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Maheen Adamson

WRIISC-WOMEN & Department of Rehabilitation, Veterans Affairs Palo Alto Health Care System, Palo Alto, CA, USA.

2 papers in the library · 67 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.

Mystical experiences during magnesium-Ibogaine are associated with improvements in PTSD symptoms in veterans.

Journal of affective disorders November 18, 2025 Randi Brown, Jennifer Lissemore, Kenneth Shinozuka et al. 1 citation

Among 30 male Veterans with traumatic brain injury from repeated blast/combat exposures, those who reported more intense mystical experiences during magnesium-ibogaine therapy showed larger reductions in PTSD severity both immediately and one month after treatment. Greater mystical experience intensity was also linked to larger reductions in peak alpha frequency one month later. The findings suggest that mystical experiences may contribute to improvements in PTSD following magnesium-ibogaine and may relate to persisting decreases in peak alpha frequency.