Reports of drug-induced flashbacks have existed
since the 1950s. Though the term "flashback" wasn't used specifically until
1969,
as early as 1954 scientists noticed LSD users complaining of a
reoccurrence of an LSD-like state long after the drug's effects should
have worn off.
The risk of a flashback has become a standard line in
anti-drug messaging.
Months or years after taking LSD, suddenly, the trip could come back
without warning, and suddenly you would be floridly hallucinating again.
An
urban legend holds that molecules of LSD stay in the body, hiding in fat or in the spine, and can later be re-released.
There are plenty of
myths
floating around about LSD use, though. So are flashbacks even real, or
just another example of public health messaging exaggerating the risks
of illicit drugs?
A recent study published in
PLOS ONE
by Norwegian University of Science and Technology neuroscientist Teri
Krebs found no association between using psychedelics, including using
LSD in the past year, and seeing things other people don't. But
psychiatrists who work with psychedelic users say that the phenomenon,
though very rare, is also very real.
"I don't think there's any question that HPPD is a genuine clinical phenomenon."In 1986, the American Psychiatric Association's
Diagnostic and Statistical Manual of Mental Disorders
included diagnostic criteria for what later became known as
Hallucinogen Persisting Perception Disorder (HPPD), the clinical term
for seeing weird, trippy things like geometric hallucinations, flashes
of color, afterimages and false perceptions of movement after taking
psychedelics. To be considered a candidate for HPPD, the type of visual
phenomena that occurs during an acid trip has to spontaneously reappear
"long after the use of hallucinogens has stopped," cause significant
distress, and not be explainable by any other mental disorder or medical
condition. For many, it's less of a sudden "flashback" and more of a
continuous disturbance of vision.
"I don't think there's any
question that HPPD is a genuine clinical phenomenon," says Charles Grob,
a professor of psychiatry at UCLA's medical school who does
research with hallucinogens.
However, how many people are truly affected remains unknown. In a
2002 review
of the scientific literature on HPPD over the last 50 years,
psychiatrist John Halpern and his co-authors found most studies provided
too little information to estimate the prevalence "even crudely" of
HPPD in the population. "It is often unclear whether symptoms occurred
exclusively following hallucinogen intoxication," they write. "It is
also difficult to rule out other medical or psychiatric conditions that
might cause 'flashbacks', including current intoxication with another
drug, neurological conditions, current psychotic or affective disorders,
malingering, hypochondriasis, or even other anxiety disorders such as
posttraumatic stress disorder (PTSD)."
One study
found that 60 percent of 2,455 hallucinogen users who took a
self-reported survey on the drug information site erowid.org reported
experiencing some kind of visual phenomena, similar to those induced by
hallucinogens, when they had been drug-free for at least three days. A
lesser number, 4 percent of respondents, found this significantly
distressing. The study found LSD to be the most statistically robust
predicator of unusual visual experiences, compared to other drugs the
survey asked about, like pot, mushrooms and salvia. HPPD is primarily an
LSD-related phenomenon, though it's also been reported with MDMA use.
"I
think the majority of people could trip relatively safely, but there's a
discrete percentage…Maybe one person in 20 will develop serious,
continuous problems related to the hallucinogenic experience," says
Henry David Abraham, the psychiatrist who pioneered the field of HPPD
research. "But that's true for virtually any drug."
Halpern, an
assistant professor of psychiatry at Harvard Medical School, notes that
there's a difference between what we often consider a flashback and
HPPD. In the first case, "it could be as simple as a provocative
memory--the recollection is so strong it'll feel like they're tripping
again," he explains. "People with HPPD have something that is more
durable and chronic. It may last for weeks to months--people even report
years."
Usually with clear-cut cases of HPPD, someone has symptoms within a
day or two, or at least within a month of the drug use. When flashbacks
occur long after the actual drug use happens, there are often
confounding variables. "Because of the striking subjective effects of
psychedelics, some people attribute psychiatric symptoms to the use of
psychedelics even if the symptoms started months or years later," Krebs
and her co-author write in their study.
Other authors have pointed out similar issues with HPPD studies. From a
German case study of an HPPD patient:
The definition of this disease
entity is entirely based on studies involving chronic LSD users.
However, any additional psychopathological symptoms that may have
occurred in this patient population were not given any consideration.
Pharmacotherapy of this very distressing condition is limited and any
recommendations are based almost entirely on uncontrolled studies on
small patient populations or even single case observations.
The woman in question
reported
taking up to 30 tabs of LSD over the course of a 1-year period when she
was 18, only to start experiencing flashbacks similar to LSD
intoxication at least two weeks after her last drug trip. This persisted
for 13 years.
"These
are folks who can stand on a street corner and a car can drive by, and
they'll see a trail of the car. They'll look at a blank wall and see
geometric patterns, they'll look at an arm and see a halo around the
arm...It's really an Alice In Wonderland kind of thing.""It
appears to be a disorder largely of the perceptual system, which is
present 24/7," Abraham says. "These are folks who can stand on a street
corner and a car can drive by, and they'll see a trail of the car.
They'll look at a blank wall and see geometric patterns, they'll look at
an arm and see a halo around the arm," he describes. "It's really an
Alice In Wonderland kind of thing." For roughly half of patients, he estimates, the disorder is lifelong.
"We
do all kinds of things to not overwhelm our brains with sensory input,"
he says. "The problem with HPPD is the filters are down--they're seeing
things that the rest of us cannot see/filter out."
People who
start seeing odd shapes and trails after using drugs can sometimes get
anxious that they've damaged their brain, and then they start paying
attention to the weird visual stuff that someone else might ignore,
exacerbating the problem. "Consider, it is not untypical for people to
become anxious about normal sensations or bodily feelings…Concerns that
something is wrong leads to increased attention on the 'symptoms',
setting up a feedback-loop of increasing anxiety," Krebs wrote me in an
email. "In case reports of HPPD in medical literature or internet
forums, the main problem typically is not the symptoms themselves but
the fear that they indicate 'drug-induced brain damage'."
And
though scientists know HPPD exists, they still don't know exactly what
causes it. "I've spent my life studying this problem and I don't know,
is the short answer," Abraham says. "There are a number of clues--they
come back to the core concept, it's an imbalance within the inhibitory
circuits of the visual processing system."
Beyond that, it's hard
to say who's at risk. According to Grob, it's a condition that's more
associated with frequent use of LSD, rather than just a once, though
studies have reported it happening after just one use. It has also been reported in people using
MDMA.
And
because we know so little about the underlying mechanics of the
disorder, it's extremely difficult to treat. Researchers have had
some luck in treating it with
benzodiazepines (a class of drugs that includes
Valium).
And therapy can help reassure people that in fact, they didn't break
their brain with drugs. However, some standard anti-psychotic
medications like
risperidone actually seem to make HPPD symptoms worse, as does cannabis use.
But
if you've been seeing some weird stuff lately, rest easy knowing this:
Krebs and her co-author mention that essentially, anything can be linked
to going crazy. "Case reports of mental health problems following
psychedelics are often comparable to case reports of mental health
problems linked to
intensive meditation, visiting
holy sites, or
viewing beautiful artwork and sublime natural scenes," they write. And what happens when you're tripping on acid
while looking at beautiful artwork? Somebody get on that.