Preliminary evidence of links between ayahuasca use and the corpus callosum

Affiliation
Center for Psychiatry Research, Department of Clinical Neuroscience, Karolinska Institute ,Stockholm ,Sweden
Simonsson, Otto;
Affiliation
ICEERS–International Center for Ethnobotanical Education, Research and Services ,Barcelona ,Spain
Bouso, José Carlos;
Affiliation
School of Psychology, University of Auckland ,Auckland ,New Zealand
Kurth, Florian;
Affiliation
Brain Institute, Federal University of Rio Grande do Norte ,Natal ,Brazil
Araújo, Dráulio B.;
GND
123460980
Affiliation
Department of Psychiatry and Psychotherapy, Jena University Hospital ,Jena ,Germany
Gaser, Christian;
Affiliation
Centro de Investigación Biomédica en Red de Salud Mental ,Madrid ,Spain
Riba, Jordi;
Affiliation
School of Psychology, University of Auckland ,Auckland ,New Zealand
Luders, Eileen

Background: Recent research suggests that ayahuasca and its alkaloid-containing ingredients may be helpful in the treatment and prevention of certain movement and neurodegenerative disorders. However, such research is still in its infancy and more studies in normative samples seem necessary to explore effects of ayahuasca on clinically relevant brain structures, such as the corpus callosum.

Aims: The purpose of the present study was to investigate links between ayahuasca use and callosal structure in a normative sample.

Methods: Using structural imaging data from 22 ayahuasca users and 22 matched controls we compared the thickness of the corpus callosum between both groups at 100 equidistant points across the entire midsagittal surface. In addition, we investigated point-wise correlations between callosal thickness and the number of past ayahuasca sessions.

Results: The corpus callosum was significantly thicker within the isthmus in the ayahuasca group than in the control group. There was also a significant positive correlation between callosal thickness and the number of past ayahuasca sessions within the rostral body, albeit none of these effects survived corrections for multiple comparisons. No region was significantly thicker in the control than in the ayahuasca group, and no callosal region was negatively linked to ayahuasca use, even at uncorrected significance thresholds.

Conclusion: This study provides preliminary evidence of links between ayahuasca use and the corpus callosum. However, future studies need to replicate these findings, preferably using larger sample sizes and ideally also utilizing longitudinal research designs, to draw any practical conclusion and offer implications for follow-up clinical research.

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License Holder: Copyright © 2022 Simonsson, Bouso, Kurth, Araújo, Gaser, Riba and Luders.

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