The Iboga Wellness Institute

Hyperbaric Therapy for Neurological Conditions: A Guide

Hyperbaric therapy for neurological conditions sits at one of the more interesting intersections in modern medicine: a well-established physical mechanism with a rapidly expanding body of clinical evidence pointing toward applications that, even five years ago, most neurologists wouldn’t have discussed with patients. This guide covers how HBOT works in neural tissue, which conditions have the strongest research backing, what a real clinical protocol looks like, and how to evaluate whether a provider is equipped to deliver it.

Here is what you will find in this guide:

  • The core mechanism: how pressurized oxygen changes what the brain receives
  • The specific biological processes HBOT triggers in neural tissue
  • A condition-by-condition review of the clinical evidence
  • What a neurological HBOT protocol actually involves
  • Safety parameters and contraindications
  • How to evaluate a provider and measure whether treatment is working

What Hyperbaric Therapy Actually Does to the Brain

Most people understand that the brain needs oxygen. What most people don’t fully appreciate is how profoundly the delivery method changes what neural tissue receives. Hyperbaric oxygen therapy (HBOT) places you inside a pressurized chamber where you breathe 100% pure oxygen at pressures above atmospheric level, typically between 1.5 and 2.4 atmospheres absolute (ATA). The result is a measurable, dramatic increase in the oxygen dissolved directly into your blood plasma, cerebrospinal fluid, and tissue, far beyond what your red blood cells carry under normal breathing conditions. This isn’t a subtle shift. It’s a fundamentally different physiological environment, and the brain responds to it in ways that have real clinical implications.

The Oxygen-Pressure Relationship

Henry’s Law states that the amount of gas dissolved in a liquid is proportional to the pressure applied. In plain terms: more pressure means more oxygen dissolves directly into plasma, bypassing red blood cells entirely. Under normal conditions, plasma carries roughly 0.3 mL of oxygen per 100 mL of blood. At 2.4 ATA with 100% oxygen, that figure rises to approximately 6 mL per 100 mL, a twenty-fold increase. A 2016 review published in Medical Gas Research quantified tissue oxygen partial pressures during HBOT at values eight to ten times above resting baseline in neural tissue.

The practical significance of this is substantial. Injured or inflamed brain tissue often suffers from localized oxygen deficits not because blood flow is completely absent, but because damaged vessels can’t deliver adequate oxygen to compromised cells. HBOT bypasses that bottleneck. Oxygen dissolved in plasma reaches tissue even when hemoglobin transport is impaired, which is precisely the scenario in traumatic brain injury, stroke penumbra, and neuroinflammatory conditions.

FDA-Cleared Indications vs. Off-Label Neurological Use

The FDA has cleared HBOT for 13 specific indications, including decompression sickness, carbon monoxide poisoning, delayed radiation injury, diabetic foot ulcers, gas gangrene, arterial insufficiencies, and several wound-care applications. Neurological applications, with the exception of carbon monoxide poisoning, are classified as off-label use.

Off-label does not mean unsubstantiated. It means the FDA approval pathway, which is expensive and slow, hasn’t been completed for those indications. Physicians prescribe off-label treatments routinely, and the legal and ethical standard is whether the available evidence supports the clinical decision. For neurological applications of HBOT, the evidence base has grown substantially through peer-reviewed randomized controlled trials, not just case reports. The framework for evaluating any specific application is the quality and volume of that evidence, not the FDA label.

How HBOT Rewires and Repairs Neurological Tissue

A 2022 review published in Frontiers in Neuroscience examining HBOT as a neuromodulatory technique across multiple clinical populations identified neuroplasticity as the central mechanism linking all observed neurological benefits. Neuroplasticity refers to the brain’s capacity to reorganize, form new connections, and repair damaged pathways. HBOT doesn’t simply flood injured tissue with oxygen and produce temporary relief. At adequate pressure and over a sufficient number of sessions, it triggers a cascade of cellular processes that remodel neural architecture. This is the distinction that separates HBOT from purely symptomatic treatments, and it’s the reason why neuroplastic mechanisms activated by HBOT are now a serious topic in peer-reviewed neuroscience, not just integrative medicine.

Mitochondrial Function and Neuroprotection

Neurons are among the most metabolically demanding cells in the body, and their function depends on mitochondrial efficiency. A 2016 study published in Brain Research demonstrated that HBOT significantly increased ATP production in neural mitochondria in models of traumatic brain injury, with measurable improvements in mitochondrial membrane potential and oxidative phosphorylation rates. The key insight from this research is that many damaged neurons retain structurally intact mitochondria that are simply not operating at capacity due to oxygen limitation and inflammatory burden. Restoring oxygen availability at the cellular level reactivates that latent function.

The practical translation: patients who report improved cognitive clarity, better processing speed, or reduced mental fatigue after a series of HBOT sessions are not experiencing a placebo response. They are experiencing the downstream effect of mitochondria in compromised neurons returning to functional output.

Neurogenesis and Angiogenesis

A landmark 2020 study by Efrati et al. at Tel Aviv University, published in Aging, enrolled 35 healthy aging adults through a 60-session HBOT protocol. Post-treatment imaging showed a statistically significant increase in cerebral blood flow and, more notably, evidence of neurogenesis and angiogenesis in areas associated with cognitive function. This was measured in aging adults without diagnosed neurological conditions. The mechanisms driving these findings were increased vascular endothelial growth factor (VEGF) and other angiogenic signaling proteins stimulated by the hyperoxygenation-reoxygenation cycling that occurs across a treatment course.

New blood vessels don’t just support neurons during treatment. They persist after the protocol ends, which is the mechanism behind sustained improvement. Patients who see continued gains weeks after finishing their last session are benefiting from vascular remodeling that occurred during the protocol.

Brain-Derived Neurotrophic Factor (BDNF) Elevation

A 2021 study published in Frontiers in Psychology documented significant BDNF elevation in participants following a 40-session HBOT protocol, with increases measured at both the serum and central nervous system level. BDNF is the protein that signals the brain to grow, strengthen synaptic connections, and repair damaged pathways. It is the same target that antidepressants aim to upregulate through serotonin pathway modulation, and that exercise stimulates through aerobic exertion. HBOT reaches the same endpoint through a distinct physiological pathway: hyperoxygenation followed by relative reoxygenation creates a cellular stress signal that upregulates BDNF expression.

Before committing to any provider, ask specifically what protocol parameters their sessions use and whether they track BDNF or related neurotrophic markers before and after treatment. A provider engaged with outcomes data will have an answer.

Synaptic Formation and Axonal Repair

White matter integrity, the density and health of the axonal connections that carry signals between brain regions, is measurable on diffusion tensor imaging (DTI). A 2013 study by Boussi-Gross et al., published in PLOS ONE, examined 56 TBI patients who underwent 40 sessions of HBOT at 1.5 ATA. DTI imaging showed significant improvements in white matter microstructure in treated patients compared to controls, including regions associated with attention and executive function. The functional correlate was improved cognitive performance on standardized neuropsychological testing.

Axonal repair means signals travel faster and more reliably between regions that were previously poorly connected. Before-and-after neuroimaging is the objective standard for verifying this is happening, not just patient-reported outcomes.

Anti-Inflammation and Telomere Effects

The Tel Aviv University aging study by Hachmo et al., published in Aging in 2020, produced findings that extended well beyond cognitive function. In 35 adults over age 64, 60 sessions of HBOT at 2.0 ATA produced measurable telomere lengthening of 20-38% in immune cells, alongside a 37% decrease in the number of senescent cells. Inflammatory cytokine markers declined significantly across the treatment course.

The neurological relevance is direct: chronic neuroinflammation drives neurodegeneration. Elevated IL-6, TNF-alpha, and other inflammatory markers are present in TBI, Alzheimer’s disease, and PTSD. Reducing systemic and central nervous system inflammation is not a secondary benefit of HBOT. It’s a primary mechanism, and the anti-inflammatory effects on neural tissue are increasingly recognized as central to why the therapy produces durable neurological results.

Neurological Conditions With the Strongest Clinical Evidence

The Frontiers in Neuroscience 2022 review analyzing HBOT as a neuromodulatory technique provides a useful organizing framework: evidence strength varies considerably by condition. Some applications have randomized controlled trial data with imaging confirmation. Others rest on well-designed case series. Evaluating each condition honestly matters, both for setting realistic expectations and for identifying which patient profiles are the strongest candidates.

Traumatic Brain Injury (TBI)

The Boussi-Gross et al. 2013 trial in PLOS ONE remains one of the most methodologically rigorous studies in this space. Fifty-six chronic TBI patients at least one year post-injury were randomized to HBOT at 1.5 ATA or a crossover control condition. Treated patients showed significant improvements on cognitive performance batteries and measurable white matter changes on DTI imaging. The mechanism specific to TBI is the “ischemic penumbra” concept applied to contusion zones: tissue surrounding the primary injury retains metabolically active but oxygen-deprived cells that remain responsive to hyperoxygenation.

If you’re evaluating HBOT for TBI, ask any provider how long post-injury they have experience treating, what pressure protocol they use, and whether they conduct neuroimaging at baseline and post-treatment. The evidence supports treatment even years after injury. For a deeper review of what TBI patients should understand before starting a protocol, the research is worth working through before committing to a facility.

Post-Traumatic Stress Disorder (PTSD)

A 2022 randomized controlled trial by Eshel et al., published in PLOS ONE, enrolled 35 veterans with treatment-resistant PTSD and randomized them to 60 sessions of HBOT at 2.0 ATA or a sham condition. The HBOT group showed a 30% reduction in PCL-5 symptom scores. More significantly, SPECT imaging revealed normalization of hyperactive amygdala perfusion and improved prefrontal cortex blood flow in treated patients. This is the key finding for anyone evaluating PTSD treatment: the neurological changes in PTSD are measurable on imaging, and HBOT produces measurable normalization of those same imaging findings.

Veterans and first responders with PTSD often have documented structural and perfusion abnormalities on brain imaging alongside their symptom burden. That combination, confirmed imaging abnormalities plus clinical symptoms, represents the strongest candidate profile for HBOT in PTSD.

Stroke and Cerebrovascular Recovery

A 2013 trial by Efrati et al. in PLOS ONE enrolled 74 patients with chronic neurological deficits from stroke, all more than six months post-event. Forty sessions of HBOT at 2.0 ATA produced significant improvements in neurological function, with SPECT imaging showing increased activity in previously hypoperfused regions. The ischemic penumbra, the ring of metabolically suppressed but salvageable tissue surrounding the infarct core, is the target. These cells survive the initial event in a state of functional dormancy, and HBOT provides the oxygen signal that can reactivate them.

