对这种疾病的神经生物学驱动因素了解不足。最近,对迷幻药物临床应用于一系列精神疾病的研究再度兴起,这凸显了包括迷幻素在内的经典迷幻药物在缓解与血清素能信号传导和认知不灵活有关的自闭症症状方面的潜力。使用迷幻剂治疗耐药性抑郁症的临床试验显示了良好的效果,尽管这些研究无法避免一些方法上的偏差。首次将迷幻药用于 AN 患者的临床试验于 2019 年开始,因此有必要更好地了解迷幻药发挥作用的神经生物学机制。在这方面,动物模型是有益的,它允许对大脑功能和行为进行详细审查,并有可能在研究药理学时不受预期和偏见的干扰,而这些在患者群体中是无法控制的。我们认为,研究迷幻药在动物模型(包括基于活动的厌食症(ABA)啮齿动物模型)中的神经生物学效应,对临床应用尤其重要,包括可能从迷幻药中获益最多的亚群患者。最初发表于《Front Neurosci 2020; 14:43》。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
Rethinking Therapeutic Strategies for Anorexia Nervosa: Insights From Psychedelic Medicine and Animal Models.

Anorexia nervosa (AN) has the highest mortality rate of any psychiatric disease, yet available pharmacological treatments are largely ineffective due, in part, to an inadequate understanding of the neurobiological drivers that underpin the condition. The recent resurgence of research into the clinical applications of psychedelic medicine for a range of mental disorders has highlighted the potential for classical psychedelics, including psilocybin, to alleviate symptoms of AN that relate to serotonergic signaling and cognitive inflexibility. Clinical trials using psychedelics in treatment-resistant depression have shown promising outcomes, although these studies are unable to circumvent some methodological biases. The first clinical trial to use psilocybin in patients with AN commenced in 2019, necessitating a better understanding of the neurobiological mechanisms through which psychedelics act. Animal models are beneficial in this respect, allowing for detailed scrutiny of brain function and behavior and the potential to study pharmacology without the confounds of expectancy and bias that are impossible to control for in patient populations. We argue that studies investigating the neurobiological effects of psychedelics in animal models, including the activity-based anorexia (ABA) rodent model, are particularly important to inform clinical applications, including the subpopulations of patients that may benefit most from psychedelic medicine. Appeared originally in Front Neurosci 2020; 14:43.

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