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"Trailing" phenomenon – A Long-Lasting LSD Side Effect
American Journal of Psychiatry
SIR: Due to the increased use of LSD during the past decade, awareness of and interest in the long-lasting and adverse reactions to it have come to the foreground. Much has been said about psychotoxic reactions secondary to this drug, but not much is being reported about perceptual distortions. Frosch (1) has described paranoid states, often with grandiosity and persecutory delusions, and Cohen (2) added unmanageability, feelings of immobilization, overwhelming anxiety, and depersonalization. In reporting perceptual distortion, Frosch (3) has included intense and varying coloring, hyperacusis, and distortion of body image. The perceptual distortion I am going to discuss had been experienced frequently by those ingesting LSD but has seldom been scientifically noted. The term denoting this phenomenon is based on the subjects’ vernacular: "trailing." "Trailing effect" is the term used to describe seeing a moving object not as an individual entity in motion but in serial, momentarily stationary positions. If the observer moves his finger across his field of vision, he not only sees his finger moving as a single object, but also sees the various individual movements needed to make up the complete movement. It is like a slow-motion multiple exposure effect. Although this is first seen while the person is under the acute influence of the drug, some LSD users report that it remains with them for up to one year after drug ingestion. This observation corresponds with Robbins’ (4) reports concerning general perceptual distortions lasting as long as one year. Various theories can be set forth concerning this phenomenon. It has been suggested that inhibition of the brain’s inhibitory mechanisms might lead to decreased ability to screen out some sensory inputs (5). Other suggestions include permanent brain damage, gradual release of stored drug metabolite, conditioned response, and learned reaction to anxiety (3). Rosenthal (6) suggested that certain visual distortions secondary to LSD ingestion are caused by transient electro-physiological changes. He hypothesized that some of these changes may be prolonged in subjects who have repeatedly taken the drug. According to him, there is significant evidence that LSD has effects on many levels of the optic pathways, although the precise site of action has not yet been pinpointed. Many questions remain unanswered. Research into the anatomical and biochemical sites of LSD action in the central nervous system is urgently needed. One hopes my letter will help stimulate interest in such research. The references are:
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