HBOT in stroke is an adjunct to standard rehabilitation, not a replacement. The evidence shows the greatest gains when combined with active physical and speech therapy, where the neuroplastic window opened by HBOT is filled with purposeful rehabilitation activity.

Alzheimer’s Disease and Cognitive Decline

The 2020 Efrati et al. study in Journal of Alzheimer’s Disease examined five Alzheimer’s patients through 60 sessions of HBOT at 2.0 ATA, with full biomarker and imaging workup. Post-treatment findings included improved cerebral blood flow on SPECT, reduced amyloid burden on PET imaging, and measurable improvement on standardized cognitive assessments. The mechanism is dual: angiogenesis improves cerebral perfusion, and reduced neuroinflammation slows the degenerative cascade.

If you’re pursuing HBOT for Alzheimer’s or cognitive decline, establish a baseline before session one. This means amyloid PET if available, SPECT perfusion imaging, inflammatory bloodwork (CRP, IL-6), and a standardized cognitive battery such as the MoCA. Without baseline measurements, you have no objective standard for evaluating whether the protocol is working.

Multiple Sclerosis (MS)

MS has one of the longer evidence histories in HBOT research, and a Cochrane review by Bennett and Heard examining nine randomized trials found consistent improvement in bladder function, fatigue, and certain mobility parameters. What the evidence does not support is significant change in lesion load on standard MRI. The distinction matters: HBOT appears to address symptom burden and functional decline in MS through neuroinflammation reduction and metabolic support of surviving tissue, not through reversal of established demyelinating lesions.

The honest translation for MS patients is this: specific symptoms, particularly fatigue, bladder dysfunction, and quality of life measures, show consistent benefit across multiple trials. Expecting lesion reduction on MRI is not supported by current evidence.

Autism Spectrum Disorder (ASD)

A double-blind, randomized controlled trial by Rossignol et al., published in BMC Pediatrics in 2009, enrolled 62 children with ASD in a 40-session protocol at 1.3 ATA with 24% oxygen. Treated children showed significant improvements in overall functioning, receptive language, social interaction, eye contact, and sensory sensitivity as rated by both clinicians and parents. A subsequent 2012 meta-analysis by Rossignol and Frye examining six studies confirmed the pattern. The proposed mechanisms include reduced neuroinflammation and improved cerebral perfusion in regions associated with social cognition.

This is one of the more rigorously studied off-label pediatric applications. The pressure used (1.3 ATA) is lower than adult neurological protocols, which also means it sits within the soft chamber range, an important nuance discussed below.

Cerebral Palsy

A 2001 randomized trial by Montgomery et al. in Undersea and Hyperbaric Medicine examined HBOT in pediatric cerebral palsy, with outcomes showing improvements in gross motor function, spasticity scores, and attention. Subsequent case series and a 2002 systematic review identified consistent signals in motor function and cognitive performance, with the clearest gains in patients treated at earlier stages. The mechanism is rooted in the hypoxic-ischemic injury model underlying CP: perilesional tissue retains oxygen-responsive capacity, and HBOT activates it.

Earlier treatment windows show stronger results because the plasticity window in the developing brain is wider. This doesn’t mean HBOT is without value in older patients with CP, but the magnitude of functional gains is better documented in pediatric populations.

Post-COVID Neurological Symptoms (Long COVID)

The 2022 randomized controlled trial by Zilberman-Itskovich et al. at Tel Aviv University, published in Scientific Reports, enrolled 73 patients with long COVID cognitive symptoms. The HBOT group received 40 sessions at 2.0 ATA; controls received sham treatment. Post-treatment SPECT imaging showed significant improvement in cerebral blood flow in the HBOT group, alongside measurable gains on cognitive function assessments and fatigue scales. The mechanism is consistent with what’s observed in TBI: microclotting disrupts cerebral perfusion, neuroinflammation persists well beyond acute infection, and both respond to HBOT.

Before starting a long COVID protocol, request baseline cognitive testing (MoCA or a full neuropsychological battery) and SPECT perfusion imaging. These two measurements give you an objective framework for evaluating treatment response.

What a Clinical HBOT Protocol Actually Looks Like

A neurological HBOT protocol differs meaningfully from the wound-care protocols that dominate hospital hyperbaric units. Standard wound-care protocols typically run 20-30 sessions at 2.0-2.4 ATA for 90 minutes. Neurological protocols, as used in the published clinical trials, tend toward 40-60 sessions at 1.5-2.0 ATA for 60-90 minutes per session. The lower pressure ceiling reflects the fact that the neuroplasticity mechanisms, particularly BDNF upregulation and angiogenesis, don’t require the highest pressures used for wound healing, and that the hyperoxygenation-reoxygenation cycling across many sessions drives the cumulative neuroplastic effect.

The parameters cited in the Efrati, Boussi-Gross, and Eshel trials consistently cluster around 40-60 sessions, 60-90 minutes each, five days per week for eight to twelve weeks. That is the protocol architecture supported by the strongest evidence.

Monoplace vs. Multiplace Chambers

Monoplace chambers are single-occupancy tubes in which the entire chamber is pressurized with 100% oxygen, which you breathe directly. Multiplace chambers are larger rooms accommodating several patients simultaneously, pressurized with air, while patients breathe 100% oxygen through a hood, mask, or endotracheal tube. From a patient experience standpoint, monoplace chambers are enclosed and individual; multiplace chambers feel less confining and allow clinician access during treatment.

The clinical difference in oxygen delivery is negligible when both are operated correctly. For neurological protocols, either chamber type produces equivalent outcomes when the pressure and session parameters match what the evidence supports. The oxygen delivery to neural tissue is determined by the inspired oxygen concentration and pressure, not the chamber architecture.

Soft-Shell Chambers and Why They Don’t Apply Here

The consumer and wellness market for portable hyperbaric chambers has grown substantially, and these devices are widely marketed for neurological benefits. They operate at a maximum of 1.3 ATA. The clinical trials supporting HBOT for TBI, PTSD, stroke, Alzheimer’s, and long COVID used pressures between 1.5 and 2.4 ATA. The Rossignol ASD trial, which used 1.3 ATA, is the notable exception, and even that trial used 24% oxygen rather than 100%, which reduces the dissolved oxygen delivery substantially.

At 1.3 ATA with ambient or mildly enriched oxygen, the Henry’s Law increase in dissolved plasma oxygen is modest. If a provider is offering soft-chamber sessions for TBI or PTSD at 1.3 ATA, the pressure they are delivering does not match the pressure used in the efficacy studies they are citing.

What to Expect Session by Session

A session begins with entering the chamber and a gradual pressurization phase lasting approximately ten minutes. The most noticeable sensation is ear fullness and pressure equalization, similar to descent in an airplane. The technique for managing this is identical to flying: yawning, swallowing, or gentle Valsalva maneuver. Most patients adapt to this within the first few sessions.

At full treatment pressure, you breathe normally through a mask or hood delivering 100% oxygen and rest, read, or listen to audio for the duration. Some protocols include air breaks, short periods of breathing ambient air, to reduce oxygen toxicity risk during longer or higher-pressure sessions. Depressurization at the end takes another ten minutes and produces no discomfort.

Temporary vision changes, specifically a slight blurring or myopic shift that resolves after the protocol ends, occur in a minority of patients in longer courses. Ear discomfort is the most common early complaint and resolves as patients learn equalization technique. Sinus congestion during upper respiratory illness is a reason to defer a session. Completing the full prescribed number of sessions is the single most important compliance factor, as the cumulative neuroplastic effect builds across the treatment course.

Risks, Contraindications, and Safety Parameters

A 1999 analysis by Plafki et al. examining 1,505 patients across 782 HBOT courses documented a serious adverse event rate below 0.4% at therapeutic pressures. More recent FDA adverse event data confirm that HBOT at 1.5-2.4 ATA in appropriately screened patients is among the safer medical procedures available. Establishing this baseline matters, because overstating risk is as misleading as understating it, and differentiating HBOT from genuinely higher-risk interventions requires accurate safety framing.

Absolute Contraindications

Untreated pneumothorax is the only true absolute contraindication to HBOT. Air trapped in the pleural space under elevated pressure expands in ways that cannot be controlled and creates a tension pneumothorax, which is life-threatening. No reputable provider will initiate treatment without screening for this condition. Any provider who skips a pre-treatment screening history and physical examination is not operating at an acceptable clinical standard.

Relative Contraindications and Risk Factors

Several conditions require physician evaluation before proceeding with HBOT. Uncontrolled seizure disorders require neurological clearance and a modified protocol, as oxygen toxicity risk adds to existing seizure threshold concerns. Certain chemotherapy drugs, specifically bleomycin and doxorubicin, have documented interactions with high-pressure oxygen that can potentiate pulmonary and cardiac toxicity, and patients with current or recent exposure to these agents require oncological consultation before treatment. Severe COPD with carbon dioxide retention presents risk because these patients rely on hypoxic drive; elevating oxygen tension can suppress respiratory drive. Severe claustrophobia requires evaluation for a multiplace chamber option or anxiolytic support. Active ear or sinus infections are temporary contraindications resolved with treatment before starting HBOT.

Relative contraindications are exactly what the name implies: they require evaluation and clinical judgment, not automatic exclusion. A physician-supervised facility handles this through a pre-treatment consultation, not a waiver.

Oxygen Toxicity: What the Research Actually Shows

Central nervous system oxygen toxicity, which presents as a generalized seizure, is the adverse event most cited in connection with HBOT. A 2000 review by Hampson and Atik examining CNS oxygen toxicity rates across therapeutic protocols found a seizure incidence of approximately 1 per 10,000 patient-treatment sessions at pressures between 2.0 and 2.4 ATA. At 1.5-2.0 ATA with session lengths of 60-90 minutes, the rate is substantially lower.

Protocols are designed around established safety windows: the CNS toxicity risk is pressure- and duration-dependent, and clinical protocols stay well within those parameters. Ask any provider what their CNS oxygen toxicity protocol includes, specifically how they handle air breaks during longer sessions and what their response protocol is for in-chamber events. A provider without a clear answer to that question has not adequately thought through their safety infrastructure.

