FAQs

  • Hallucinogen Persisting Perception Disorder is a DSM-5-listed condition in which people experience lasting, debilitating changes to their visual perception after using drugs, especially psychedelic drugs.

    To meet the criteria for a diagnosis for HPPD, these changes should:

    • Create distress and impairment to quality of life

    • Not be attributable to something else like schizophrenia, head injury, or brain infection

    • Occur after the consumption of drugs, especially psychedelic drugs

    These visual perceptual effects seem to arise especially after people use classic psychedelic drugs like LSD, magic mushrooms, and DMT, but they also arise with related (but not classically psychedelic) drugs like MDMA, cannabis, ketamine, dextromethorphan (DXM), diphenhydramine (DPH), and new suites of Novel Psychoactive Substances (NPS). Some people even report the onset of HPPD-style changes after using SSRI antidepressants and antibiotics.

    These changes are speculated to occur in two types: Type-1, in sudden (usually benign) flashbacks, and Type-2, in persistent changes to everyday perception.

  • While HPPD is a complex, under-researched, and highly subjective condition, people consistently report similar kinds of changes. If you have experienced some of these changes - and they began noticeably after taking drugs - then this may be suggestive of HPPD and the need for further clinical consultation.

    Some of the main visual changes include:

    • Visual snow: When the field of vision is coated with small, grainy dots like the static of an undialed TV

    • Haloes: When light sources have a bright ‘halo’ or ‘aura’ ring around them

    • Haloes around objects

    • Trails: When an object moves, a trail of faint replicated images follows it

    • After-images: When an image of an object lingers after looking away, either the same or of a different colour

    • Changes to size and depth perception: Things can seem smaller, ‘at-a-distance’, or possessing a two-dimensional quality

    • Assorted psychedelic-style effects, such as seeing fractals, kaleidoscopic patterns, faces, ‘breathing’ walls, moving, ‘wavy’ or shaky text, or flashing and strobing lights

    People with HPPD report other, non-visual changes, too:

    • Physical effects, such as head pressure or tingling sensations throughout the body

    • Tinnitus and ringing of the ears

    • Confused and unclear thoughts

    • Depersonalization/derealization (DP/DR), in which people feel detached from their bodies and the world stops feeling real

  • ‘Folk wisdom’ in HPPD communities suggests that cultivating an attitude of ‘acceptance’ helps to prevent the symptoms overtaking sufferers’ lives. Accepting that the visual symptoms ‘are as they are’ in any one moment may be critical in reducing anxiety.

    The more sufferers ‘monitor’ and fixate on their symptoms and their implications - how their lives are now ‘ruined’, how they ‘did this to themselves’ - the more apparent and disturbing the symptoms will appear. In this respect, early psychotherapeutic evidence suggests that strategies found in Cognitive Behavioral Therapy (CBT), and Acceptance and Commitment Therapy (ACT) may be considerably helpful.

    Lifestyle changes may also relieve the suffering and symptoms associated with HPPD.

    • Regular exercise

    • A healthier and better-rounded diet

    • Plenty of water

    • High quality and consistent sleep

    • Reductions in stress and dealing with wider mental health problems

    • Relaxation and attention-training techniques like mindfulness meditation

    Abstinence is also encouraged for those experiencing the effects of HPPD, at least for those struggling with the condition or first experiencing its effects. Continuing to use drugs will not necessarily make the symptoms considerably worse, but a considerable risk still remains. Note, further psychedelic use has helped to relieve some people’s HPPD, but scientific research on the potential of psychedelic re-administration has never been conducted.

    Pharmaceutical drugs may have their place for some sufferers, including benzodiazepines like Klonopin and anticonvulsants like Lamotrigine or Keppra. While they work for many patients in reducing the intensity of their visual changes - and their associated anxiety - they come with possible side-effects and are not curative. Some may experience a deterioration rather than relief in symptoms.

    Promise has emerged around the use of brain stimulation techniques, though this requires further research.

  • How long HPPD lasts for is not a question with a simple answer. People's experiences are incredibly wide-ranging. It is likely that those following the advice outlined in ‘What helps people with HPPD?’ will recover sooner.

    Some people experience these changes for a few weeks or months, before they naturally die down; others experience them for many years, including case reports of people with HPPD for more than forty years.

    We do not know which lengths are most common, or what precise conditions are at play in shaping them: including the diversifying effects of genetics, lifestyle choices, people’s subjective psychological and physiological makeup, their ongoing drug use, or the nature of the drug experience that triggered the condition.

  • HPPD, or Hallucinogen Persisting Perception Disorder, is a condition characterized by recurrent visual disturbances such as geometric patterns, flashes of color, and trails even after discontinuing hallucinogenic substance use.

    If you suspect you have HPPD, consult a healthcare professional like a psychiatrist or neurologist for an accurate diagnosis.

    Common signs include visual disturbances like halos, trails, and geometric patterns, as well as perceptual changes, recurring symptoms, and distress or impairment in daily life.

    Seek professional help for a comprehensive evaluation, guidance, support, and potential treatment options.



  • HPPD seems to be caused by distress, such as anxiety surrounding the visual disturbances and obsession over the visual disturbances. Therefore, if you remove that distress, you can recover.

    Out of the hundreds of recovery stories posted on r/HPPD, the most prevalent factors contributing to someone recovering were as follows: immediately cease all substance use including alcohol and marijuana, work on mental health with a professional including not obsessing over the visual disturbances, and leaving HPPD communities.

    Recovering from HPPD is possible. Please also keep in mind that browsing HPPD communities often is not recommended. It can keep one in the cycle of obsession by constantly being reminded of their condition.

  • While we don’t know the exact odds of developing HPPD, according to a survey done on Erowid, it may be as high as 1 in 25 psychedelic users.

  • Hallucinogen Persisting Perception Disorder is a DSM-5-listed condition in which people experience lasting, debilitating changes to their visual perception after using drugs, especially psychedelic drugs.

    These visual perceptual effects seem to arise especially after people use classic psychedelic drugs like LSD, magic mushrooms, and DMT, but they also arise with related (but not classically psychedelic) drugs like MDMA, cannabis, ketamine, dextromethorphan (DXM), diphenhydramine (DPH), and new suites of Novel Psychoactive Substances (NPS). Some people even report the onset of HPPD-style changes after using SSRI antidepressants and antibiotics.

    These changes are speculated to occur in two types: Type-1, in sudden (usually benign) flashbacks, and Type-2, in persistent changes to everyday perception.