Neuropsychopharmacology : official publication of the American College of Neuropsychopharmacology

How psilocybin exposure during adolescence affects behavior, brain structure, brain connections, and sensory perception differently in males and females

Updated

Abstract

Essence

Repeated psilocybin exposure during mouse adolescence produced lasting sex-dependent changes in brain structure, connectivity, sensory responses, and some behavior, with stronger effects in males.

Evidence

This preclinical mouse experiment gave male and female mice 3.0 mg/kg psilocybin by oral gavage every other day from postnatal days 40-50, then assessed adult MRI, resting-state connectivity, affective behavior, odor responses, and prefrontal protein markers.

Caveat

This was an animal study with limited behavioral differences, so the long-term developmental implications for humans remain uncertain.

Simplified

Full Text

Full text is available at the source.

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