How to Evaluate a Hyperbaric Therapy Provider

The credentialing standard for clinical HBOT is established by the Undersea and Hyperbaric Medical Society (UHMS) and the American Board of Preventive Medicine (ABPM), which certifies physicians in hyperbaric medicine. UHMS accreditation requires physician oversight, staff training protocols, equipment standards, and outcome documentation processes. The gap between an accredited facility and an unaccredited wellness-oriented operation is not marginal. It involves physician supervision, appropriate screening for contraindications, validated pressure delivery, and the ability to respond to adverse events.

Choosing a program built specifically around brain health outcomes rather than wound care or general wellness makes a meaningful difference in neurological applications, because protocol design, session count, pressure parameters, and adjunct care integration are all calibrated differently.

Questions to Ask Before Committing to a Protocol

Ask the facility whether a board-certified hyperbaric physician conducts the pre-treatment evaluation and oversees the protocol. This is not a question about whether a doctor is associated with the practice. It is a question about who performs the pre-treatment screening, reviews your imaging, and adjusts the protocol based on your response.

Ask specifically what pressure (ATA) they use for neurological protocols and how many sessions they recommend. If the answer doesn’t align with the parameters from the clinical trials for your condition, ask why. A competent provider has a clear rationale.

Ask whether they conduct baseline and post-treatment imaging. SPECT perfusion imaging before and after treatment is the standard used in the strongest clinical trials. A provider who doesn’t track objective outcomes is operating on faith rather than evidence.

Ask how the neurological protocol differs from their wound-care protocol. If the answer is “it doesn’t,” that is a red flag. Neurological applications use different pressure parameters and session counts than wound care.

Ask how HBOT will be sequenced and integrated with any other therapies you are receiving. Providers who think about HBOT as one tool in a coordinated protocol, not a standalone intervention, are operating at a higher clinical standard.

How HBOT Fits Into a Broader Neurological Treatment Plan

Multiple studies have demonstrated that HBOT combined with active rehabilitation outperforms either intervention alone. The 2013 Efrati stroke trial noted that the neurological gains seen in HBOT patients were amplified when combined with active physical and occupational therapy. The mechanism is straightforward: HBOT opens a neuroplastic window, a state of heightened cellular receptivity to learning and repair, and structured rehabilitation fills that window with purposeful activity.

The same principle applies to the combination of HBOT with ibogaine protocols, where ibogaine-driven neuroplastic changes and HBOT-supported oxygenation and neuroinflammation reduction work through complementary pathways. Ask your neurologist or treatment coordinator specifically how the sequencing is planned: HBOT-then-rehabilitation, concurrent, or integrated within a multi-modality protocol. The answer reflects how seriously a facility has thought through treatment design.

Measuring Whether HBOT Is Working

The clinical trials that established HBOT’s neurological efficacy didn’t rely on patient self-report alone. The Efrati, Boussi-Gross, Eshel, and Zilberman-Itskovich studies all used imaging-confirmed outcomes alongside validated symptom scales. If you are going through a 40-60 session protocol and the only measure of success is how you feel, you are missing the objective verification layer that distinguishes rigorous clinical treatment from wellness experimentation.

The outcome measures used in peer-reviewed trials include SPECT perfusion imaging, diffusion tensor imaging for white matter integrity, standardized cognitive batteries (MoCA for screening, full neuropsychological testing for detailed assessment), and condition-specific symptom rating scales such as the PCL-5 for PTSD or the ADAS-Cog for Alzheimer’s. Subjective improvement is valuable data. Objective imaging and cognitive testing are the standard that confirms the mechanism is doing what the research says it should do.

Biomarkers and Imaging Protocols Worth Tracking

Inflammatory biomarkers are the most accessible starting point: CRP and IL-6 provide a baseline of systemic inflammatory burden that should decline across a course of treatment. These are standard blood tests available through any laboratory, and tracking them pre-, mid-, and post-protocol gives you a quantitative signal on one of HBOT’s primary mechanisms.

BDNF serum levels, while not as widely available as inflammatory panels, are increasingly offered through specialty laboratories and provide direct measurement of the neurotrophic signaling that underlies HBOT’s cognitive benefits.

For imaging, SPECT (single-photon emission computed tomography) provides the clearest signal for perfusion-related changes in TBI, PTSD, and long COVID. Standard structural MRI will not show perfusion abnormalities or the functional changes that HBOT produces; this is why some patients are told their MRI is normal while remaining significantly symptomatic. SPECT is more sensitive to the perfusion deficits and improvements that HBOT targets. Get a SPECT scan before treatment starts if cognitive symptoms, PTSD, or post-TBI deficits are your primary target.

The Clearest Next Step

The research base supporting HBOT for neurological conditions is established enough to act on. The gap between knowing it and getting into the right protocol is almost always logistical rather than evidential.

The single most useful move right now is to find a UHMS-accredited facility that has a physician experienced in neurological HBOT protocols, schedule a consultation, and arrive at that consultation with baseline measurements already ordered. That means a SPECT scan if cognitive or PTSD symptoms are primary, an inflammatory panel (CRP, IL-6), and a standardized cognitive assessment. The consultation itself costs nothing compared to entering a 40-60 session protocol without the baseline data needed to know whether it’s working.

If you are also evaluating ibogaine or other neuroplasticity-focused treatments as part of a broader protocol, understanding how HBOT supports addiction recovery and neuroregeneration is worth working through before that first consultation. The two interventions address complementary mechanisms, and the sequence and integration matter.

The evidence is there. The barrier is starting with the right information, at the right facility, with a baseline you can actually measure against.

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Daisy Silva

Clinical Director, Integration Specialist, Nutritionist

Daisy serves as the Clinical Director at Iboga Wellness Institute, where she oversees the coordination of patient care, treatment preparation, and post-experience integration to ensure each individual receives comprehensive, compassionate, and medically aligned support throughout their healing journey. With a multidisciplinary background that combines clinical coordination, integrative wellness, and advanced nutritional practice, Daisy plays a central role in bridging medical treatment with sustainable lifestyle transformation. 

As Clinical Director, Daisy manages the continuum of care from initial intake through post-treatment follow-up. She works closely with the medical team, led by Dr. Omar A. Calderón, to ensure that every client is properly prepared—physically, emotionally, and nutritionally—for ibogaine therapy. Her responsibilities include reviewing health histories, coordinating pre-treatment requirements, guiding clients through preparation protocols, and ensuring that each case is handled with precision, discretion, and individualized attention. 

In her role as an Integration Specialist, Daisy helps clients translate their ibogaine experience into meaningful, lasting change. She provides structured pre-integration education and post-treatment support designed to help individuals process insights, stabilize routines, and build healthy behavioral patterns that reinforce neurological reset and emotional healing. Her approach emphasizes grounding, accountability, and practical application, allowing clients to return home with clear strategies for maintaining progress. Daisy understands that ibogaine is not a standalone solution, but rather a catalyst for transformation that must be supported through intentional integration and lifestyle alignment. 

Daisy is also a highly experienced Nutritionist, specializing in therapeutic nutrition that supports neuroregulation, metabolic restoration, and overall physiological balance. She designs individualized nutritional plans that focus on replenishment, inflammation reduction, gut health optimization, and micronutrient support—critical elements for patients recovering from substance use, chronic stress, or neurological dysregulation. Her programs incorporate whole-food strategies, targeted supplementation guidance, and education on sustainable dietary habits that extend far beyond a client’s stay at the Institute. 

Her philosophy centers on the understanding that true healing requires alignment of body, mind, and environment. By integrating clinical structure with holistic wellness principles, Daisy ensures that each client is not only medically safe during treatment but also empowered with the tools necessary to sustain long-term recovery and vitality. 

Known for her meticulous organization, warm presence, and unwavering dedication to patient advocacy, Daisy has become a trusted guide for clients navigating some of the most pivotal moments of their lives. She brings both professionalism and empathy to every interaction, creating an atmosphere where individuals feel supported, informed, and confident in their path forward. 

At The Iboga Wellness Institute, Daisy’s leadership helps define the standard of care—one that unites medical excellence, integrative support, and nutritional science to foster lasting transformation and whole-person wellness.

Luisa Cab, RN

HEAD NURSE

Luisa Cab, RN, is the Head Nurse at Iboga Wellness Institute, where she serves as a cornerstone of our medical team and is proudly practicing full-time within our medical program. With a strong background in Western nursing and several years of hands-on experience working with ibogaine therapy, Luisa brings a rare and essential combination of traditional medical expertise and specialized knowledge in plant-medicine–assisted care. 

As a Registered Nurse, Luisa is deeply committed to maintaining the highest standards of patient safety, clinical monitoring, and ethical medical practice. At Iboga Wellness Institute, she oversees critical aspects of the treatment process, including medical preparation, continuous observation, vital sign assessment, and post-treatment care. Her training in conventional healthcare allows her to apply rigorous nursing protocols while ensuring that each guest receives attentive, individualized support throughout their healing journey. 

Luisa has developed extensive experience working specifically with ibogaine over the years, understanding both its physiological demands and its transformative therapeutic potential. She plays an integral role in creating a safe, structured environment where medical oversight and compassionate care work hand in hand. Her ability to seamlessly integrate Western clinical standards with the unique needs of ibogaine treatment helps ensure that every guest is supported with professionalism, stability, and reassurance. 

Known for her warm demeanor and calming presence, Luisa provides far more than clinical supervision—she offers genuine comfort and human connection. Guests consistently find reassurance in her attentiveness, kindness, and ability to anticipate their needs during vulnerable moments. Her compassionate approach allows individuals to feel secure enough to fully engage in the healing process. 

Luisa’s dedication, experience, and heartfelt commitment to patient-centered care make her an invaluable leader within Iboga Wellness Institute. She embodies our mission of delivering medically responsible, safe, and transformative treatment while honoring the dignity and well-being of every person we serve.

Ray Rodriguez

Psychedelic Integration Coach & Recovery Mentor

Ray Rodriguez serves as a Psychedelic Integration Coach and Recovery Mentor at Iboga Wellness Institute, bringing over a decade of direct, hands-on experience supporting individuals and families navigating addiction recovery, personal transformation, and long-term post-treatment integration. His work is grounded in both professional training and lived experience, allowing him to guide clients with authenticity, empathy, and practical insight. 

Certified through Being True To You, Ray has worked extensively within family systems and recovery-oriented frameworks, helping clients prepare for treatment, navigate the depth of their therapeutic experience, and translate insights into meaningful, sustainable life changes. He spent five years working one-on-one within one of the first viable ibogaine therapeutic aftercare programs, where he provided structured reintegration support for individuals transitioning from clinical treatment back into everyday life. This experience shaped his specialization in stabilization, accountability, and long-term success beyond the acute treatment phase. 

