The Ibogaine Dossier
NYU Conference on Ibogaine Nov 5-6, 1999
Howard S. Lotsof
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IBOGAINE IN THE TREATMENT OF CHEMICAL DEPENDENCE DISORDERS:
CLINICAL PERSPECTIVES
(A Preliminary Review)
H.S. LOTSOF
© 1994
Dedicated to the work J. Bastiaans and N.F.P. Adriaans
in memory of N.
Kribus
Table of Contents
Introduction
Brief History
Clinical Practice
Acute Effects
A. Regimen
B. Visualization
Autonomic Responses
Female Patient Safety
Cognitive Evaluation
Behavioral Immobility
Attenuation of Narcotic Withdrawal
Example One
Example Two
Delayed Withdrawal
Aftereffects
Interrupting Craving
Psychological Support
Reduction of Need for Sleep
Long-Term Effects
Example One
Example Two
Example Three
Current Treatments: A Self-Report
1st Day - 100mg (test dose #1)
2nd Day - 25mg (test dose #2)
3rd Day - 10mg/kg (experimental dose)
5th Day - 20/mg/kg (therapeutic dose)
Differences in day-to-day life after the experience
Some months later
Conclusion
Acknowledgements
References
INTRODUCTION
The primary purpose of this paper is to provide general information to
the clinician who will be using the Lotsof Proceduresm
(Goutarel, 1993) developed by NDA International, Inc. in which Ibogaine is
administered to treat chemical dependence disorders. This is a preliminary
report. The patient base upon which my conclusions have been made totals
thirty-five treatment episodes. All clinical observations conducted after
1963 have been made on patients treated outside of the United States.
Ibogaine is not a substitute for narcotics or stimulants, is not
addicting and is given in a single administration modality (SAM). It is a
chemical dependence interrupter. Retreatment may occasionally be needed
until the person being treated with Ibogaine is able to extinguish certain
conditioned responses related to drugs they abuse. Early data suggests
that a period of approximately two years of intermittent treatments may be
required to attain the goal of long-term abstinence from narcotics and
stimulants for many patients. The majority of patients treated with
Ibogaine remain free from chemical dependence for a period of three to six
months after a single dose. Approximately ten percent of patients treated
with Ibogaine remain free of chemical dependence for two or more years
from a single treatment and an equal percentage return to drug use
within two weeks after treatment. Multiple administrations of Ibogaine
over a period of time are generally more effective in extending periods of
abstinence. It is noteworthy that twenty-nine of the thirty-five patients
successfully treated with Ibogaine had numerous unsuccessful
experiences with other treatment modalities.
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A BRIEF HISTORY
Ibogaine, a naturally occurring alkaloid found in Tabernanthe iboga
and other plant species of Central West Africa, was first reported to be
effective in interrupting opiate narcotic dependence disorders in U.S.
patent 4,499,096 (Lotsof, 1985); cocaine
dependence disorders in U.S. patent 4.587,243
(Lotsof, 1986) and poly-drug dependence disorders in U.S. patent 5,152,994 (Lotsof, 1992). The initial studies
demonstrating Ibogaine's effects on cocaine and heroin dependence were
accomplished in a series of focus group experiments by H. S. Lotsof in
1962 and 1963. Additional data on the clinical aspects of Ibogaine in the
treatment of chemical dependence were reported by Kaplan (1993), Sisko
(1993), Sanchez-Ramos & Mash (1994), and Sheppard(1994).
Prior to Ibogaine's
evaluation for the interruption of various chemical dependencies, the use
of Ibogaine was reported in psychotherapy by Naranjo (1969, 1973) and at the First
International Ibogaine Conference held in Paris (Zeff, 1987). The use of Ibogaine-containing
plants has been reported for centuries in West Africa in both religious
practice and in traditional medicine (Fernandez,
1982; Gollnhofer & Sillans 1983, 1985) An
overview of the history of Ibogaine research and use was published by Goutarel et al. (1993).
Claims of efficacy
in treating dependencies to opiates, cocaine, and alcohol in human
subjects were supported in preclinical studies by researchers in the
United States, the Netherlands and Canada. Dzoljic
et al. (1988) were the first researchers to publish Ibogaine's ability
to attenuate narcotic withdrawal. Stanley D. Glick
et al. (1992) at Albany Medical College published original research
and a review of the field concerning the attenuation of narcotic
withdrawal. Maisonneuve et al. (1991) determined the pharmacological
interactions between Ibogaine and morphine, and Glick et al. (1992)
reported Ibogaine's ability to reduce or interrupt morphine
self-administration in the rat. Woods et al.
(1990) found that Ibogaine did not act as an opiate, and Aceto et al. (1991) established that Ibogaine did
not precipitate withdrawal signs or cause dependence.
