When Nothing Else Works: The Neuropathic Pain Solution
Twenty years of unrelenting pain. That was the reality for a 53-year-old man who suffered brachial plexus nerve root avulsion in a motorcycle accident. Complete separation of the nerve root from the spinal cord. Reconstructive surgeries prevented amputation but couldn’t stop the toxic nerve pain that increased in intensity over decades.
He had exhausted everything: gabapentin, tramadol, oxycontin, methadone, tricyclic antidepressants, SSRIs, SSNRIs, calcium channel anticonvulsants, mirror box therapy, mindfulness meditation, cranial sacral therapy, fetal stem-cell treatment. Nothing worked sustainably. The only remaining option was Dorsal Root Entry Zone lesion surgery—essentially burning the nerves—but the risks were daunting.
Then he tried ibogaine. The results were so dramatic they led to the first documented case report of ibogaine treating severe neuropathic pain from nerve root avulsion.
The Neuropathic Pain Epidemic
Neuropathic pain—pain arising from nerve damage rather than tissue injury—represents one of medicine’s most challenging problems. Unlike acute pain that signals injury and resolves with healing, neuropathic pain persists long after initial damage, arising from malfunctioning nerves themselves.
It’s the burning, shooting, electric pain that characterizes diabetic neuropathy. The phantom limb pain that torments amputees. The trigeminal neuralgia so severe it’s called the “suicide disease.” The chronic regional pain syndrome that can make even a breeze across skin feel like flames.
Conventional treatments offer limited relief. Opioids, paradoxically, often work poorly for neuropathic pain. Anticonvulsants like gabapentin help some patients but cause cognitive dulling and fatigue. Antidepressants may modestly reduce symptoms but take weeks to work and come with side effects. Many patients exhaust all options and still live with debilitating pain.
The Mechanisms of Relief
Ibogaine’s potential for neuropathic pain stems from its unique pharmacological profile. Both ibogaine and its primary metabolite noribogaine stimulate the production of neurotrophic factors such as GDNF and BDNF—targets for drug development in the treatment of Parkinson’s and other neurodegenerative conditions. Critically, GDNF has been shown to prevent and reverse sensory abnormalities in neuropathic pain models.
Ibogaine also acts as an NMDA receptor antagonist, similar to ketamine and other drugs investigated for neuropathic pain amelioration. NMDA receptors play a central role in “wind-up” pain—the phenomenon where pain signals amplify over time, making the nervous system increasingly sensitive. By blocking these receptors, ibogaine may interrupt this amplification cycle.
Additionally, ibogaine is an agonist for sigma receptors, with special affinity for sigma-2. Compounds with similar sigma receptor actions have been shown to attenuate neuropathic pain in mice. This multi-receptor action may explain why ibogaine succeeds where single-mechanism drugs fail.
The Case Report That Changed Everything
The brachial plexus avulsion patient underwent both flood dose and saturation protocols. During the initial flood dose, he reported that during periods where he had to focus on his body, such as going to the bathroom, “the sensation of pain was not there.” Instead of pain, he experienced what he described as “an unraveling of chaos.”
Quantitative assessments showed dramatic reductions across all pain measures through four treatment phases. The improvements weren’t temporary—they persisted through outpatient periods where the patient used low-dose ibogaine (10-250mg daily) to manage symptoms.
This represents the first documented case of ibogaine reducing severe neuropathic pain from nerve root avulsion—one of the most intractable pain conditions known to medicine. The implications are profound: if ibogaine can address pain this severe, what else might it treat?
The Ibogaine Derivatives
Recent research explores novel non-hallucinogenic compounds derived from iboga alkaloids—”ibogalogs”—including tabernanthalog (TBG), ibogainalog (IBG), and ibogaminalog (DM506). These compounds decreased mechanical hyperalgesia and allodynia induced by chronic constriction injury in dose- and time-dependent ways.
The anti-pain activity of these derivatives involves serotonin 5-HT2A receptor activation—the same receptors involved in psychedelic experiences, though these compounds minimize hallucinogenic effects while preserving analgesic properties. This suggests the possibility of ibogaine-like pain relief without requiring intensive psychedelic experiences.
Other iboga derivatives demonstrated significant reduction in paw diameter increases induced by formalin, reversed reduced tail flick latency, notably improved restricted locomotor activity, and produced anxiolytic (anti-anxiety) effects. The derivatives also mitigated inflammatory markers and reduced pro-inflammatory cytokines.
The Opioid Connection
Many chronic pain patients become dependent on opioid medications—not for euphoria, but for basic function. Ibogaine treatment offers a way to lower tolerance to medication, allowing patients to take less or stop completely while maintaining or improving pain control.
This happens through ibogaine’s ability to restore neurochemical balance, enhancing natural opioid signaling through high binding affinity for sigma-2 receptors rather than simply replacing exogenous opioids with another substance. The treatment addresses both the pain and the dependence simultaneously.
Several patients have reported using ibogaine microdosing to manage their dependence on hydromorphone (Dilaudid), oxycodone (Oxycontin), morphine, hydrocodone (Vicodin), and other pain medications. Some get off pain medication completely. Others reduce doses substantially while maintaining better pain control than before.
The Inflammation Factor
Recent research suggests ibogaine derivatives effectively inhibit mechanical allodynia and heat hyperalgesia in chronic pain models while ameliorating impaired motor activity. The compounds mitigated inflammatory markers including Substance P, CGRP, COX-2, and p65 nuclear translocation, while reducing serum IL-6 and TNF-α levels.
This anti-inflammatory action adds another dimension to pain relief. Chronic pain often involves neuroinflammation—persistent activation of immune cells in the nervous system that amplifies pain signals. By reducing this inflammation, ibogaine may address root causes rather than just symptoms.
The Fibromyalgia Promise
While specific research on ibogaine for fibromyalgia remains limited, the mechanisms suggest potential benefit. Fibromyalgia involves widespread musculoskeletal pain, fatigue, and cognitive difficulties—symptoms that overlap substantially with other conditions ibogaine has shown promise treating.
The neurotrophic factor stimulation, NMDA antagonism, and neuroinflammatory modulation all address pathways implicated in fibromyalgia. Anecdotal reports suggest some fibromyalgia patients experience significant relief, though controlled studies are needed.
The Protocol Considerations
Pain management with ibogaine may require different protocols than addiction treatment. The brachial plexus case used both flood doses and extended microdosing, with the saturation protocol designed to maintain high noribogaine levels. Doses during outpatient periods ranged from 20mg to 250mg daily, adjusted based on pain severity.
This flexible dosing differs from addiction protocols, where single flood doses often suffice. Chronic pain may require ongoing treatment—not forever, but during the healing window when new neural pathways form and inflammatory cascades resolve.
The Measured Hope
At Iboga Wellness Institute, we approach chronic pain with the same evidence-based rigor we bring to all conditions. The research is promising but preliminary. We’re not claiming ibogaine cures all pain—some types may respond better than others, and individual responses vary.
But for those who have exhausted conventional options, who live with pain that steals their life quality, who face invasive surgeries or indefinite opioid dependence—ibogaine offers something precious: a new possibility. The chance that the pain cycle might finally break.