Ray’s personal journey includes recovery from opiate addiction, an experience that informs his compassionate, nonjudgmental approach. His own healing path led him to explore plant medicine as a catalyst for deeper change, and he has since supported individuals working with modalities including ibogaine, ayahuasca, kambo, and bufo. His philosophy prioritizes safety, preparation, and responsibility—emphasizing that true healing is not defined by peak experiences, but by the ability to integrate those experiences into lasting behavioral, emotional, and relational transformation. 

Well-versed in multiple recovery models, Ray works fluidly within both 12-Step programs and SMART Recovery, meeting clients within their chosen framework without imposing ideology. His coaching style is collaborative and client-centered, honoring each individual’s worldview, belief system, and stage of readiness while providing grounded structure and accountability. 

In addition to his integration and recovery work, Ray is a Certified Holographic Sound Practitioner, incorporating harmonic and sound-based modalities when appropriate to support nervous system regulation and emotional processing. His methodology weaves together embodiment practices, yoga, nature-based experiences, frequency work, and structured integration strategies designed to help clients anchor insights into daily living. 

Areas of Specialization 

Pre-ibogaine preparation and intention setting 
Post-treatment integration and stabilization
Therapeutic aftercare and recovery support 
Family systems education and alignment 
Addiction recovery coaching and relapse prevention 
Nervous system regulation and embodiment practices 
Bridging traditional recovery models with psychedelic-assisted healing 

At The Iboga Wellness Institute, Ray plays a vital role in ensuring that healing extends far beyond the clinical setting. His work focuses on helping individuals transform profound therapeutic experiences into sustainable, embodied change—supporting them as they rebuild lives rooted in clarity, resilience, and purpose.

Dr. Omar A. Calderón

Chief Medical Director

Dr. Omar A. Calderón is a licensed Medical Doctor and serves as the Chief Medical Director at Iboga Wellness Institute, where he leads all medical oversight, patient safety protocols, and clinical treatment standards. With more than 10 years of experience in emergency medicine, Dr. Calderón brings extensive expertise in acute care, cardiovascular monitoring, pharmacology, and critical patient management—an essential foundation for the safe administration of ibogaine therapy. 

Throughout his decade of service in the Emergency Room, Dr. Calderón treated a wide range of complex and high-risk medical conditions, developing a disciplined, detail-oriented approach to diagnostics, stabilization, and continuous monitoring. This experience directly informs his rigorous medical model at Iboga Wellness Institute, where safety, screening, and individualized care remain the highest priorities. 

For over five years, Dr. Calderón has specialized in the clinical application of ibogaine within structured, medically supervised environments. He is highly experienced in comprehensive pre-treatment evaluations, EKG and QTc analysis, medication management, risk stratification, and medically guided dosing protocols. His work focuses on supporting individuals facing substance dependence, neurological conditions, and trauma-related challenges through responsible, evidence-informed care. 

A native of Cozumel, Dr. Calderón offers a unique integration of local cultural understanding and international medical standards. His leadership helps ensure that Iboga Wellness Institute maintains a model that combines compassionate healing with hospital-level medical diligence, ethical stewardship, and continuous patient monitoring. 

Dr. Calderón is widely respected for his calm clinical presence, precision, and unwavering commitment to patient well-being. He believes that innovative therapies must be delivered with the highest level of medical responsibility, ensuring that every patient receives care that is safe, ethical, and deeply supportive of long-term recovery and transformation.

Mike Powers

Co-Founder

Mike Powers is a Co-Founder of Iboga Wellness Institute, where he combines his personal journey of recovery with a strong background in business leadership and entrepreneurship to help guide the organization’s mission of delivering safe, innovative, and compassionate care. Mike’s path to this work is rooted in both extraordinary athletic achievement and firsthand experience with the long-term consequences of high-impact sports. 

As a standout collegiate football player, Mike , earned the distinction of being a two-time national champion and receiving prestigious All-American honors. His athletic career was defined by discipline, perseverance, and an unrelenting commitment to performance—traits that later became essential as he faced the physical toll of the game. After sustaining multiple concussions, Mike began to experience the cumulative neurological effects associated with traumatic brain injury and, ultimately, Chronic Traumatic Encephalopathy (CTE). Like many former athletes, he encountered limited treatment options within conventional Western medicine that addressed symptoms but failed to offer meaningful restoration or healing. 

Determined to find answers beyond traditional models of care, Mike began exploring alternative therapies. This search led him to ibogaine treatment, an experience that proved to be profoundly transformative. Through this process, Mike experienced significant improvements in clarity, emotional well-being, and overall quality of life—an outcome that reshaped not only his health, but also his sense of purpose. The experience ignited a deep commitment to helping others who were facing similar neurological, psychological, and substance-related challenges discover pathways to healing that had previously seemed out of reach. 

Motivated by this mission, Mike co-founded Iboga Wellness Institute to create a medically responsible, ethically grounded environment where individuals could access ibogaine therapy within a structured framework that prioritizes safety, clinical oversight, and whole-person care. His vision has been instrumental in shaping the Institute’s focus on supporting individuals suffering from traumatic brain injuries, addiction, and other complex conditions through integrative, evidence-informed approaches. 

In addition to his work in the health and wellness space, Mike is a seasoned American entrepreneur who has been a part of multiple businesses across diverse industries. This extensive business experience provides the operational foundation necessary to build sustainable treatment environments that meet rigorous professional standards. 

Mike brings a unique combination of lived experience, executive leadership, and unwavering compassion to The Iboga Wellness Institute. His journey from elite athlete to advocate for innovative healing allows him to connect deeply with those seeking recovery and renewal. Through his work, Mike remains dedicated to expanding awareness, accessibility, and responsible delivery of ibogaine therapy offering hope to individuals and families searching for meaningful solutions beyond conventional care.

James Collins

Co-Founder and Chief Executive Officer

James Collins is the Co-Founder and Chief Executive Officer of Iboga Wellness Institute, where he has played an integral role in the vision, development, and operational launch of the organization. With a diverse entrepreneurial background and decades of experience owning and operating multiple businesses throughout the United States, James brings a unique blend of executive leadership, operational strategy, and client-centered service to the rapidly evolving field of ibogaine-assisted therapy. 

Before co-founding Iboga Wellness Institute, James built a successful career across several industries, including real estate development , hospitality, sales, and business development. His extensive experience in launching, scaling, and managing companies has equipped him with the operational discipline and financial oversight necessary to build sustainable, compliant, and patient-focused wellness environments. His entrepreneurial track record reflects a consistent ability to transform vision into structured, results-driven organizations. 

James also possesses a strong background in marketing and brand development, having led strategic initiatives that positioned businesses for growth in competitive markets. This expertise has been instrumental in shaping the identity and outreach of Iboga Wellness Institute, helping to elevate awareness of ibogaine therapy while maintaining a professional, ethical, and medically responsible presence. 

Throughout his lengthy career in sales and customer service, James cultivated a deep understanding of client relationships and the importance of trust, transparency, and individualized care. These principles now guide the Institute’s patient experience model, ensuring that every individual who walks through the doors is treated with dignity, compassion, and the highest level of support. 

Known for his dedication, integrity, and hands-on leadership style, James is deeply committed to advancing the responsible integration of plant-based medicines into modern therapeutic frameworks. He is a passionate advocate for the ibogaine movement, working to expand safe, structured access not only but worldwide. His mission is to help bridge the gap between traditional healing knowledge and contemporary medical standards, creating pathways for individuals seeking recovery, neurological support, and personal transformation. 

At the core of James’s work is a sincere belief in healing through compassion, structure, and innovation. His leadership continues to drive Iboga Wellness Institute’s growth as a center focused on safety, education, and meaningful outcomes for those seeking lasting change.

Neurological Conditions & Chronic Pain

Repair Mechanisms Medicine Considers Impossible

Conventional neurology treats most conditions as irreversible—managing symptoms while accepting inevitable decline. Ibogaine challenges that assumption by stimulating neurological repair processes that modern medicine barely understands.

Parkinson's Disease

Multiple clinical studies document significant tremor reduction following ibogaine treatment. Patients report improved motor control, reduced rigidity, better sleep, and cognitive clarity. The mechanism involves GDNF (glial cell line-derived neurotrophic factor) production—a protein that protects dopamine neurons and may slow disease progression.

Multiple Sclerosis

MS patients report reduced inflammation, improved mobility, decreased fatigue, and symptom stabilization. While not a cure, ibogaine appears to interrupt the neuroinflammatory cascade driving MS progression and potentially support remyelination.

Traumatic Brain Injury & Post-Concussion Syndrome

Veterans with blast exposure, athletes with multiple concussions, accident survivors with persistent TBI symptoms—patients given no hope for improvement beyond “wait and see”—experience headache reduction, cognitive fog lifting, mood stabilization, and functional recovery.

Chronic Traumatic Encephalopathy (CTE)

While CTE can only be definitively diagnosed post-mortem, patients with suspected CTE (multiple concussions, progressive symptoms, cognitive decline) report symptom improvement and slowed deterioration following ibogaine therapy.

Neuropathic Pain

Pain from nerve damage that opioids can’t touch without creating dependency. Fibromyalgia. Complex regional pain syndrome. Chronic pain driving addiction. Ibogaine’s NMDA receptor antagonism interrupts pain signaling at the source—offering relief that conventional treatments cannot provide.

The Neuroplasticity Factor

Medical training teaches that neurological damage is permanent. Ibogaine contradicts that dogma. The evidence base is growing but still limited by ibogaine’s legal status preventing large-scale trials. Clinical outcomes documented by providers like us consistently show improvement that shouldn’t be possible according to conventional neurology.

Treatment-Resistant Mental Health & Trauma

Accessing What Therapy Cannot Reach

Traditional mental health treatment works for many people. For those it doesn’t help—patients who’ve tried multiple medications, years of therapy, and every recommended approach without relief—ibogaine offers a different path.

PTSD & Combat Trauma

Clinical trials show 60-88% reduction in PTSD symptoms following ibogaine therapy. Veterans with treatment-resistant combat trauma, first responders with cumulative stress, survivors of assault or abuse—patients who’ve exhausted VA resources and traditional trauma therapy report breakthrough that seemed impossible.