Cappendijk and Dzoljic (1993) published Ibogaine's
effect in reducing cocaine self-administration in the rat. Broderick et al. (1992) first published Ibogaine's
ability to reverse cocaine-induced dopamine increases and later, on
Ibogaine's reduction of cocaine-induced motor activity and other effects
(1994). Broderick et al.'s research supported the findings of Sershen et al. (1992), that Ibogaine reduced
cocaine-induced motor stimulation in the mouse. Sershen (1994) also demonstrated that Ibogaine
reduced the consumption of cocaine in mice. Glick
(1992) and Cappendijk (1993) discovered in
the animal model that multiple administrations of Ibogaine over time
were more effective than a single dose in interrupting or attenuating
the self-administration of morphine and cocaine, supporting Lotsof's
findings in human subjects (1985).
Popik
et al. (1994) determined Ibogaine to be a competitive inhibitor of MK-801
binding to the NMDA receptor complex. MK-801 has been shown to attenuate
tolerance to opiates (Trujillo & Akil 1991) and alcohol (Khanna et al.
1993). MK-801 has also shown a blockade of "reverse tolerance" of
stimulants (Karler et al. 1989). Ibogaine's effects on dopamine, a
substance hypothesized to be responsible for reinforcing pleasurable
effects of drugs of abuse, and the dopamine system were found by
Maisonneuve et al. (1991), Broderick et al. (1992) and Sershen et al.
(1992). Ibogaine binding to the kappa opiate receptor was reported by
Deecher et al. (1992). Thus we begin to see a broad spectrum of
mechanisms by which Ibogaine may moderate use of substances so diverse as
opiate narcotics, stimulants and alcohol.
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CLINICAL PRACTICE
The effects of
Ibogaine treatment are viewed in three categories: acute, intermediate
and long-term. The acute and intermediate effects have sometimes been
referred to as the effects and aftereffects. The two major effects of
Ibogaine are A) the ability to interrupt narcotic and stimulant
withdrawal and B) the attenuation or elimination of the craving to
continue to seek and use opiates, stimulants and alcohol (Lotsof 1985,
1986, 1989). Knowledge concerning the use of Ibogaine in treating alcohol
dependence is limited to: 1) a single alcohol-only dependent patient and
2) the attenuation and, in some cases, cessation of alcohol use in
persons treated for poly-drug dependence disorders. Ibogaine's ability to
treat nicotine dependence (Lotsof, 1991) has been seen in poly-drug
dependent subjects treated primarily for opiate and/or cocaine use .
First, there are some general considerations. The primary obligations
of the treatment team are four-fold: 1 ) to earn the trust of the
patient, 2) to maintain the comfort of the patient, 3)
to assist the patients in interrupting their chemical dependence and
4) to supply the psychosocial support network needed by the
majority of patients to enable them to develop a sense of personal
accomplishment and the ability to function as productive members of
society. This is a process the Dutch treatment community refers to as
normalization.
In the Lotsof Proceduresm, for which a
manual is now being prepared, the sense of conflict seen in most treatment
modalities between the doctor and patient over the immediate ceasing of
drug use does not exist. The patients have been allowed, if
narcotic-dependent, to continue their use of narcotics until a certain
time prior to treatment with Ibogaine. There is no conflict over opiate
use before treatment as our position has been that Ibogaine will either
work to interrupt chemical dependence or it will not. Patients
dependent on stimulants are not maintained on stimulants and this has not
created a problem for the patients or the medical staff.
Prior
to our conducting Ibogaine treatments in hospitals, addicted patients were
allowed to use their personal supply of narcotics until the evening before
treatment. However, during hospital-administered Ibogaine sessions, the
narcotic-dependent patient is maintained on medications prescribed by the
principal investigator during the three to five day intake process
preceding their treatment with Ibogaine. Even under these circumstances,
patient distrust of the medical establishment and their extreme fear of
going into withdrawal has resulted in the smuggling of narcotics into
hospital environments. In order to protect the patient from possible
overdose due to narcotics, stimulants or other drugs, a thorough physical
examination is performed on all patients upon their admission to hospital
environments. The examination and a search of the patient's
possessions prior to treatment with Ibogaine serve two important
functions. The first, is to limit the possibility of accidental overdose
from secreted drugs. The second, is to provide a complete understanding
of the patient's physical health, since many of the people seeking
treatment for chemical dependence have masked various and often numerous
medical problems for years or even decades by self-medicating with illicit
drugs.
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ACUTE EFFECTS
A. REGIMEN
The acute effects
of Ibogaine are dramatic. The initial reaction is usually noted within
forty-five minutes after the oral dose and full effects are generally
evident within two to two and a half hours. The earliest subjective
indication by patients of Ibogaine's effects is the report of a pervasive
oscillating sound. The patient tends to lie down and, if asked to stand
or walk, shows signs of ataxia.
The protocol for the Lotsof
Proceduresm stipulates that the patient remain in bed with as
little movement as possible from the time of Ibogaine administration, as
nausea associated with Ibogaine use has proven to be motion-related or, in
later stages (those longer than four hours after administration),
possibly to be a psychosomatic reaction to previously repressed traumatic
experiences. In addition to keeping the patient as still as possible, we
use a non-phenothiazine anti-nauseant, as phenothiazines may interfere
with the psychoactive properties of Ibogaine. If the patient vomits in
less than two and a half hours after the administration of Ibogaine, an
examination of the regurgitated material should be made to determine how
much Ibogaine may have already been absorbed by the patient. A rectal
infusion of Ibogaine to supplement the lost portion of the dose may be
provided if it is not possible for this dose to be administered orally.
