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Anna Chaiken

Department of Psychiatry and Behavioral Sciences, Stanford University School of Medicine, Palo Alto, CA, United States.

2 papers in the library · 2 citations · publishing 2025-2026

Papers

Ibogaine is associated with reorganization of high-beta brain networks in veterans with post-traumatic stress disorder

bioRxiv (Cold Spring Harbor Laboratory) March 24, 2026 Kenneth Shinozuka, Mattia Rosso, Anna Chaiken et al. 1 citation

A single dose of the atypical psychedelic ibogaine can be highly effective at treating PTSD in veterans up to twelve months later, according to an observational study of 30 veterans. Using a novel EEG analysis method, researchers found that ibogaine shifted high-beta (24 and 25 Hz) brain networks from frontal areas toward posterior regions, an effect seen both three to four days and one month after treatment. This posterior shift correlated with improvements in PTSD symptoms and was replicated in an independent dataset on ibogaine for opioid use disorder. Neural modeling suggested the shift reflects increased corticocortical, not corticothalamic, connectivity. The reconfiguration of high-beta networks may be a robust biomarker for ibogaine's therapeutic effects.

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.