Treatment-Resistant Depression

When SSRIs, SNRIs, tricyclics, MAOIs, ketamine, and ECT haven’t worked—when years of therapy produce no improvement—ibogaine’s neurotransmitter reset creates changes that conventional antidepressants cannot achieve. Patients describe lifting of depression that’s persisted for decades.

Anxiety Rooted in Trauma

Surface-level anxiety management (breathing exercises, cognitive reframing, medication) doesn’t address trauma-based anxiety. Ibogaine allows patients to process the traumatic material driving their anxiety—material that conscious therapy often cannot access.

Complex Grief

Loss that therapy can’t resolve. Grief that’s become pathological. Mourning that’s stolen years of life. Ibogaine facilitates emotional processing that talk therapy reaches only intellectually—allowing patients to actually feel, process, and begin releasing what they’ve carried.

Why It Works Differently

Ibogaine creates a unique psychological state where deeply buried memories, traumas, and patterns surface for processing. It’s not talk therapy—it’s direct access to subconscious material, allowing patients to confront and process what’s been driving symptoms for years or decades.

What Patients Report

Clarity about trauma origins. Emotional release that feels complete rather than temporary. Reduced hypervigilance. Improved sleep. Ability to connect with others. Freedom from symptoms that defined their existence.

Addiction & Substance Dependency

Neurological Interruption, Not Maintenance

Ibogaine fundamentally differs from traditional addiction treatment. Instead of substituting one substance for another or requiring lifelong management, ibogaine interrupts dependency at the neurological level—resetting brain chemistry and eliminating the physical chains of addiction.

Opioid Addiction

Patients dependent on heroin, fentanyl, prescription painkillers, methadone, or Suboxone experience withdrawal elimination within 24-36 hours of ibogaine administration. Physical cravings are dramatically reduced or completely absent. This isn’t suppression—it’s neurological reset.

Alcohol Dependency

Clinical data shows 70-80% reduction in alcohol cravings following ibogaine treatment. Patients who’ve failed multiple rehabs, experienced dangerous withdrawal attempts, or struggled with decades of dependency report freedom they never thought possible.

Stimulant Addiction

Cocaine, methamphetamine, and prescription stimulant (Adderall, Ritalin) dependencies respond to ibogaine’s dopamine system reset. The compulsive drive that traditional therapy can’t touch is interrupted at its neurological source.

Polysubstance Use

Many patients aren’t addicted to a single substance—they’re managing multiple dependencies simultaneously. Ibogaine addresses the underlying neurological patterns driving all substance use, not just one drug at a time.

Why Traditional Treatment Fails

Methadone and Suboxone are opioids—they maintain dependency while managing symptoms. Rehab addresses behavioral patterns but not neurological addiction. Willpower fails because addiction isn’t a character flaw—it’s brain chemistry. Ibogaine changes that chemistry.

What Research Shows

Studies consistently demonstrate ibogaine’s ability to eliminate withdrawal symptoms, reduce cravings for extended periods (months to years), and create the neurological space necessary for sustained recovery. Success rates far exceed traditional treatment modalities.

Who Should Not Use Hyperbaric Oxygen Therapy

Important Safety Information

Hyperbaric oxygen therapy is generally safe when properly administered, but certain medical conditions create serious risks and disqualify patients from treatment. The following contraindications must be carefully evaluated:

Untreated Pneumothorax (Collapsed Lung)

The single most critical contraindication. Pressure changes in the hyperbaric chamber can worsen a pneumothorax, potentially causing life-threatening tension pneumothorax. Even resolved pneumothorax requires careful evaluation—history of spontaneous pneumothorax significantly increases risk of recurrence under pressure.

Certain Chemotherapy Drugs

Bleomycin, Doxorubicin (Adriamycin), Cisplatin, and Disulfiram (Antabuse) create dangerous interactions with hyperbaric oxygen. These medications must be discontinued with adequate clearance periods before HBOT. Patients currently undergoing chemotherapy with these agents cannot receive hyperbaric therapy.

Severe COPD or Emphysema

Advanced chronic obstructive pulmonary disease with CO2 retention or air trapping creates pulmonary complication risks. Patients may be unable to tolerate oxygen toxicity prevention protocols (air breaks). Each case requires individual pulmonologist evaluation.

Uncontrolled High Fever

Fever above 101°F increases metabolic rate and oxygen consumption, raising seizure risk from oxygen toxicity. Treatment must be postponed until fever resolves and underlying infection is addressed.

Uncontrolled Seizure Disorders

High-pressure oxygen can lower seizure threshold in susceptible individuals. Well-controlled epilepsy on stable medication may be acceptable, but uncontrolled seizures or recent seizure activity requires neurologist clearance.

Upper Respiratory Infections

Active sinus infections, severe congestion, or ear infections prevent safe pressure equalization. Treatment postponed until infection clears. Inability to equalize ear pressure creates barotrauma risk (ruptured eardrum, severe pain).

Recent Ear Surgery or Eustachian Tube Dysfunction

Surgical ear procedures within 3-6 months, perforated eardrum, or inability to equalize pressure safely creates barotrauma risk. ENT evaluation required before HBOT approval.

Severe Claustrophobia or Panic Disorder

While our chambers are spacious and clear, some patients cannot tolerate enclosed spaces under any circumstances. Severe anxiety during sessions compromises safety and prevents pressure equalization. Mild anxiety often manageable with preparation and support.

Pregnancy Status: Exercise Caution

HBOT effects on fetal development aren’t fully understood. While not absolutely contraindicated, treatment during pregnancy requires:

  • Compelling medical necessity (life/limb threatening condition)
  • Informed consent acknowledging unknown fetal risks
  • OB/GYN consultation and approval
  • Benefits clearly outweighing theoretical risks

Most elective HBOT (TBI recovery, PTSD, addiction support) should be postponed until after pregnancy and breastfeeding.

Medications Requiring Adjustment or Discontinuation

Steroids (Prednisone, Dexamethasone):
May impair wound healing that HBOT aims to enhance. Doesn’t prohibit treatment but may reduce effectiveness.

Diabetes Medications:
HBOT can lower blood sugar. Diabetic patients require careful glucose monitoring and possible insulin/medication adjustments during treatment course.

Blood Pressure Medications:

Hyperbaric oxygen can affect blood pressure. Antihypertensive medications may need adjustment.

Recent Heart Attack (within 3 months):
Cardiovascular system needs stabilization before additional physiological stress from hyperbaric treatment.

Uncontrolled Congestive Heart Failure:
Fluid status must be optimized. Severe CHF creates pulmonary edema risk under hyperbaric conditions.

Pacemakers/Implanted Devices:
Not contraindicated but require verification that devices are pressure-rated and MRI-compatible (some monitoring equipment uses magnets).

Cataracts:
HBOT can accelerate cataract progression in susceptible individuals. Not a contraindication but patients should be informed. Cataract surgery may be needed sooner.

History of Optic Neuritis:
Increased risk of vision changes. Ophthalmology consultation recommended before starting HBOT.

Recent Eye Surgery:
Intraocular pressure changes during compression/decompression. Wait 6-8 weeks post-surgery before HBOT.

Children:
HBOT is safe for pediatric patients but requires age-appropriate chamber (multiplace with parent present) and ability to cooperate with ear equalization instructions.

Elderly Patients:
Age alone is not a contraindication. However, comorbid conditions common in elderly (COPD, heart disease, sensory deficits) require careful screening.

Patients with Implants:
Most implants (joint replacements, surgical hardware, dental work) are safe. Certain older devices or experimental implants require manufacturer verification of pressure tolerance.

Even without contraindications, all patients should understand potential side effects:

Barotrauma (Middle Ear/Sinus)

Most common complication. Caused by inability to equalize pressure. Ranges from mild discomfort to ruptured eardrum. Prevented through proper equalization techniques taught before treatment.

Temporary Vision Changes

Reversible myopia (nearsightedness) affects 20% of patients after 20+ treatments. Vision returns to baseline 6-8 weeks after HBOT ends.

Oxygen Toxicity

Rare when air breaks are properly administered. Symptoms: muscle twitching, nausea, dizziness, seizures (extremely rare). Prevented through treatment protocol design.

Pulmonary Oxygen Toxicity

Very rare with standard protocols (60-90 minute sessions). Would require many hours of continuous oxygen exposure.

Fatigue

Common. Many patients feel tired after sessions—body is working hard to heal. Usually improves as treatment course progresses.

Before any patient begins HBOT, our physicians conduct:

  • Complete medical and surgical history review
  • Pulmonary function assessment
  • Cardiovascular evaluation
  • Ear, nose, throat examination
  • Medication review for interactions
  • Informed consent discussion of all risks
  • Ear equalization training and practice

We err on the side of extreme caution. If there’s any question about safety, we decline to provide therapy until concerns are resolved.

When in Doubt, We Say No

Your safety matters more than providing a requested service. If our medical team determines HBOT presents unacceptable risk—even if you’ve traveled for ibogaine treatment—we won’t proceed with hyperbaric therapy.

This isn’t about excluding people. It’s about protecting lives.

Still Have Questions ? Talk to our Medical Team

Who Should Not Use 5-MeO-DMT

Important Safety Information

5-MeO-DMT is a powerful entheogenic medicine that is not safe or appropriate for everyone. The following conditions create serious risks and disqualify patients from this therapy:

ACTIVE PSYCHOSIS OR SCHIZOPHRENIA

Current psychotic symptoms or diagnosed schizophrenia spectrum disorders create extreme risk of psychological destabilization, prolonged psychotic episodes, or permanent worsening of condition. Even if currently stable on medication, the intensity of 5-MeO-DMT can trigger acute psychotic breaks.

SEVERE BIPOLAR DISORDER (TYPE I)

Particularly during manic or mixed episodes. 5-MeO-DMT can trigger manic episodes, destabilize mood regulation, or cause rapid cycling that’s difficult to manage medically.

SEVERE DISSOCIATIVE DISORDERS

Conditions like Dissociative Identity Disorder (DID) or severe depersonalization/derealization disorder may be dangerously exacerbated by ego-dissolving experiences.

ACTIVE SUICIDAL IDEATION WITH INTENT

While we treat depression and suicidal thinking with ibogaine, active intent to self-harm combined with 5-MeO-DMT’s intensity creates unacceptable risk during the vulnerable post-experience period.

UNCONTROLLED HYPERTENSION

5-MeO-DMT can temporarily elevate blood pressure and heart rate. Uncontrolled high blood pressure (systolic >160, diastolic >100) creates stroke or cardiac event risk.