The rectal administration should occur only if the patient has previously
consented to this mode of dosing.
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B. VISUALIZATION
One of Ibogaine's principal
effects during its first phase of action is to produce a state which
emulates dreaming, aside from the fact that the subject is fully awake and
has the ability to respond to the treatment staff's questions. In most
cases, people under the influence of a therapeutic dose of Ibogaine do
not wish to speak. They prefer instead to pay close attention to the
visual presentation of memories or phenomena they are experiencing, that
have been noted to have both Freudian and Jungian connotations.
The experiencing of visual material is rapid. Some patients have
described it as a movie run at high speed; others as a slide show, each
slide containing a motion picture of a specific event or circumstance in
the viewer's life. In either case, the presentation of visual material is
so compressed and fast moving that distracting the patient for even a
moment may interfere with the process of abreaction. Therefore, in
treatment, the intrusion of the medical staff should be kept to a minimum
during Ibogaine's primary phase.
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AUTONOMIC
RESPONSES
During the first through the fifth hour there
is a moderate rise in blood pressure of ten to fifteen percent and, in
some cases, an associated decline in the pulse rate. The most
significant autonomic changes occur between one and a half and two and a
half hours after administration of therapeutic doses of Ibogaine. In
many cases the patients' pulse rates are elevated due to anxiety prior
to the administration of Ibogaine.
On two occasions, persons with
transient hypertension were treated. In one of those instances the
patient's blood pressure dropped to normal levels during the primary and
secondary stages of treatment. The second hypertensive exhibited little
change at a 23mg/kg therapeutic dose, but showed significant changes on
two occasions when provided with only a 1.6mg/kg test dose. The two
1.6mg/kg doses were supplied due to our concern over the patient's
hypertension. He had been previously treated with an 18mg/kg dose by
Dutch Addict Self-Help (DASH) with no apparent negative results. This
alleviated somewhat our concern for the patient's safety. Variation in
individual patient reactions should be anticipated.
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FEMALE PATIENT SAFETY
One 24-year-old
female patient treated with Ibogaine for chemical dependence died from
undiagnosed causes in the Netherlands. Although her autopsy did not
determine the cause of death, it reported Ibogaine levels of 0.75mg/liter
in blood. This level has not been seen to be toxic in animal research or
in our prior human studies. Subsequent to this death and to a previously
reported death of a Swiss woman who received Ibogaine during a
psychotherapy session in Europe, totally unrelated to NDA's research
program, the FDA excluded women from the present clinical trials taking
place at the University of Miami. However, the FDA decision is contrary
to the gender guidelines of the National Institutes of Health. The
guidelines with regard to women call for the inclusion of women at the
earliest stages of clinical trials, as this would provide the greatest
determination of safety for women. Thirty percent of NDA International's
patients have been women who have shown no negative effects from taking
Ibogaine either during or after treatment. However, considering all of
the circumstances, the Procedure should be administered only in a
hospital or clinic with the patient under continuous staff observation
and electronic monitoring.
An ongoing international research
program is developing evidence to determine a hypothesis for the cause of
death of the woman in the Netherlands. We are additionally seeking Swiss
government cooperation concerning the death of the Swiss woman. The
results of this research may facilitate either an exclusion criteria or an
antidote allowing Ibogaine safely to treat chemical dependence in women.
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COGNITIVE EVALUATION
The
second phase of Ibogaine's action during the Lotsof Proceduresm
is one of the patients' intellectual evaluation of their previous
experiences and decisions. This occurs after the visualization phase,
which generally ends abruptly in three to five hours. However,
individual reactions and variations are the norm and not the exception
within the parameters of the Procedure.
Regarding this process of
evaluation by the patient, in many cases, when various decisions were made
by the patient in the past, those decisions appeared to be the only
options available at the time. However, due to Ibogaine's ability to
allow the reevaluation of one's life, actions and behavior , it is
possible for the patient to understand that alternatives to their original
decisions were available, and this knowledge appears to allow the patient
to modify their current behavior and cease their drug dependence.
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BEHAVIORAL IMMOBILITY
During the
periods of visualization, and extending into the stage of cognitive
evaluation, patients will demonstrate a state of behavioral immobility
(Depoortere, 1987) during which brain wave patterns associated with
dreaming and sleep, but distinct from those states, are represented by
rhythmic slow activity of 4-6 Hz. These EEG patterns are associated with
a state characterized by a lack of movement. Some early observers of the
Lotsof Proceduresm (Kaplan, 1990) initially believed that the
condition represented paralysis, but when patients were asked to stand and
move around, the patients were able to do so, albeit with difficulty.
