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Angela Phillips

Brain Stimulation Lab, Department of Psychiatry & Behavioral Sciences, Stanford School of Medicine, Stanford, CA, USA.

2 papers in the library · 66 citations · publishing 2024-2025

Papers

Magnesium-ibogaine therapy in veterans with traumatic brain injuries.

Nature medicine February 1, 2024 Kirsten N Cherian, Jackob N Keynan, Lauren Anker et al. 66 citations

A combination of the plant-derived compound ibogaine with magnesium, given alongside complementary treatments, led to large improvements in functioning, PTSD, depression, and anxiety in 30 male Special Operations Forces veterans with mild traumatic brain injury. Functioning improved significantly both immediately after treatment and one month later, with very large effects on PTSD, depression, and anxiety at one month. No serious adverse events occurred. The authors call for controlled trials to confirm these initial open-label findings.

Is ibogaine treatment durable? 12-month follow-up of magnesium–ibogaine therapy (MISTIC) in Special Operations Veterans with traumatic brain injuries

Research Square December 17, 2025 Camarin E. Rolle, Nolan Williams, Afik Faerman et al.

A single dose of magnesium-ibogaine produced large and lasting reductions in disability, posttraumatic stress disorder, depression, and anxiety symptoms over 12 months in male U.S. Special Operations Veterans with a history of traumatic brain injury. Of 30 treated participants, 25 completed the full year of follow-up. Effect sizes at 12 months were very large (Cohen's d ≥ 2.18). The estimated probability of sustained remission at one year was 84% for PTSD, 66% for depression, and 61% for anxiety. These results suggest ibogaine may offer durable clinical benefits for TBI-related psychiatric and functional problems, though randomized controlled trials are needed to confirm the findings.