RECENT HEART ATTACK OR STROKE

Within 6 months. Cardiovascular system needs complete stabilization before additional stress from powerful medicines.

SEVERE CARDIAC ARRHYTHMIAS

Irregular heart rhythms that aren’t medically controlled create risk of dangerous cardiac events during the intense physiological response to 5-MeO-DMT.

ADVANCED HEART FAILURE

Compromised cardiac function cannot safely handle the temporary cardiovascular stress of the experience.

MAOIs (Monoamine Oxidase Inhibitors)

Dangerous interaction. Must be discontinued with physician guidance well before 5-MeO-DMT.

SSRIs/SNRIs (Antidepressants)

Can create dangerous serotonin syndrome when combined with 5-MeO-DMT. Requires tapering and clearance period.

Lithium

Severe interaction risk. Creates potential for seizures and extreme psychological reactions.

Certain Blood Pressure Medications

Some interact dangerously. Full medication review required.

Pregnancy or Breastfeeding

Unknown risks to fetal development and infant exposure through breast milk. Absolutely contraindicated.

Severe Liver or Kidney Disease

Compromised organ function affects medicine metabolism and increases complication risk.

Seizure Disorders (Uncontrolled)

5-MeO-DMT can lower seizure threshold in susceptible individuals.

Recent Ibogaine Treatment Without Clearance

Must be medically stable and cleared by physicians. Timing matters for safety.

Even if medically cleared, 5-MeO-DMT may not be appropriate if you:

Fear Losing Control

Ego dissolution means complete surrender. If the concept terrifies rather than intrigues you, this isn’t the right medicine.

Expect Recreational Experience

This is profound therapeutic work, not entertainment. Wrong expectations create difficult experiences.

Have Unrealistic Expectations

5-MeO-DMT is not a magic cure. It’s a tool for deep work that requires integration and effort.

Lack Integration Support

The experience demands processing. Without willingness to do integration work, benefits are lost.

Before any patient is approved for 5-MeO-DMT therapy, our physicians conduct:

  • Complete medical history review
  • Psychiatric evaluation
  • Medication interaction assessment
  • Cardiovascular screening
  • Psychological readiness evaluation
  • Informed consent discussion of all risks

We err on the side of caution. If there’s any question about safety, we decline to provide this therapy.

When in Doubt, We Say No

Your safety matters more than providing a requested service. If our medical team determines 5-MeO-DMT isn’t appropriate for you—even if you’ve traveled for ibogaine treatment—we won’t proceed.

This isn’t about excluding people. It’s about protecting lives.

Still Have Questions ? Talk to our Medical Team

Intention: Purpose-Built for Transformation

These spaces aren’t repurposed hotels or converted vacation rentals. Every element—from room layout to lighting design to garden placement—was conceived specifically for ibogaine therapy and the healing work it facilitates. The treatment suites balance medical functionality with psychological comfort. The outdoor spaces invite contemplation without overstimulation. The common areas allow connection when wanted and solitude when needed. Nothing here is accidental. Every detail reflects our commitment to your healing above all other considerations.

Comfort: Nervous System Regulation

Your autonomic nervous system must downregulate for healing to occur. Chronic stress, uncomfortable surroundings, and sensory overwhelm keep you in fight-or-flight mode—the opposite of the parasympathetic state needed for neurological repair. Beautiful natural surroundings, quality bedding, temperature control, peaceful gardens, nourishing food, comfortable furnishings—these aren’t luxuries, they’re therapeutic necessities. When your environment supports regulation, your body can allocate resources to healing instead of coping with environmental stressors.

Privacy: Freedom to Go Deep

Deep psychological work requires freedom from judgment, observation, and the performance of normalcy. Our facilities protect your confidentiality absolutely—gated access, discrete locations, staff trained in privacy protocols, and separate accommodations for high-profile patients. This isn’t just about avoiding publicity; it’s about creating sacred space where you can be completely vulnerable without fear of exposure. Transformation happens when masks come off. Privacy makes that possible.

Safety: The Foundation of Everything

You cannot heal if you don’t feel safe. Fear activates survival mechanisms that shut down the very neurological processes ibogaine is trying to reset. Our medical infrastructure—ICU-level monitoring equipment, emergency response systems, experienced physicians on-site 24/7—creates the physical safety that allows your nervous system to trust the process. Proven protocols refined over 3,000+ treatments mean we’ve encountered virtually every scenario and know how to respond. When your body knows it’s protected, it can focus energy on healing rather than vigilance.

Our Treatment Protocols

Medical Excellence in Ibogaine Therapy

Our protocols represent decades of clinical experience, peer-reviewed research, and an unwavering commitment to patient safety. Here’s what sets our approach apart:

NO TWO PATIENTS ARE IDENTICAL

We don’t use one-size-fits-all dosing. Your ibogaine protocol is calculated based on:

  • Your specific condition (addiction, PTSD, Parkinson’s, etc.)
  • Body weight and metabolism
  • Cardiac function and QT interval baseline
  • Liver function capacity
  • Current medications and health status
  • Treatment goals and severity

DOSING APPROACHES INCLUDE

  • Flood dose protocol: Full therapeutic dose for addiction and deep psychological work
  • Low-dose protocol: Gentler approach for medical conditions or older patients
  • Microdosing regimen: Extended treatment for neurological repair
  • Booster protocols: Follow-up sessions for sustained results

Your physician determines the optimal approach during pre-treatment assessment.

WHY HEART MONITORING IS CRITICAL

Ibogaine temporarily affects cardiac electrical activity, specifically the QT interval—the time it takes your heart to recharge between beats. Prolonged QT intervals can lead to dangerous arrhythmias.

OUR CARDIAC SAFETY PROTOCOL

Pre-treatment:

  • Baseline 12-lead EKG to establish your normal QT interval
  • Echocardiogram if cardiac history warrants
  • Electrolyte optimization (magnesium, potassium, calcium)
  • Physician review of all cardiac risk factors

During treatment:

  • Continuous real-time cardiac monitoring
  • Automated QT interval analysis with alarms
  • ICU-trained nursing staff observing rhythm constantly
  • Physician check-ins every 2-4 hours
  • Emergency equipment immediately accessible

Post-treatment:

  • 12-lead EKG within 24 hours
  • Continued monitoring until QT normalizes
  • Electrolyte panel to confirm balance

Result: We’ve safely treated hundreds of patients without serious cardiac events because we monitor obsessively and respond immediately to any changes.

THE FOUNDATION OF CARDIAC SAFETY

Proper electrolyte balance is critical for preventing cardiac complications during ibogaine treatment. Imbalances—especially low magnesium or potassium—increase risk of dangerous heart rhythms.

OUR ELECTROLYTE PROTOCOL

48 hours before treatment:

  • Comprehensive blood chemistry panel
  • IV supplementation begins if levels are suboptimal
  • Repeat testing to confirm optimization

Immediately before treatment:

  • Final electrolyte verification
  • Additional IV supplementation as needed
  • Magnesium bolus (proven protective for QT prolongation)

During treatment:

  • Continuous IV electrolyte support
  • Monitoring for signs of imbalance
  • Real-time adjustments based on cardiac rhythm

Post-treatment:

  • Repeat chemistry panel within 24 hours
  • Continued supplementation until fully stabilized

Why this matters: Research spanning 30+ years confirms that proper electrolyte management is the single most important factor in preventing cardiac complications during ibogaine therapy.

WHAT YOU CANNOT TAKE WITH IBOGAINE

Certain medications create dangerous interactions with ibogaine. We require discontinuation or tapering before treatment:

Absolutely contraindicated:

  • SSRIs/SNRIs (Prozac, Zoloft, Lexapro, Effexor, etc.) – Must taper weeks before
  • MAOIs (Nardil, Parnate) – Dangerous serotonin syndrome risk
  • Tricyclic antidepressants – Cardiac risk
  • Antipsychotics (Haldol, Risperdal, etc.) – Neurological complications
  • Benzodiazepines (Xanax, Klonopin, Valium) – Requires slow taper
  • Stimulants (Adderall, Ritalin, cocaine, meth) – Cardiac and seizure risk

Managed carefully:

  • Opioids – Detoxification program patients are stabilized onsite
  • Blood pressure medications – May require adjustment
  • Diabetes medications – Monitored closely during fasting

Our medical team provides detailed tapering schedules and coordinates with your current providers when necessary. Never discontinue medications without our guidance.

WHY YOU FAST BEFORE TREATMENT

Ibogaine can cause nausea and vomiting, especially during the first few hours. Fasting reduces this risk and improves absorption.

TYPICAL FASTING TIMELINE

  • 8-12 hours before: No solid food
  • 4-6 hours before: No liquids (including water)
  • Exceptions: Small sips of water for essential medications only

DURING FASTING

  • IV hydration maintains fluid balance
  • Electrolyte supplementation continues
  • Anti-nausea medications available if needed

POST-TREATMENT

  • Light foods reintroduced gradually (broth, crackers, fruit)
  • Full meals resume within 24-48 hours as tolerated

Your exact fasting instructions are provided based on your treatment timing.

PROTOCOLS WE HOPE NEVER TO USE

Every possible complication has a rehearsed response protocol:

Cardiac emergencies:

  • Torsades de Pointes (dangerous arrhythmia)
  • Immediate IV magnesium sulfate
  • Electrical cardioversion if needed
  • Overdrive pacing capabilities

Respiratory issues:

  • Oxygen supplementation
  • Airway management equipment
  • Emergency medications

Seizures:

  • Anti-seizure medications immediately available
  • Airway protection protocols
  • Physician response within 60 seconds

Severe nausea/vomiting:

  • Multiple anti-nausea medication options
  • IV hydration adjustment
  • Position changes for comfort

Psychological distress:

  • Therapeutic grounding techniques
  • Benzodiazepine rescue medication (if safe)
  • Continuous emotional support from staff

Our team drills these protocols regularly. Response time is measured in seconds, not minutes.

TREATMENT DOESN’T END WHEN IBOGAINE DOES

The neurological changes ibogaine creates require integration—making sense of insights, implementing behavioral changes, and maintaining progress.

OUR INTEGRATION PROTOCOL

Immediate post-treatment (24-48 hours):

  • Processing sessions with therapists
  • Journaling and reflection time
  • Group sharing (if desired)
  • Rest and nervous system recovery

Before departure:

  • Personalized integration plan
  • Aftercare recommendations
  • Follow-up scheduling
  • Resource connections

Post-departure:

  • Check-in calls at 1 week, 1 month, 3 months
  • Access to integration therapists
  • Peer support group connections
  • Booster treatment options if needed

Why this matters: Ibogaine creates the neurological reset. Integration determines whether changes last.