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ATTENUATION OF NARCOTIC WITHDRAWAL
One of the major acute effects experienced with Ibogaine treatment is
the attenuation or elimination of narcotic withdrawal in opiate-dependent
patients. This is extremely important to the narcotic-dependent patients
who live in fear of going into withdrawal.
The treatment team's
experience in the field is of the utmost importance in dealing with this
aspect of the Procedure as withdrawal symptoms are a combination of
physical and, in many cases, psychosomatic manifestations that are
anxiety-driven. Therefore, it is imperative for the medical and
paramedical staff to have experience in identifying and distinguishing
between these varieties of symptoms. Provided below are examples of
psychosomatic withdrawal manifestations demonstrated by two of the
patients treated outside the United States.
Example One
On one
occasion I was called into the room by a colleague about twenty hours
after Ibogaine had been administered to a twenty-five year old male
heroin-dependent patient. The patient had been using approximately 1/4
gram of heroin a day, but soon increased his daily intake to two grams
while in the Netherlands.
I was informed that the patient was
complaining of muscle spasms; I asked the patient if this was true, and he
concurred. I asked if I might see these spasms and the patient agreed,
showing me the calf of his leg. The patient was exhibiting what appeared
to be involuntary movements. I checked his pupils and observed that they
were not dilated, nor was he exhibiting any other form or manifestation of
withdrawal. When I turned to my colleague for discussion I noticed the
patient's spasms had ceased. When I turned to the patient and once again
examined his calf, the spasms returned. I turned away once again, but
continued to watch him and the spasms ceased again. I informed the
patient that I believed the spasms to be psychosomatic in origin. I
placed a pillow under the patient's calf to give it support and covered
the patient with a blanket. The spasms did not occur again.
Example Two
On
another occasion I received a call from a person involved with Dutch
Addict Self-Help (DASH) groups who had been observing a number of
treatments. She informed me that a Yugoslavian woman in her mid to late
twenties had been complaining of narcotic withdrawal during Ibogaine
treatment, but the DASH observer did not believe this to be the case as
there were no observable signs of withdrawal..
When I arrived,
the patient was sitting on a couch. I checked her pupils and observed
they were not dilated and asked her if she were in withdrawal. The
patient said, she was.
"How are you in withdrawal? What are its manifestations?" I asked.
"I'm sick," she said. I asked her if her eyes were tearing.
"Yes," she said, but her eyes were not tearing. "Is
your nose running?" "Yes," she said, but her nose was dry.
"Do you have goose bumps?" I asked. "Yes," she said, but I
pointed out to her that she did not have goose bumps, and finally I
said, "Do you have diarrhea?" "Yes," she said, but I had
no way to determine the validity of her statement.
The patient requested that I provide her with funds to return home, and I
told her I did not think it wise for her to leave at this time, but would
give her carfare in the morning. The following day the DASH observer
informed me the patient left about four hours after I did, informing the
observer as she left that she had not been sick, but had only said she
was. This example should further demonstrate the importance of hospital
administered treatments with a full medical staff of psychiatrists,
neurologists, internists, therapists, nurses, peer counselors and patient
advocates capable of evaluating and responding to any aspects of the
patient's condition at all times.
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DELAYED WITHDRAWAL
The complaint of
experiencing narcotic withdrawal after leaving the treatment environment
has been reported in three cases. We have provided additional treatments
six months to a year after the initial treatment to patients who were
re-addicted and stated they had experienced some form of withdrawal
within a week of their first Ibogaine treatment. Our working group decided
to keep patients making such complaints under observation for periods
equal to the number of post treatment days during which the patients
stated they previously experienced withdrawal symptoms.
Our findings have been that, under the above conditions of monitoring,
the reported withdrawal signs are usually symptoms of anxiety or anxiety
related conditions that the patients characterized as withdrawal, i.e.,
nausea, diarrhea or increases in blood pressure in one hypertensive
patient. There have been two incidents which did not appear
anxiety related, in which diarrhea occurred five to seven days after
treatment in patients using one gram of heroin a day. These episodes were
easily controlled with a single administration of an appropriate
medication and did not occur again.
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AFTEREFFECTS
INTERRUPTION OF
CRAVING
The acute interruption of craving to seek
and use drugs of abuse is unique to the Lotsof Proceduresm as a treatment
modality for chemical dependence disorders. This effect is generally not
noticed by the patient until the principal actions of Ibogaine
(visualization, cognitive evaluation, behavioral immobility and
significant residual stimulation) are no longer evident and the patient
has had the opportunity to sleep. The initial recognition of lack of
craving is usually noticed forty-eight to seventy-two hours after Ibogaine
administration. In a minority of treatments, recovery and the absence of
craving may be evident to the person being treated in as little as
twenty-four hours. The medical staff, on the other hand, usually notes
the absence of craving in the patient in forty-five minutes to one and a
half hours after Ibogaine administration.
Our experience gained
in recent years through the treatment of twenty persons outside the United
States has shown that the majority of patients may need a series of
treatments before the conditioned responses (craving) to a long history
of chemical dependence can be extinguished. However, for three of these
patients a single treatment interrupted chemical dependence for a minimum
of two years. The advantage of Ibogaine is that it begins to allow
patients time periods free of craving during which the psychiatrist,
social worker, therapist, paraclinician and the patient often bond into a
cohesive working group to accomplish a state of long-term non-dependence
by the patient to the drug(s) of abuse for which the patient is under
treatment.
