{"id":702,"date":"2021-07-29T12:42:46","date_gmt":"2021-07-29T12:42:46","guid":{"rendered":"https:\/\/ultimatehealthreport.com\/amazing-psychedelics-phantom-limb-pain\/"},"modified":"2021-07-29T12:42:46","modified_gmt":"2021-07-29T12:42:46","slug":"amazing-psychedelics-phantom-limb-pain","status":"publish","type":"post","link":"https:\/\/ultimatehealthreport.com\/amazing-psychedelics-phantom-limb-pain\/","title":{"rendered":"Amazing: Psychedelics & Phantom Limb Pain"},"content":{"rendered":"


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Part One of a Two-Part Series on Psychedelics and Chronic Pain<\/em><\/p>\n

The key is neuroplasticity: the brain\u2019s ability to change and adapt (or, as is often said in psychedelic circles, to rewire itself) such that negative or harmful patterns of thought are disrupted, and new, healthier paths are forged in their place.<\/p>\n

This is the general mechanism through which scientists now believe at least some of the benefits of psychedelics for a wide range of psychiatric disorders occur. And in much the same way that they appear to help treat depression, addiction, post-traumatic stress disorder, obsessive-compulsive disorder, and other mental-health conditions, psychedelic drugs are now being investigated as a remedy for a particularly troublesome form of chronic pain.<\/p>\n

Neuroplasticity appears to play a central role in the published case study of a 35-year-old man whose intractable phantom-limb pain resulting from an amputated leg suddenly all but disappeared. The treatment? Three doses of psilocybin paired with mirror visual feedback. a form of therapy used to relieve amputee phantom-limb pain in which patients position a mirror in the middle of their body and perform a motor task with one limb while watching its reflection, giving the illusion of the missing limb moving.<\/p>\n

Not just a lot of good vibes<\/h2>\n

The article describing this rapid recovery aided by psilocybin mushrooms was published in the journal Neurocase<\/em> in May 2018 and co-authored by the patient himself, one Albert Lin, a research scientist at the University of California at San Diego (UCSD<\/span>) and National Geographic explorer and television host. Four of Lin\u2019s colleagues at UCSD<\/span>, including neuroscientist Vilayanur Ramachandran, who pioneered mirror visual feedback in the early 1990s, also contributed to the article.<\/p>\n