HOW WE ENSURE PROTOCOL EXCELLENCE

Our protocols aren’t static—they evolve with emerging research and clinical experience:

Continuous improvement:

  • Monthly protocol review by medical team
  • Integration of latest peer-reviewed research
  • Patient outcome tracking and analysis
  • Third-party safety audits
  • Staff training and certification updates

Pharmaceutical-grade ibogaine:

  • Sourced from verified suppliers
  • Tested for purity and potency
  • Proper storage and handling
  • Documented chain of custody

Equipment maintenance:

  • Regular calibration of cardiac monitors
  • Backup systems for all critical equipment
  • Emergency equipment inspected weekly

Why Our Protocols Work

Because we treat ibogaine with the medical seriousness it deserves.

This isn’t experimental medicine practiced casually. It’s evidence-based treatment delivered with hospital-level standards, by physicians who’ve dedicated their careers to this work, in facilities designed specifically for safe psychedelic therapy.

Your safety isn’t an afterthought. It’s the foundation everything else is built on.

Travel Guide

Getting to Iboga Wellness Institute

Our treatment facility is located in Cozumel. Our team will coordinate your travel logistics and ensure a smooth arrival. Here’s everything you need to know:

PASSPORT VALIDITY

Your passport must be valid for at least 6 months beyond your planned departure date. This is strictly enforced by Mexican immigration—expired or soon-to-expire passports will prevent entry.

VISA REQUIREMENTS

  • US Citizens: No visa required for stays up to 180 days
  • Canadian Citizens: No visa required for stays up to 180 days
  • EU Citizens: No visa required for stays up to 180 days
  • Other nationalities: Check with the Mexican embassy in your country

Tourist Card (FMM): You’ll receive a tourist card (Forma Migratoria Múltiple) on your flight or at the border. Keep this with your passport—you’ll need it to exit.

Airport: Cozumel International Airport (CZM)

Common Connection Cities:

  • Cancún(CUN) – 30-minute flight to Cozumel
  • Houston (IAH)
  • Dallas (DFW)
  • Miami (MIA)
  • Atlanta (ATL)

Direct Flights Available From: United States cities with seasonal direct service. Most travelers connect through Cancún or major US hubs.

FLIGHT TIPS

  • Book flights that arrive during daylight hours when possible (easier navigation)
  • Allow 2-3 hour connection time in Cancún if connecting
  • Check baggage directly to Cozumel (CZM) to avoid collecting in Cancún

AIRPORT PICKUP

Our team provides complimentary airport pickup. You’ll be met at arrivals by a staff member holding an Iboga Wellness Institute sign. Transportation to our facility takes approximately 15-20 minutes.

DECLARE

  • Medications (bring in original labeled containers)
  • Amounts over $10,000 USD in cash
  • Restricted items (firearms, certain foods)

DO NOT BRING

  • Recreational drugs of any kind
  • Weapons
  • Large quantities of supplements without explanation
  • Anything you wouldn’t want customs searching

CUSTOMS QUESTIONS YOU MAY ENCOUNTER

  • “What’s the purpose of your visit?” → Answer: “Medical treatment” or “Wellness retreat”
  • “How long will you stay?” → Answer: Your program length (5-30 days)
  • “Where are you staying?” → Answer: “Private medical facility in Cozumel”

Pro tip: Be honest but brief. Mexican customs is generally straightforward for medical travelers.

Currency: Mexican Peso (MXN)

WHAT YOU’LL NEED CASH FOR

Very little. Your program fee covers nearly everything. Cash may be useful for:

  • Airport snacks or personal purchases before arrival
  • Tips for airport porters (optional, 20-50 pesos)
  • Personal purchases during free time (if applicable)

ATMs: Available at Cozumel airport and throughout the island. Most accept international cards.

Credit Cards: Widely accepted at airport, hotels, restaurants. Visa and Mastercard preferred. American Express less common.

Exchange Rate: Check current rates before travel (typically 17-20 pesos per USD, but fluctuates).

Recommendation: Bring $100-200 USD cash for incidentals. You won’t need much.

CLIMATE IN COZUMEL

  • Warm and humid year-round (75-90°F)
  • Light, breathable clothing recommended
  • Occasional tropical rain showers (bring light rain jacket)
  • Hurricane season: June-November (we monitor closely)

ESSENTIAL CLOTHING

  • 5-7 days of comfortable, loose-fitting clothes
  • Lightweight, breathable fabrics (cotton, linen)
  • Comfortable walking shoes
  • Sandals or slip-on shoes
  • Swimsuit (facility has pool/spa)
  • Light cover-up or sarong
  • Sunglasses and hat

TOILETRIES

  • Personal hygiene items (we provide basics)
  • Sunscreen (high SPF 50+ recommended) – Caribbean sun is intense
  • Insect repellent (mosquitoes present year-round)
  • After-sun lotion or aloe
  • Any specific products you prefer
  • Prescription medications in original containers

PERSONAL ITEMS

  • Journal and pen
  • Books or e-reader
  • Headphones
  • Phone charger (uses same outlets as US/Canada: Type A/B, 110V)
  • Small backpack or day bag
  • Reusable water bottle
  • Eye mask for sleep (if sensitive to light)

WHAT NOT TO PACK

  • Expensive jewelry or watches
  • Work laptop (unless absolutely necessary for emergencies)
  • Excessive cash or valuables
  • Recreational substances
  • Heavy clothing or bulky items
  • Formal wear (casual, comfortable environment)

TRAVEL INSURANCE

Highly recommended. Ensure your policy covers:

  • Medical treatment
  • Emergency evacuation (if needed)
  • Trip cancellation/interruption
  • COVID-19 related issues (if applicable)

VACCINATIONS

No specific vaccinations required. Standard travel vaccines (Hepatitis A/B, Typhoid) recommended but not mandatory. Consult your physician.

DRINKING WATER

Our facility uses a comprehensive water purification system throughout, ensuring the highest safety standards. We provide:

  • Purified water at all times
  • Bottled water in your room
  • Safe, filtered water in all prepared foods and beverages

As with most international destinations, we recommend drinking only purified or bottled water during your stay.

FOOD SAFETY

All meals at our facility are prepared to international safety standards using purified water and safe ingredients. Avoid street food and restaurants before arriving at our facility.

MEDICATIONS & SUPPLEMENTS

Bring all required medications in original labeled containers with prescriptions or doctor’s notes. Bring enough for your entire stay plus 3-5 extra days in case of travel delays.

SUN SAFETY

Caribbean sun is intense. Even on cloudy days:

  • Wear high SPF sunscreen
  • Reapply every 2 hours if outdoors
  • Seek shade during peak hours (11am-3pm)
  • Stay hydrated

CELL PHONE SERVICE

International Carriers: Contact your mobile provider before travel to confirm coverage options:

  • US/Canadian travelers: Many plans now include at no extra charge (AT&T, T-Mobile) or offer affordable add-ons (Verizon TravelPass)
  • European travelers: Check with your carrier for international roaming rates or specific packages
  • Other international travelers: Verify roaming costs and available international plans

Alternative Options:

  • Purchase a Mexican SIM card at Cozumel airport (if your phone is unlocked)
  • Rely on our facility’s WiFi for WhatsApp, FaceTime, Skype (free calling)
  • Use WiFi calling if supported by your carrier and phone

Our WiFi is reliable and fast—many patients find they don’t need cellular data during their stay.

WiFi

Our facility has reliable high-speed internet throughout. You’ll stay connected for:

  • Video calls home
  • Work emergencies (if necessary)
  • Entertainment during downtime
  • Communication with our team

CALLING HOME

  • WhatsApp, FaceTime, Skype work over WiFi (free)
  • International calling cards available at airport
  • Facility phone available for emergencies

TIME ZONE

Cozumel operates on Eastern Time (same as New York, Miami, Toronto). No time zone adjustment needed if traveling from US East Coast.

WHAT HAPPENS WHEN YOU LAND

  1. Deplane & Immigration: Walk to immigration area, present passport and tourist card, immigration officer stamps passport (typically 2-5 minutes per person)
  2. Baggage Claim: Collect luggage from carousel
  3. Customs: Walk through “nothing to declare” (green) or “items to declare” (red) lane. May involve random bag check via button press (green light = pass through, red light = bag inspection)
  4. Airport Exit: Our staff meets you immediately outside customs area with Iboga Wellness Institute signage
  5. Transportation: Private air-conditioned vehicle to facility (15-20 minutes)
  6. Facility Arrival:
    • Welcome orientation and tour
    • Room assignment and settling in
    • Initial medical check-in
    • Meet your care team

FIRST 24 HOURS

  • Unpack and acclimate to your space
  • Complete baseline diagnostics (EKG, blood work, vital signs)
  • Physician consultation to review results
  • Nutritional plan review
  • Begin preparation phase for treatment

WHAT TO DO IF:

Your flight is delayed: Contact us immediately at [emergency number]. We monitor flight status but appreciate direct updates. We’ll adjust pickup timing.

You miss your connection: Contact us right away. We’ll help you rebook and coordinate new pickup arrangements.

You have luggage issues: Notify our team. We can provide essential toiletries and clothing while the airline locates your bags.

You feel unwell upon arrival: Inform our team immediately. Our medical staff will assess and adjust your protocol as needed.

Emergency contact number: [Provided upon booking confirmation]

CHECK-OUT PROCESS

  • Final medical evaluation and clearance from physicians
  • Discharge planning and integration recommendations
  • Aftercare instructions and follow-up scheduling
  • Scheduled transportation to airport (timed to your flight)

RECOMMENDED DEPARTURE TIMING

Arrive at Cozumel airport 2.5-3 hours before international flights. The airport is small, but security and check-in can have lines during peak season (December-April).

CUSTOMS RETURNING TO US/CANADA

  • Declare any medications, purchases over $800 USD
  • You may be asked about your trip → Answer honestly: “Medical treatment”
  • Have prescriptions/doctor’s notes for medications
  • Re-entry is typically straightforward for citizens

POST-TREATMENT TRAVEL

We strongly recommend staying at our facility at least 24 hours after treatment completion before flying. Some patients experience fatigue—allowing recovery time makes international travel safer and more comfortable. We’ll only clear you for travel when medically appropriate.