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PSYCHOSOCIAL SUPPORT
All aspects of
treatment for chemical dependence disorders common to other treatment
modalities are common to the use of Ibogaine. The patient's
characteristics in terms of psychopathology, behavior, societal
accomplishments, as well as the skills of the treatment team are
significant to treatment outcomes.
In rare cases, when the
patient already has the occupational, educational and skills needed to
succeed in society, the task may be somewhat easier. In cases where the
patient does not have those societal skills, or lacks medical care for
disorders other than chemical dependence, care and training must be
provided through psychosocial support structures.
Trauma suffered
by the patient during childhood appears to play an important part in the
drive for love and the fear of abandonment that is common to many of the
patients we have treated (Bastiaans, 1991).
All psychosocial
support paradigms should be available for the patient after the
completion of an Ibogaine treatment. Their use should be contingent upon
the evaluation of the patient's needs and progress.
One of the
primary differences that social workers, counselors or therapists offering
psychosocial support notice in post-Ibogaine treated patients, as
compared to untreated subjects, is the rapidity with which the support can
and must be provided to aid the patient in accomplishing goals and making
decisions. Ibogaine presents a symptom-free window of opportunity which
the patient and therapist must take advantage of. One patient put it this
way: "Ibogaine and 12-Step (groups) both help you to get in touch with
your soul. Ibogaine is like rocket fuel for that process." (Village Beat,
1990) It is imperative that ground control remain in contact with the
patient, and this means moving quickly and dramatically to assist the
patient to establish goals while the patient has the ability and desire to
do so.
Ibogaine generally expedites the placement of the patient
in receptive psychological state. This produces a relationship between
the patient and the therapist which is mutually rewarding and beneficial,
but requires the person providing psychosocial support to work both
harder and faster than is the norm for other treatment modalities. Prior
to the use of Ibogaine in the treatment of chemical dependence, it may
have taken the therapist three to twenty-four months (Judd, 1993) using
traditional methods to assist the patient in reaching a state of
well-being free of drug craving (Kaplan et al., 1993). This advantage that
Ibogaine treatment provides enables the psychosocial support staff to
assist the patient in making decisions to allow their normalization and
integration into society as self-fulfilled and productive human beings.
Many of the accepted parameters of distance between the
therapist and the patient are not effective in Ibogaine treatment.
Patients will require closer and more intensive guidance, and generally be
more open to it. They will require faster intervention to learn societal
skills and to overcome and objectively understand various traumas
experienced during their lives. Therefore, Ibogaine is not a treatment
modality for clinicians whose preference is to simply administer a pill or
tablet and then distance themselves from their patients.
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REDUCTION OF THE
NEED FOR SLEEP
In all cases, Ibogaine temporally
reduces the patient's need for sleep to as few as three or four hours a
night. This effect may last a month or more, gradually returning to
normal. Two theories have been put forth concerning this effect. One
theory suggests the long-lasting bioavailability of Ibogaine or one of its
metabolites. This is in keeping with the pharmacokinetic studies
conducted at the University of Miami (Mash, 1995). The second theory
suggests the cause is the decrease in the psychological requirements for
sleep associated with the necessity to dream. Evidence supporting this
theory is that Ibogaine promotes an intense emulation of dreaming that
lasts for many hours during its acute stage of activity.
The
reduction in the need for sleep is viewed by the majority of patients as a
discomfort, since they have used drugs and sleep as an escape mechanism.
These patients may require some mild form of sedation during the first
days after treatment with Ibogaine. Normal precautions should be taken
in providing sedatives to persons with a history of chemical dependence.
In a minority of cases, patients have used this newly available time to
advantage in their busy work schedules.
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LONG-TERM EFFECTS
Long-term are
those which may be noticed from one to twenty-four months after
treatment, and in some cases even longer. I have provided three examples.
Example
One
A heroin-dependent couple was treated. The woman of
26 was a relatively new addict of three months while her 27-year-old
husband had a history of over ten years of heroin use. At the time of
their treatment a protocol of treating one patient at a time was
followed. These were early treatments and the medical and medical support
staff were familiarizing themselves with what might be expected during
such episodes.
Portions of the treatment episodes were observed
by Dr. Carlo Contoreggi, Deputy Medical Director of the Addiction
Research Center of the National Institute on Drug Abuse in Baltimore and
Dr. Lester Grinspoon of the Harvard School of Medicine.
The
husband was treated first, and his wife was completely cooperative and
helpful during his treatment. The following day, when the wife was
administered her dose of Ibogaine, her husband demanded that he be allowed
to leave his room and remain in bed with her. He informed the medical and
paramedical staff present that unless he got his way he would create a
disturbance to interfere with his wife's treatment. Rather than deal with
a belligerent and angry patient, we decided it would be less harmful to
let him have his way. He continuously disturbed his wife during her
treatment. This resulted in a policy of treating couples simultaneously in
separate rooms.
