TUESDAY, Nov. 14, 2017 (HealthDay News)--
A powerful psychedelic drug out of South America might help battle both depression and alcoholism, a new British survey suggests.
Not exact matches
At a handful of sites across the country, after a four - decade hiatus,
psychedelic research is undergoing a quiet renaissance, thanks to scientists like Charles Grob who are revisiting the
powerful mind - altering
drugs of the 1960s in hopes of making them part of our therapeutic arsenal.
They also included, in the mid-1900s, the
powerful psychedelic compound lysergic acid diethylamide, or LSD, that is still being studied and has been widely used as an illegal recreational
drug.
Psychedelic drugs do precisely this and so are
powerful tools for exploring what happens in the brain when consciousness is profoundly altered.