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Psilocybin Grows New Brain Cells Options
 
InfiniteFacticity
#21 Posted : 12/12/2012 11:08:52 PM

just curious


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Thanks corpus callosum! That is a great and useful description of the variety of different cell types beyond neurones most directly involved in brain functioning. (The support staff, if you will, for the neurones)

I would like to clarify your last point that "Any neurogenesis taking place in the CNS (ie making 'new' NEURONS) will be taking place as a result of the maturation of pre-existing stem cells rather than a de novo process."

Actually, there is evidence that the progenitor (stem) cells in certain regions of the brain actually do divide as they differentiate/mature. So yes, any neurogenesis is the result of the maturation of pre-existing stem cells, but it seems that part of that process includes mitotic division. I am ignorant as to what is considered a de novo process of cell division, so this point may or may not contradict what you wrote. (http://www.jneurosci.org/content/22/3/629.short)

 

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aliendreamtime
#22 Posted : 12/13/2012 12:48:05 AM

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Saw this on youtube the other day...almost posted haha. Then I figured someone else would.
 
corpus callosum
#23 Posted : 12/13/2012 4:11:18 AM

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InfiniteFacticity wrote:
Thanks corpus callosum! That is a great and useful description of the variety of different cell types beyond neurones most directly involved in brain functioning. (The support staff, if you will, for the neurones)

I would like to clarify your last point that "Any neurogenesis taking place in the CNS (ie making 'new' NEURONS) will be taking place as a result of the maturation of pre-existing stem cells rather than a de novo process."

Actually, there is evidence that the progenitor (stem) cells in certain regions of the brain actually do divide as they differentiate/mature. So yes, any neurogenesis is the result of the maturation of pre-existing stem cells, but it seems that part of that process includes mitotic division. I am ignorant as to what is considered a de novo process of cell division, so this point may or may not contradict what you wrote. (http://www.jneurosci.org/content/22/3/629.short)



Nice link! Thumbs up

The purpose of my post was to clarify the issue of 'brain cells', a vague term (IMO), and to point out that 'growing new brain cells' could suggest to the casual reader that the process under discussion may involve new cells appearing without a progenitor source.

Good stuff is neuroscience. Smile
I am paranoid of my brain. It thinks all the time, even when I'm asleep. My thoughts assail me. Murderous lechers they are. Thought is the assassin of thought. Like a man stabbing himself with one hand while the other hand tries to stop the blade. Like an explosion that destroys the detonator. I am paranoid of my brain. It makes me unsettled and ill at ease. Makes me chase my tail, freezes my eyes and shuts me down. Watches me. Eats my head. It destroys me.

 
The Meddling Monk
#24 Posted : 12/13/2012 5:33:58 AM

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Good to have a doctor in the house, Corpus!Smile

I thought (I'm no neuroscientist) that the main requirement for building new brain cells was sugars.
 
lewinii
#25 Posted : 12/23/2012 7:12:41 PM

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that is pretty remarkable
"science never proves anything; you can never duplicate an event precisely at the same moment in time as the initial event. science can only show correlation from the evidence and data derived from it." -benzyme

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athousandeyes
#26 Posted : 12/25/2012 6:41:45 AM

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I love this. It is fine if it is a thesis from some intern, its evidence. And cheers to corpus callosum for the head-y break down. Lovin' you nexus for trying to figure out this mystery and show the positivity of this wonderful set of molecules.
NowHere.
 
Bancopuma
#27 Posted : 12/30/2012 4:43:27 PM

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Fantastic thread, thanks so much for sharing that and for all the good info, amazing! As well as psilocybin, ibogaine, ketamine, cannabis, exercise and fasting have all been implicated with neurogenesis to some degree.
 
Bancopuma
#28 Posted : 6/4/2013 10:50:27 PM

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The paper on this is attached for anyone interested.

Catlow, B.J., Song, S., Paredes, D.A., Kirstein, C.L. & Sanchez-Ramos, J. (2013) Effects of psilocybin on hippocampal neurogenesis and extinction of trace fear conditioning. Experimental Brain Research.
 
Hyperdimensional Cuttlefish
#29 Posted : 6/5/2013 10:34:09 PM

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Thanks for the article Bancopuma. Haven't read that one yet. Awesome stuff.
All these posts are on behalf of Stimpy, my yellow bullhead. He is an adventurous fish, and I feel his exploits are worth sharing...so much so, I occasionally forget that HE is the one who does these things. Sometimes I get caught in the moment and write of his experiences in the first person; this is a mistake, for I am an upstanding citizen who never does wrong. Stimpy is the degenerate.
 
Carrierwave
#30 Posted : 6/6/2013 5:11:09 PM

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1.5mg/kg, that would obliterate your mind...

That's 120mg for a 80KG adult. Poor little mice. I hope that their receptors don't bind well with psilocybin.

Threshold 3 - 4 mg
Light 4 - 8 mg
Common 6 - 20 mg
Strong 20 - 40 mg
Heavy 35 + mg

Am I missing something?
 
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