He recovered before his wife, as she had been
administered Ibogaine twenty-four hours after his treatment. He complained
that he was getting bedsore and was no longer able to stay in bed and
asked for permission to go for a bicycle ride. Upon his leaving, his
wife broke down and cried in the arms of a female paraclinician, stating
she did not know if she could remain with her husband, but she was afraid
he would die if she left him. This was a concept he continuously stressed
to her during their treatment.
After treatment, he followed a
pattern of controlling his wife's contacts with other persons including
the treatment team, which was denied access to either of them. We later
learned that they both returned to heroin use. However, three months
later the wife determined that her husband was incapable of loving himself
or her and this was not the life she wished. She stopped using heroin,
enrolled in nursing school, filed divorce proceedings against her husband,
and is now specializing in psychiatric nursing.
While initially
she did not recognize that her decision to stop heroin use was due to her
Ibogaine treatment, as the months went by she realized that her
determination to change her life was catalyzed by her experience with
Ibogaine.
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Example Two
A cocaine/cocaine-base dependent patient was
treated with the Lotsof Procedure and experienced an acute interruption
of his drug use. During his Ibogaine treatment he had a strong
impression that if he continued drug use God would punish him. He remained
drug-free for about thirty days, after which he increased his drug use
over the next months and was retreated. The dose he received proved to be
inadequate due to his vomiting of the oral dose and to a bowel movement
immediately after the rectal administration of Ibogaine, which he
requested to remedy the loss of his oral dose. His drug use continued,
but far below his original pretreatment levels.
About six months
after his retreatment, the first Ibogaine therapy group sponsored by the
International Coalition for Addict Self-Help, directed by psychotherapist
Barbara Judd, CSW, was established in New York. The patient attended
these sessions until fifteen months after his original treatment, when he
recognized that he had to move away from his drug-infested neighborhood.
Thereupon he moved to Florida. In Florida, he has remained drug-free,
even though he had access to cocaine. He is employed in the construction
industry by a business with strict non-drug use guidelines that is owned
and run by former drug users.
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Example Three
One of the most
important concepts learned by persons treated with Ibogaine is that
addiction can be reversed. Persons dependent on drugs such as opiates or
cocaine are not able to recognize that chemical dependence is a reversible
phenomenon. This third example is of the only
chemically-dependent person from the 1962-1963 study to receive a series
of treatments at therapeutic levels with Ibogaine. The individual
remained free of addiction for approximately three and a half years as a
result of his series of treatments.
During that period he moved
to California, married, and worked in pharmaceutical sales. He later
lost his job and, when offered a ride back to New York, accepted it and
returned to a life of minor drug dealing and use that resulted in his
arrest and imprisonment.
After his release, he worked for a while
as a machinist, then slowly fell back into heroin use and addiction in
1969. Luckily, this was a period when methadone programs were expanding,
and he was able to enter one of the better programs run by Beth Israel
Hospital. At that time, the programs were well-staffed with doctors,
nurses and adequate counselors, and the patient reached a point in his
life when he recognized that the life of a heroin addict was not what he
wanted. It was not just the heroin, but the scene itself, wherein a human
life was without value, where sometimes a human being would be murdered
for two cents worth of an innocuous powder in a glassine envelope. The
patient was ready to quit heroine, but was a slave to the craving to use
opiates for the anxiolytic relief they provided.
Over a period of
more than two years, the patient stabilized himself on methadone. He
tried heroin once, two weeks after starting methadone, was satisfied with
the level of blockage that methadone offered, and never used heroin again.
During the next few years the methadone programs changed. Many
of the competent counselors were unable to continue in their positions due
to the stress and sense of frustration in their work, a condition common
in the treatment community. The Federal government placed more and more
restrictions on methadone patients' freedom of movement and, though
methadone is anticipated to maintain the methadone client for a period of
twenty-four hours, in many cases it does not. For this patient withdrawal
signs were setting in at eighteen hours and not twenty-four. The patient
began a slow detoxification process from 100mg of methadone per day that
took approximately eighteen months.
The final stage of
detoxification was followed by the patient's entry into University-level
training after he obtained a scholarship to a prominent university. At
the time of the detoxification, the philosophy among methadone patients
was that you could not get off methadone, but having previously had the
Ibogaine experience, the patient stated that he knew addiction was
reversible, and that knowledge allowed him to successfully leave addiction
behind.
return to table of contents
CURRENT TREATMENTS: A SELF
REPORT(personal communication, 1994)
The
following report is from the type of patient we had been seeking for
years: a medical doctor who needed to be treated with Ibogaine. The
subject was chemically dependent on 600mg of Demerol a day and had
attempted to stop his drug use a number of times without any lasting
success. Our particular interest in this subject was the hope that, as a
medical doctor, he might provide us with some professional insight into
the results of his treatment. He kept notes and provided a report on
the four different doses he received, which is presented in its entirety.
