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Here’s what happened when a psychiatrist tried to treat his depression by smoking DMT

sigmond

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ERIC W. DOLAN

A case report recently published in the Journal of Psychoactive Drugs chronicles the story of a 40-year-old retired male psychiatrist who tried to treat his bipolar disorder using a powerful psychedelic drug called N,N-dimethyltryptamine (DMT).

DMT was first synthesized by the chemist Richard H. F. Manske in 1931. However, the drug’s powerful psychedelic properties were not scientifically documented until Stephen Szára studied DMT in the mid-1950s. Though the scientific institutions of the West only recently discovered DMT, the drug was the key component of a hallucinogenic brew called ayahuasca, which has traditionally been used in the healing ceremonies of indigenous Amazon tribes.

The ex-psychiatrist described in the case report had one prior episode of mania and had been depressed for the majority of his life. He had tried antidepressant medications, mood stabilizers, antipsychotics, electroconvulsive therapy, and ketamine. But after these treatments failed, he started using DMT on a daily basis, which he obtained via the dark web.

Noticing some improvements, he began adding 60 mg of phenelzine to his daily regimen. The medication is a monoamine oxidase inhibitor, a type of drug known to amplify and prolong the effects of DMT.

The man was consuming up to 1 gram of DMT a day — an extremely large amount for such a potent psychedelic. He was also taking clonazepam to help him sleep at night.

After about six months, the man abruptly stopped his daily DMT habit because he was traveling out of state — and did not want to carry the illegal substance with him.

Two or three days after discontinuing DMT, he had a psychotic breakdown and ended up in a hospital. It took six security guards to restrain him before he was administered tranquilizers. He ended up having a seizure.

“He was pressured in his speech, hyperreligious, and delusional. He believed that demons were leeching into his soul and asked the medical staff for an exorcism,” the report explains.

He received psychological treatment for a week, but was then given a lithium prescription and discharged against medical advice. His condition after release is unknown — attempts to follow-up failed.

“This case highlights that patients with vulnerabilities such as personal or family history of psychosis, nonpsychotic mania, or concomitant use of other drugs should avoid hallucinogenic intake. Additionally, this patient serves as a good reminder of the potential consequences of self-medication, especially amongst physicians,” the case report concludes.

link
 
would be interesting to read case study, seeing as he had a psychiatric background and must have had some positive results to take dmt daily for 6 months.

i can't imagine trying to function with daily life, tripping on dmt every day
 
The man was consuming up to 1 gram of DMT a day — an extremely large amount for such a potent psychedelic.

DMT is actually a pretty unpotent psychedelic. If we take usual doses to be 30mg for DMT and 0.1mg for LSD, than LSD is 300x more potent! Looks like the author doesn't know the difference between potency and powerfulness!

It hard to find a psychedelic that's even less potent than DMT. the 4-substituted tryptamines, the 5-substituted tryptamines, the nbomes, the DOx ones, the 2-Cx ones and the lysergamides are all more potent than the unpotent DMT. One of the few psychedelics that's actually even less potent is mescaline.

It is true however that DMT (together with 5-MeO-DMT) is the most powerful psychedelic.
 
would be interesting to read case study, seeing as he had a psychiatric background and must have had some positive results to take dmt daily for 6 months.

Maybe he was just depressed enough that he preferred tripping balls all day to regular life (although DMT is an odd choice for that)? Or maybe mania drove him?

I wonder what the darkweb vendor thought he was doing with so much DMT...
 
anyone would know that mania and psychedelics dont go together all that well. ffs
 
I had a family member recently take his own life, we believe he was using large amounts of DMT to help with his heroin addiction and depression. Amounts & frequency of DMt are unknown.
 
ERIC W. DOLAN

A case report recently published in the Journal of Psychoactive Drugs chronicles the story of a 40-year-old retired male psychiatrist who tried to treat his bipolar disorder using a powerful psychedelic drug called N,N-dimethyltryptamine (DMT).

DMT was first synthesized by the chemist Richard H. F. Manske in 1931. However, the drug’s powerful psychedelic properties were not scientifically documented until Stephen Szára studied DMT in the mid-1950s. Though the scientific institutions of the West only recently discovered DMT, the drug was the key component of a hallucinogenic brew called ayahuasca, which has traditionally been used in the healing ceremonies of indigenous Amazon tribes.

The ex-psychiatrist described in the case report had one prior episode of mania and had been depressed for the majority of his life. He had tried antidepressant medications, mood stabilizers, antipsychotics, electroconvulsive therapy, and ketamine. But after these treatments failed, he started using DMT on a daily basis, which he obtained via the dark web.

Noticing some improvements, he began adding 60 mg of phenelzine to his daily regimen. The medication is a monoamine oxidase inhibitor, a type of drug known to amplify and prolong the effects of DMT.

The man was consuming up to 1 gram of DMT a day — an extremely large amount for such a potent psychedelic. He was also taking clonazepam to help him sleep at night.

After about six months, the man abruptly stopped his daily DMT habit because he was traveling out of state — and did not want to carry the illegal substance with him.

Two or three days after discontinuing DMT, he had a psychotic breakdown and ended up in a hospital. It took six security guards to restrain him before he was administered tranquilizers. He ended up having a seizure.

“He was pressured in his speech, hyperreligious, and delusional. He believed that demons were leeching into his soul and asked the medical staff for an exorcism,” the report explains.

He received psychological treatment for a week, but was then given a lithium prescription and discharged against medical advice. His condition after release is unknown — attempts to follow-up failed.

“This case highlights that patients with vulnerabilities such as personal or family history of psychosis, nonpsychotic mania, or concomitant use of other drugs should avoid hallucinogenic intake. Additionally, this patient serves as a good reminder of the potential consequences of self-medication, especially amongst physicians,” the case report concludes.

link

It's not surprising he's a psychiatrist and manic/bipolar, and he self medicated with drugs, went crazy and had a psychotic break from using psychedelic drugs. This is more common than people want to admit.
 
I'm not sure there is anything remotely common about someone using DMT on a daily basis.
 
I'm not sure there is anything remotely common about someone using DMT on a daily basis.

I meant someone self medicating their severe and debilitating mental illness with drugs, instead of going back on or using medications that work to abate the symptoms of the mental illness. Or if it's really bad going to a hospital to get help.
 
Haha ah in that case totally. Mental illness can be so frustrating to deal with through the "appropriate" channels sometimes, I guess it's no wonder though.
 
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