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I'm not a medical researcher, but I can tell you that the random LSD flashback, as you're describing, is not evidence-based. As with many drugs, LSD releases glutamate and can trigger psychosis in people predisposed to psychosis. This can lead people to believe that LSD is somehow being stored in their body and activated later on. Something similar may be happening when people have a bad experience smoking weed and insist it was "laced" with another drug. LSD is processed by the liver and isn't "stored" anywhere, unless you count blood during the several hours before it's fully metabolized. Also, we already prohibit LSD-driving. Driving recklessly while under the influence of a substance can get you arrested and get your license revoked.
Please be careful about spreading misinformation.
I'm sticking to the facts I was given: that LSD can be stored in the body, in body-fat, & can be released later.
IF I find ( and I will dig, later ) actual-research on the topic, then I'll have better, more-trustworthy knowing.
But until then, the doctor-&-researcher who told me that, & the other-person whose experience matches what that doctor-&-researcher told me, is what I'm sticking-to.
I don't willingly spread disinformation or misinformation, & am one hell of alot more rigorous than normal-people about that.
Nearly 600 pages of results, unfortunately, with ZERO guarantee any 1 of those papers deals-with the question..
https://pubmed.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/?term=lysergic+acid+diethylamide
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I'm afraid that "repeating word-of-mouth information until it's disproven" isn't how the scientific method works, and wouldn't be considered rigorous in the research community. I look forward to your findings.
WHEN a working-psychiatrist, who did research in psychiatry, tells me that LSD can be stored in bodyfat & released later,
I believe them before I believe you.
There's a category difference between "I heard it from someone" & being told by a specialist who works in that field, but obviously you contempt that..
Good for you.
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"Acute, short-lived reactions are often fairly benign, whereas chronic, unremitting courses carry a poor prognosis. Delayed, intermittent phenomena ("flashbacks") and LSD-precipitated functional disorders that usually respond to treatment appropriate for the non-psychedelic-precipitated illnesses they resemble, round out this temporal means of classification. The question of organic brain damage as well as permanent changes in personality, attitudes, and creativity in patients and normals who have repeatedly ingested psychedelic drugs is controversial, but tends to point to subtle or nonsignificant changes. Future areas for study of the psychedelics' pharmacological, psychological, and therapeutic effects are suggested. "
which is from this scientific paper: https://journals.lww.com/jonmd/citation/1984/10000/adverse_reactions_to_psychedelic_drugs__a_review.1.aspx
Claiming that flashbacks "is not evidence-based", as you claim, is pseudoscientific disinformation, according to that paper's abstract.
Case closed.
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Just to review, your arguments that I'm labeling as non-evidence-based are:
You chose to quote an abstract from a 40-year-old lit review, and even though it doesn’t support your point, you’re declaring this “case closed.” You’re either arguing in bad faith or you’re not putting much effort into finding the truth. Either way I think you know your case is weak.
Strassman is summarizing the range of post-LSD experiences that have been reported. Delayed, intermittent psychosis is at one end of the range and mild, short-term symptoms at the other. He doesn't validate those reports, and goes on to say that no causal relationship had been established, and the etiology of "flashbacks" was at that time controversial.
A more recent 2021 review by David Nutt et al. (Nutt is by most accounts the most credentialed and respected psychedelic researcher today) says:
I will say again that your original arguments are not supported by current research. I won't spend any more time debating this with you because we don't seem to have the same definitions of "evidence" and "misinformation."