This subject proved to be more sensitive to Ibogaine than any other
individual in our studies conducted outside the United States, and had a
full-blown experience from a 10mg/kg dose. The patient had participated
in a research protocol which called for an intermediate dose of 10mg/kg of
Ibogaine, which was administered as part of a pharmacokinetic study and
was not expected to have a therapeutic effect, but it did. As part of the
protocol, patients would then be administered a known therapeutic dose of
20mg/kg.
1st day - 100mg (test dose #1)
I've taken my Ibogaine
dose and went to bed, and stayed laying down. I felt nothing, until the
medical staff arrived to do the 1 hour tests. I was surprised because in
my mental measurements, I thought I had taken Ibogaine about 20 minutes
earlier. When I stood up, I felt a little drowsiness, and it was
difficult to walk in a straight line. I was feeling photophobia and every
little noise seemed to be much louder than in reality. The sounds were
very disturbing to me.
During the two hour testing, symptoms were
worse. It was very difficult to walk in a straight line, and the room
seemed to beat, like a heart. I felt very tired, and the only thing I
wanted was to rest in bed. Each head movement seemed to make things
worse.
When I stood up for the 3 hour test I felt that the
symptoms were disappearing. I was very hungry and ate. After eating, I
was a little nauseated. For the following hours I felt nothing, except
for sensation that my mind images were richer in details than before,
like a 3-D movie.
I ate with no nausea, slept very well, and
awakened in very good condition.
  2nd day - 25mg (test dose #2)
After this dose of Ibogaine I felt nothing different from my normal state.
return to table of contents
  3rd Day -
10mg/kg (experimental dose)
For the first two hours I
felt a little different, like I had smoked marijuana. I was very calm and
relaxed and all the tension of the beginning of the procedure was gone.
The room seemed to be a little different and the colors around me sharper
than normal. The lights and sounds were disturbing to me, like the first
time. Suddenly, with my eyes closed I began to see images that appeared
in screens, exactly like TV or cinema screens. These screens were
appearing in small sizes and then they would get bigger as I focused my
attention on them. Sometimes they appeared small and would then begin to
grow, like I was walking in their direction, and sometimes they were going
from left to right, in a continuous way.
The images on the screens
were moving in slow motion and were very sharp and well defined. I saw
trees moving with the wind, a man with bells in his hands, various
landscapes with mountains and the sunset. At this time I was a little
nauseated, and when the doctors asked me to stand up for some tests, I
vomited. From all of the hundreds of images I saw this day, I recognized
only two: the first, an image of myself as a child, static like a photo.
This image began to approach me and get bigger, but something in the room
happened and I opened my eyes, losing the image. The second image I
recognized was one of some horses dancing in a circus. It was a TV show
that I had seen two days before. The time seemed to go very quickly,
because after about four hours (in my mind), they told me I had taken
Ibogaine nine hours earlier! It was very difficult for me to speak in
English or in Spanish. I was only able to speak in my native language.
At this time the images started to appear at a slower rate and for another
two hours I saw only screens with no images on them. About 10-11 hours
after the beginning of the experiment they disappeared.
I ate
very well and stayed awake all night long, falling asleep only about 7 AM,
almost 24 hours after the medication had been administered. During the
night I had some insights about my life and about the things I realized I
was doing wrong. I stayed all the following day very tired, sleepy, but
very happy and relaxed, in a way I never was before.
return to table of contents
  5th day - 20mg/kg
(therapeutic dose)
The first 3 hours were similar to the
last time; photophobia and a bad sensation with little noises. After that
the images began to appear, in a slower rate than the other time. There
were less images, but I was recognizing all of them as part of my
childhood. I saw myself playing in my father's farm, riding a motorcycle,
playing with a cousin, feeding a fish and other things. I saw some recent
images, like one of my father, laughing in the living room of my house.
This happened about a year ago. I understood that I had a happy
childhood, and there was no one to blame for my addiction, only myself. I
felt their love coming from my parents and relatives. I was feeling the
same time distortion that I felt the other day, and after many hours I
suddenly had an insight. It was that my mind and the universe were the
same thing, and that all the people in the universe and all things in the
universe are only one. I saw many mistakes I was doing in my life, so
many attitudes I could not have, and this helped me to decide very
strongly that I will never use Demerol again. Now I can see very clearly
that I don't need Demerol to live my life. And I feel better if I don't
use it. During the first 8 hours after taking the Ibogaine I vomited 4 or
5 times, always when I tried to move. I was able to sleep about 4 AM, and
to eat only about 9 AM the following day. I awakened feeling weak, tired
and drowsy. As the hours were going, I slept a lot and began to feel
better and in the morning of the following day I was normal.
Differences in
day-by-day life after the experience
I returned to my
normal life with absolutely no cravings, with better appetite than before,
and highly self-confident. Now I can see differences in some aspects of
my personality, things are changed. For example, I used to avoid driving
at night, because it reminded me of a car accident I had years ago. Now I
can drive anytime, day or night, without anxiety. I'm sure that this is
caused by Ibogaine, because now I'm not the same very anxious person I
was. I'm not as shy as I used to be, too. It's easier now to contradict
people when I think they are wrong, and to make them know what I want and
what I think. I used to accept all that other people said only to avoid a
discussion, even when I was sure that my point of view was the correct
one. These are the main happenings in my Ibogaine experience and
the main differences I can perceive in these few days.