FAQ

Questions We Often Hear

Yes. Cozumel is one of safest destinations and an established medical tourism hub. The island has extremely low crime rates, especially in hotel and medical zones. Our facility is in a secure area, and our team has safely transported thousands of international patients.

Our entire staff speaks fluent English. You won’t encounter language barriers at our facility, with our transportation team, or at the airport. Cozumel is heavily tourism-oriented, so English is widely spoken throughout the island.

Yes. Companions or support persons are welcome to accompany you to Cozumel for emotional support. They’ll need to arrange their own lodging at nearby hotels or vacation rentals, as our facility is dedicated exclusively to patient care and treatment. We can recommend accommodations within 10-15 minutes of our facility and coordinate visitation schedules based on your treatment plan and medical needs.

Medical clearance is required before any departure. If you must leave early for family or personal emergencies, our physicians will assess your safety to travel and may require additional monitoring or clearance procedures.

Depends on your program and treatment phase. Some programs include limited free time for beach walks or relaxation. However, healing is the priority—this isn’t a vacation. Any activities are approved by your medical team based on your condition and treatment progress.

Requirements change frequently. We’ll provide current entry/exit requirements when you book. Generally has minimal restrictions, but we maintain enhanced health protocols at our facility.

Absolutely not immediately after. Alcohol is prohibited for at least 30 days post-treatment, longer for some conditions. Our aftercare plan includes specific guidelines.

We’re Here To Help

Travel coordination can feel overwhelming, especially when dealing with health challenges, addiction, or neurological conditions. Our team handles logistics, answers every question, and ensures your journey is as smooth and stress-free as possible.

You’re not figuring this out alone. From booking flights to airport pickup to ensuring safe return home, we guide you through every step. Our priority is getting you here safely so healing can begin.

Have questions we didn’t answer? Contact our team. We’re here to help.

Preparing for Treatment

What You'll Need to Do Before Arrival

Once you’re medically cleared for treatment, our Clinical Director will guide you through comprehensive preparation to ensure your body and mind are optimized for healing. Here’s what the preparation process involves:

COMPLETE REQUIRED SCREENING

Before traveling, you’ll need to complete and upload:

  • Echocardiogram – Provides detailed imaging of heart structure and function
  • Liver function panel – Evaluates your body’s ability to metabolize ibogaine safely
  • Additional tests as needed – Based on your medical history and condition

These allow our physicians to confirm eligibility and design your personalized protocol.

MEDICATION ADJUSTMENTS

Certain medications interact dangerously with ibogaine:

  • Antidepressants (SSRIs, SNRIs, MAOIs)
  • Benzodiazepines (Xanax, Klonopin, Valium)
  • Antipsychotics
  • Stimulants (Adderall, Ritalin, cocaine, methamphetamine)
  • Opioids (depending on your program)

CRITICAL: Never stop medications on your own. Our medical team provides individualized tapering schedules when clinically necessary. Some medications require weeks or months to safely discontinue.

TWO WEEKS BEFORE ARRIVAL

Transition to clean, healing nutrition:

  • Reduce: Caffeine, processed foods, refined sugars, artificial additives
  • Increase: Whole foods, fresh vegetables, fruits, lean proteins, healthy fats
  • Focus: Simple, nutrient-dense meals that reduce inflammation and support healing

THREE DAYS BEFORE ARRIVAL

Enter strict dietary discipline:

  • Eliminate completely: Alcohol, recreational drugs, caffeine, non-prescribed substances
  • Avoid: Heavy, greasy, fried foods that stress digestion
  • Prioritize: Hydration (water, natural juices), light meals, easy digestion

DAY OF TREATMENT

You’ll fast (no food or liquids) for a designated period before ibogaine administration. Our medical team provides exact timing during your stay. Fasting optimizes absorption and reduces nausea risk.

WHY THIS MATTERS: Your diet directly impacts treatment safety and effectiveness. A clean system processes ibogaine more efficiently and reduces complications.

EXERCISE RECOMMENDATIONS

  • Encouraged: Walking, gentle yoga, stretching, light swimming
  • Avoid: Intense workouts, heavy weightlifting, exhausting cardio, competitive sports

Your body needs to be rested and balanced, not depleted.

SLEEP & RECOVERY

Prioritize 7-9 hours of quality sleep nightly in the week before treatment. A well-rested nervous system:

  • Supports neurological healing
  • Enhances therapeutic response
  • Reduces treatment complications
  • Improves integration capacity

HYDRATION PROTOCOL

Drink approximately 2 liters (8 cups) of water daily unless your physician directs otherwise. Proper hydration supports:

  • Electrolyte balance (critical for cardiac safety)
  • Metabolic function
  • Toxin elimination
  • Overall treatment efficacy

SET YOUR INTENTION

Reflect deeply on why you’re seeking treatment. Journal about:

  • What am I ready to heal?
  • What patterns am I prepared to release?
  • What does freedom from my condition look like?
  • What do I hope to understand about myself?

Clear intention creates psychological focus and enhances therapeutic depth.

STRESS REDUCTION PRACTICES

Begin daily practices that calm your nervous system:

  • Meditation: Even 10-15 minutes daily
  • Journaling: Process fears, hopes, emotions
  • Breathwork: Box breathing, 4-7-8 technique
  • Prayer or spiritual practice: If meaningful to you

Reduced baseline stress increases your capacity for healing work.

BUILD YOUR SUPPORT NETWORK

Inform trusted family or friends about your journey:

  • Where you’ll be and when
  • What you’re seeking to heal
  • How they can support you after treatment
  • Your integration needs upon return

Post-treatment integration is significantly strengthened when you have understanding support at home.

PASSPORT REQUIREMENTS

Your passport must be valid for at least 6 months beyond your travel dates. Mexican immigration strictly enforces this requirement.

WHAT TO PACK

Clothing:

  • Comfortable, loose-fitting clothes for treatment and recovery
  • Layers for varying comfort (facilities are climate-controlled)
  • Comfortable walking shoes

Essential Items:

  • Personal toiletries (we provide basics, but bring preferences)
  • Required medications in original labeled containers
  • Journal and writing materials
  • Books or reading for downtime
  • Personal comfort items (photos, spiritual objects, etc.)
  • Headphones if desired

WHAT NOT TO BRING

  • Expensive jewelry or valuables
  • Work laptops (this is healing time)
  • Recreational substances of any kind

72 HOURS BEFORE ARRIVAL

Absolutely do not use:

  • Alcohol
  • Recreational drugs (cocaine, MDMA, cannabis, etc.)
  • Non-prescribed benzodiazepines or opioids
  • Stimulants
  • Any substance not approved by our medical team

Exception: If you’re in our Detoxification Program, opioid use before arrival is addressed through our stabilization protocol.

AVOID THESE ACTIVITIES

  • High-risk sports or dangerous activities
  • Physically exhausting work or exercise
  • Sudden dietary or medication changes without approval

WHY THIS MATTERS: These substances create dangerous interactions with ibogaine, compromise physical readiness, and can be life-threatening during treatment.

Once you’re approved for treatment, our Clinical Director contacts you directly to provide:

  • Personalized nutritional recommendations based on your condition
  • Medication tapering schedule (if needed)
  • Travel coordination and arrival logistics
  • Answers to all your questions and concerns

You won’t navigate this alone. We guide you through every preparation step to ensure you arrive physically, mentally, and emotionally ready for transformative healing.

Questions about Preparation?

Our team is here to help you understand exactly what’s required, answer every question you have, and ensure you feel confident, informed, and fully prepared for the process ahead. You’re not expected to navigate this alone.

Guy Collins

Co-Founder & Chief Financial Officer

Guy Collins is the Co-Founder and Chief Financial Officer of Iboga Wellness Institute, A seasoned healthcare entrepreneur with more than two decades of executive leadership experience, Guy has played a central role in shaping the Institute’s operational, financial, and strategic framework as it works to responsibly advance ibogaine therapy into broader clinical acceptance. 

Throughout his career, Guy has demonstrated a consistent ability to build and scale mission-driven organizations that balance financial sustainability with meaningful social impact. At Iboga Wellness Institute, he oversees financial strategy, regulatory alignment, and organizational development, ensuring that the Institute maintains rigorous standards of safety, transparency, and accountability while expanding access to innovative treatment options. His leadership helps bridge the gap between emerging therapies and structured healthcare delivery models. 

A graduate of The Ohio State University, Guy brings both Midwestern roots and a national perspective to his work, combining analytical discipline with a deep commitment to service. He is particularly passionate about expanding access to care for neurological disorders, veterans, first responders, and individuals and families affected by the opioid crisis—communities that often face limited effective treatment options within conventional systems. 

As a founding leader of Iboga Wellness Institute, Guy Collins remains dedicated to building a model that integrates medical rigor, compassionate care, and responsible innovation. His vision continues to guide the organization’s growth as it seeks to provide safe, ethical, and transformative treatment while contributing to the evolving dialogue around the future of mental health and addiction medicine.

Detoxification

The Detoxification Program facilitates safe, medically supervised withdrawal and neurological reset.

Medical Conditions

The Medical Condition Program addresses complex health challenges at their neurological foundation.

Mental Health

The Mental Health Program addresses depression, anxiety, and PTSD through deep neuroplastic healing.

What All Our Accommodations Include:

Your Private Room

Private bedrooms with dedicated personal space for rest and introspection

Sound machines, heaters, fans, lamps, and room dividers for optimal comfort and tranquility

Premium linens, plush bedding, blackout masks, and essential recovery items

Nourishment & Daily Essentials

Three thoughtfully prepared meals daily featuring fresh, organic, locally-sourced ingredients

Gluten-free, anti-inflammatory cuisine crafted from whole, unprocessed foods

Artisan gluten-free baked goods, caffeine-free herbal teas, electrolyte-enhanced hydration with BCAAs

Curated daily supplements and wholesome snacks

Therapeutic Services

On-site therapeutic services, including massage, reiki, guided meditation and mindful movement, and breathwork sessions

Books, art materials, and entertainment options – optional creative and restorative activities

Outdoor Spaces

Tranquil garden settings thoughtfully curated for meditation, introspection, and peaceful restoration

Luxurious wellness amenities featuring swimming pool, spa facilities, and lush tropical gardens

Care & Support

Attentive daily housekeeping and dedicated culinary team

Comprehensive on-site medical staff with round-the-clock patient monitoring

High-speed internet connectivity throughout the facility