The Latest Addiction Treatment is Making Noise - Ibogaine Claims to ...
Set on the Bahamas sand in a tropical oasis overlooking the vast turquoise ocean you will find The Avante Institute; a quiet but luxurious Iboga ...
www.newswire.comHere’s a concise roundup of the latest credible reporting on ibogaine and how it works.
What ibogaine is and how it works
Latest research highlights (2024–2025)
Clinical context, safety, and access
News in brief
If you’d like, I can pull in more specific details from any one of these sources (e.g., the Stanford study methods and brain imaging findings, or a review summarizing proposed mechanisms). I can also summarize safety considerations or outline where ongoing clinical trials are registered.
Citations:
Set on the Bahamas sand in a tropical oasis overlooking the vast turquoise ocean you will find The Avante Institute; a quiet but luxurious Iboga ...
www.newswire.comStanford Medicine researchers find that ibogaine, a plant-based psychoactive compound, safely led to improvements in depression, anxiety and functioning among veterans with traumatic brain injuries.
med.stanford.eduNew Compound Related to Psychedelic Ibogaine Could Treat Addiction, Depression By Andy Fell on December 9, 2020 in Human & Animal Health A non-hallucinogenic version of the psychedelic drug ibogaine has been developed by David Olson and colleagues at the UC Davis Department of Chemistry.
neuroscience.ucdavis.eduA traditional African psychedelic plant medicine called ibogaine is the blueprint for two new drug candidates that could treat addiction and depression.
www.ucsf.eduPsychedelic drug ibogaine shows preliminary promise for traumatic brain injury: Study
www.goodmorningamerica.comA non-hallucinogenic version of the psychedelic drug ibogaine, with potential for treating addiction, depression and other psychiatric disorders, has been developed by researchers at the University of California, Davis. A paper describing the work is published Dec. 9 in Nature. “Psychedelics are some of the most powerful drugs we know of that affect the brain,” said David Olson, assistant professor of chemistry at UC Davis and senior author on the paper. “It’s unbelievable how little we know...
www.ucdavis.eduRichard E. Harris, PhD, receives a $50,000 grant from the Etheridge Foundation in support of his study into whether ibogaine, a psychoactive substance derived from plants, can help treat opioid use disorder.
medschool.uci.eduPsychedelic drug ibogaine shows preliminary promise for traumatic brain injury: Study
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