Some Months
Later
The most important thing I learned with all that
happened is that I can never underestimate the power of the addictive
personality I have inside. I can never say I'm cured because if I do
this, I will forget to protect myself from drug using thoughts. I must
know I have a chronic disease that will be quiet in its place until I
decide to give it a chance to grow. This decision, and that's the point,
is a conscious decision. If I give in,the disease will be out of control
in a few days. But, if I could be strong to take real and honest control
of my Demerol using thoughts, I will be free forever.
A few days
ago, because of professional needs, I had to keep two Demerol doses with
me, in my house, all night long. To protect myself, I gave them to my
wife. But, it was amazing to see how I was not anxious to use them but,
to give them to the patients that needed them. I clearly felt that
Demerol was a strange thing in my environment. I wasn't curious about the
place my wife had put them, I wasn't feeling any craving. I was only
looking forward to the moment I could give them to the patient and say:
I've done it. And I did it, because of all of you from NDA.
I
don't want to be boring, but I have no words to say how grateful we, my
family and I, are. I will remember you for a lifetime.
- - - e n d p e r s o n a l c o m m u n i c a
t i o n - - -
Needless to say, this patient
provided particular advantages in terms of his treatment outcome. He had
a career, was highly motivated, and did not require the significant
psychosocial support needed by so many others who do not have his
background.
return to table of contents
CONCLUSION
The
follow-up for observations in patients we have been able to track, a
significant minority, possibly twenty-five percent is short. In many
cases we have maintained direct contact with the patients for only two
months after treatment. In a single case, for five years. The difficulty
concerning patient contact has been one of geographic distances, both
national and international as our patients have come from diverse cities
and countries. This factor, as well as the normal problems in tracking a
chemically dependent population must be taken into consideration in
evaluating the findings of this paper.
General conclusions based
on study observations are that a single administration of Ibogaine is an
interrupter for chemical dependence disorders. A series of treatments
given over a period of time will produce more significant results and may
allow some of the persons treated to free themselves completely from
dependence to, or the use of, opiates and stimulants including cocaine and
nicotine for years. Data on alcohol dependence treatment in human
subjects is minimal.
Ibogaine has the ability to significantly
attenuate opiate withdrawal in all patients and, in ninety percent of
cases treated, to interrupt an individual's craving to continue drug use
for periods of time ranging from as short as two days to as long as two
and a half years from a single treatment. Concurrently, Ibogaine has
demonstrated the quality of precipitating the release of repressed
memories and of fostering a process of abreaction that I believe to be an
important aspect of Ibogaine's ability to interrupt chemical dependence.
In order to obtain the greatest benefit for those treated with
Ibogaine, a psychosocial support structure should be in place. Providers
of the Procedure should be knowledgeable in the field of chemical
dependence treatment, and patients should shown kindness and respect. In
many cases, such an approach will be the first attentions of this kind
the patient may have experienced in decades.
Patients are
deserving of kindness and respect, and such care is an important part of
the healing process. Ultimately, physicians and support staff should be
specifically trained in the Lotsof Proceduresm to fully
understand the physical and psychological transformation of the patient,
the advantages of the Procedure, and the providers' responsibilities in
administering Ibogaine to treat chemical dependence disorders.
Eventually, the understanding of Ibogaine's actions may yield important
data on memory, learning, dreams and sleep, as well as chemical
dependence, tolerance and abuse.
***
return to table of contents
ACKNOWLEDGEMENTS
The author
acknowledges the editorial assistance of Norma E. Alexander; Rick Doblin;
William J. Gladstone; David Goldstein; Barbara E. Judd, CSW; Daniel
Luciano, MD; Piotr Popik, MD; Bruce H. Sakow; Bob Sisko; Sylvia Thyssen;
Boaz Wachtel and Rommell Washington.
The author thanks N.
Adriaans; N. Alexander; Z. Amit, Ph.D; J. Bastiaans, MD; P.A. Broderick,
PhD; C. Contoreggi, MD; M.R. Dzoljic, MD; E. Della Sera, MD; G. Frenken;
W.J. Gladstone; S.D. Glick, MD; O. Gollnhofer, PhD; R. Goutarel, MD
(deceased); C. Grudzinskas, PhD; B.E. Judd, CSW; J.S. Kahan, Esq; C.D.
Kaplan, PhD; D. Luciano, MD; D.C. Mash, PhD; G.J. Prud'homme, Esq; L.
Rolla, PhD; B.H. Sakow; J. Sanchez-Ramos, MD; B. Sisko; H. Sershen, PhD;
Frank Vocci, PhD, B. Wachtel; R. Washington; Curtis Wright, MD for their
science and cooperation, and all of the volunteer patients for their
courage.
return to table of contents
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return to table of contents
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