Imperial College London
Psychiatry
David Nutt is a psychiatrist and the Edmond J. Safra Professor of Neuropsychopharmacology in Imperial College London. He has been president of the European Brain Council, the BAP, BNA, and ECNP. He is currently Founding Chair of the charity DrugScience.org.uk. David has published 35 books and over 1000 papers, including in Nature, Cell Lancet and New England Journal of Medicine. These define his many landmark contributions to psychopharmacology including GABA and noradrenaline receptor function in anxiety disorders, serotonin function in depression, endorphin and dopamine function in addiction and the neuroscience and clinical utility of psychedelics.

Moderator of 3 Sessions

Session Type
Joint Session
Date
Mon, 06.06.2022
Session Time
10:00 - 11:30
Room
Hall C
Session Description
Serotonin psychedelics (e.g., psilocybin, LSD and ayahuasca) have gained recent international attention as novel therapeutics for hard-to-treat neuropsychiatric disorders including depression, anxiety, obsession and addiction. The rapid development of large-scale clinical trials demands a comparable understanding of the brain mechanisms associated with and mediating the acute psychoactive as well as lasting clinical and behavioral effects of these drugs. This mini conference aims to discuss relevant and unaddressed outcome measures of brain function during both the acute experience state and lasting post-drug effects.
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Fully Live

Tuesday, 7 June: Daily Overview

Session Type
EPA TV
Date
Tue, 07.06.2022
Session Time
09:30 - 10:00
Room
EPA TV
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Fully Live, Live TV

Webinar - Ask the Expert: What is new in the use of psychedelic drugs in treatment of psychiatric disorders compared to their use in the past?

Session Type
Ask the Expert
Date
Tue, 07.06.2022
Session Time
10:00 - 11:00
Room
Ask the Expert 1
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Ask the Expert, Fully Live

Presenter of 2 Presentations

Brain imaging psychedelic effects in depression

Session Type
Clinical/Therapeutic
Date
Tue, 07.06.2022
Session Time
08:00 - 09:30
Room
Hall A
Session Icon
Fully Live
Lecture Time
08:17 - 08:34

Psychedelic Psychiatry

Session Type
Pharmacology
Date
Tue, 07.06.2022
Session Time
12:00 - 12:45
Room
Hall A
Session Icon
Fully Live
Lecture Time
12:00 - 12:25

Abstract

Abstract Body

The last decade has seen a remarkable resurgence of interest in psychedelic drugs such as psilocybin (from magic mushrooms) LSD and DMT (dimethyl tryptamine – the active ingredient of ayahuasca). This has been driven by the discovery that these psychedelics all act agonists of 5-HT2A receptors. Human imaging studies have revealed this action leads to profound alterations in brain measures of activity particularly in terms of increased entropy of EEG MEG and fMRI signals and reduced within-network, but increased between-network, connectivity. In addition they all can increase synaptic growth and brain plasticity. These findings not only explain the subjective nature of the psychedelic experience but also have implications for the treatment of internalising disorders such as depression addiction anorexia and OCD that are characterised by increased within network connectivity especially of the default mode network. Subsequent trials, particularly of psilocybin, in these disorders has revealed significant clinical benefits from even just a single administration. A number of companies have now been set up to extend these discoveries with regulatory-level trials that could result in market authorisations within a few years. My talk will explore these brain mechanisms and clinical data and discuss the potential place of psychedelic medicine in the future of psychiatry.

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