Psilocybin
Psilocybin is a naturally occurring tryptamine prodrug found in over 200 mushroom species. It is dephosphorylated to psilocin in vivo, which acts as a 5-HT2A agonist. The most significant development in psychiatry in decades: FDA Breakthrough Therapy designation for treatment-resistant depression (2018) and major depressive disorder (2019). Phase 3 trials show 1-2 doses produce rapid (within weeks), sustained (6-12 months) remission of treatment-resistant depression. MAPS and Compass Pathways Phase 3 trials running. Microdosing (sub-perceptual doses) is a growing area with mixed clinical data but significant anecdotal use in tech/performance communities. Oregon and Colorado have state-level regulated medical frameworks as of 2024.
Evidence
No score yet
Safety
Unknown safety profile
Clinical Status
No formal phase listed
Last Sync
Not synced yet
Last Reviewed
Not reviewed yet
Dosing
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Pharmacology
Evidence Score
Plain-English Snapshot
Psilocybin is currently categorized as a other compound.
Evidence scoring has not been fully computed yet, so interpret this profile as preliminary.
Safety scoring is incomplete. Start conservatively and monitor carefully.
Core mechanism
5-HT2A full agonist in PFC, DMN, and limbic system; increases synaptic density (rapid, AMPA-mediated); Default Mode Network (DMN) disruption; neuroplasticity via BDNF and TRKB
Practical Context
Strongest current signals
No indexed study summaries yet.
Elevated caution signals
2 severe/high side effect flags