UC San Diego Retreat Unleashes Rapid Biological Shifts in Participants, Study Finds

November 6, 2025
UC San Diego Retreat Unleashes Rapid Biological Shifts in Participants, Study Finds
  • Analyses revealed reduced connectivity between major networks and key nodes after the retreat, alongside a notable increase between the left insula and posterior cingulate in line with absorptive contemplative states.

  • The program combined meditation, reconceptualization, and open-label placebo elements, including guided practices and Kundalini techniques, with findings showing broad neural and molecular effects.

  • Metabolic profiling showed post-retreat plasma driving higher glycolysis in neuron-like cells, indicating a more flexible metabolic state with increased glycolytic activity and altered mitochondrial respiration.

  • Gene and small RNA analyses in blood revealed shifts in brain-related pathways, indicating systemic molecular signaling changes.

  • The study, published in Communications Biology, was funded by the InnerScience Research Fund and VA Research Career Scientist Award, with disclosures noting an author’s employment by Encephalon, Inc.

  • In a seven-day immersive mind–body retreat at UC San Diego, 20 healthy adults experienced rapid, multi-system biological changes—brain imaging and blood markers indicating neuroplasticity, metabolic shifts, immune activation, and pain-relief mechanisms.

  • Future directions include longitudinal studies to assess durability of changes and the impact of repeated retreats.

  • Post-intervention exosome-derived non-coding RNAs showed distinct expression changes, influenced by timepoint and practitioner experience, suggesting lasting molecular signaling shifts.

  • Endogenous opioids rose in the blood after the retreat, signaling activation of the body's natural pain-relief systems even in an open-label context.

  • Mystical Experience Questionnaire scores rose post-retreat and higher scores correlated with greater brain network integration and broader biological changes.

  • Researchers aim to extend the work to patients with chronic pain, mood dysregulation, or immune dysfunction to define therapeutic parameters and long-term benefits.

  • Immune signaling became more complex, with simultaneous increases in both inflammatory and anti-inflammatory markers, suggesting a nuanced re-calibration of immune responses.

Summary based on 6 sources


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