Help for iboga induced dissociation/brain...
Jbac
06 Feb 2014
Plenty of people are non-responders to piracetam and if you have kidney problems it could hurt you.
Edited by Jbac, 06 February 2014 - 01:28 AM.
socialpiranha
06 Feb 2014
Luxflux
06 Feb 2014
Missjess
06 Feb 2014
Socialpiranha I may just wait to get jdtic ...I'm going to see my psychiatrist today and I'm going to ask him about kappa antagonist drugs...what about naltrexone or naleoxone ??
Missjess
06 Feb 2014
Jbac
06 Feb 2014
Naloxone and naltrexone are weak antagonists and will cause debilitating symptoms in doses high enough to help you.
Assuming you're set on trying kappa opioid antagonists, you'll probably have better odds of getting suboxone if you claim to have an opioid addiction (e.g. kratom) and head/neck pain, instead of attempting a discussion about kappa opioid receptors. It's addictive so waiting for jdtic might be a better idea.
Missjess
06 Feb 2014
Luxflux
06 Feb 2014
preg - 50mg
NAC - 2400 mg(this is a high dose by most standards, common is 600-1200 mg I think)
r-la - 100 mg
I can attest to their NMDA activity, since I had some leftover cognitive symptoms from psychosis some years before(though I was never diagnosed with a psychotic disorder). I have not felt dissociation per se, but the first times I ingested pregnenolone, sarcosine, and NAC together I can still remember just feeling a strong sense of "I am here, and the world is there, and things all have their place and fit together", which was a very pleasant feeling. It's this personal experience, along with a basic understanding of iboga's mechanism of action, which leads me to believe these might be helpful for you.
protoject
07 Feb 2014
Hi protoject,
I actually just purchased these products:
NAC
Glycine
Piracetam
I found that info from this thread: http://www.longecity...019#entry641019 (just look at bottom of post)
Would u suggest those products all will they not be good for me? I think I shud have researched into this further..
Glycine should be good. Don't dose too high. Keep it modest.
The rest is harmless, you know, just keep your doses regular and modest.
Personally I find sarcosine superior to glycine somehow. Less side effects and more effectiveness, and also more subtle.
Also, anecdote for you: I occasionally take STRONG nmda antagonists, and use D-serine and Sarcosine to buffer out the dissociative effects to give a smoother experience. So while I can't comment on their use for your dissociative symptoms, which BTW I've also experienced without being on any supplement, but I can say that based on the fact that they buffered out those dissociative symptoms on the strong antagonist , that maybe there's some value there.
They also seem to be the superior options to glycine in any studies with schizophrenics. Which I know again is not your case but it appears both are superior and more convenient. Also works well in conjunction IMO
protoject
07 Feb 2014
Just outta curiosity ... if you take a lower than average dose, is it possible to reap some modest benefit while curtailing side effects? also is suboxone only IV or can people take it orally>?I actually took iboga to get off of suboxone and i can confirm that it does produce exactly the opposite feeling of suboxone. suboxone induces a warmth comfort and familiarity with your surroundings whereas iboga produces a profound feeling of cold distance and discomfort. Like i've said many times, If you are ok with being on a drug for the rest of your life suboxone really is the best option out there for dissociation and depression. Unfortunately the mu agonism causes cognitive problems and intestinal motility issues which is why i'm holding out hope for selective kappa antagonists.
celebes
08 Feb 2014
Just outta curiosity ... if you take a lower than average dose, is it possible to reap some modest benefit while curtailing side effects? also is suboxone only IV or can people take it orally>?I actually took iboga to get off of suboxone and i can confirm that it does produce exactly the opposite feeling of suboxone. suboxone induces a warmth comfort and familiarity with your surroundings whereas iboga produces a profound feeling of cold distance and discomfort. Like i've said many times, If you are ok with being on a drug for the rest of your life suboxone really is the best option out there for dissociation and depression. Unfortunately the mu agonism causes cognitive problems and intestinal motility issues which is why i'm holding out hope for selective kappa antagonists.
No, buprenorphine has a higher affinity for mu receptors and it takes 2-4 mg to saturate those, only above that do you begin to get kappa antagonism. Even 200mcg is not tolerable to the opiate naive so you are talking dependence, unless it's taken with a mu-antagonist. Related discussions in the JDTic thread.
celebes
08 Feb 2014
Personally I find sarcosine superior to glycine somehow. Less side effects and more effectiveness, and also more subtle.
They also seem to be the superior options to glycine in any studies with schizophrenics. Which I know again is not your case but it appears both are superior and more convenient. Also works well in conjunction IMO
Do you use them regularly and if so have you developed any tolerance?
Does anyone know if either one of sarcosine or D-serine are less liable to that?
Edited by celebes, 08 February 2014 - 12:51 AM.
Luxflux
08 Feb 2014
protoject
08 Feb 2014
Do you use them regularly and if so have you developed any tolerance?
Does anyone know if either one of sarcosine or D-serine are less liable to that?
When I did use them regularly I found glycine created a tolerance. But when I was taking glycine I used to take it with taurine so that could be a confounding factor. Plus I was taking grams upon grams. So I'm sure a normal dose would be alright. Whatever that is.
Took sarcosine and d serine for months didn't notice any tolerance
Missjess
08 Feb 2014
Missjess
08 Feb 2014
BigPapaChakra
09 Feb 2014
The dissociation you speak of - I live that day and night, almost 24/7. If you look up HPPD I have practically every symptom there is maybe outside of depression (although I occasionally have a low-mood, I'm very optimistic and overall am not sad or anything). I've had HPPD, in particular dissociated symptoms, for just under 2 years now (13 days from now will be the date of the concert - it was that messed up I still remember the date and time, lol). I think extreme NMDA-antagonism is what caused me to have these everlasting negative symptoms. As you can see, others have stated your problems sound like NMDA-antagonism, and I believe this to be true. You and the others who have commented have some sound ideas.
I've been running a blinded trial (with the help of my mom, haha) on pregnenolone, and I think I'll use it on occasion after my experiment despite my young age. It feels very nice - if pregnenolone is what I ingested the other day I did duel n-back before and after ingestion and my scores went up after ingestion and my average n-back went from 2.45 to 2.55 and I reached 4-back. I also had increased resilience to stress and I almost felt high without any side-effects. This was really interesting to me because if I were to get high on anything in my current state I'd honestly feel like I was in a state of minor psychosis or something. You can get a lot of glycine from bones/cartilage/ligaments/etc. - eat some bone broth and recipes using bones and joints and maybe supplement collage - that's what I'm gonna start doing, it's extremely nutritious anyhow. Some of the studies LostFalco has posted in the new gut microbiome thread show that different fibers (GOS and FOS, I believe) actually increase the amount of NMDAr's in the brain, as well as BDNF and NGF. Without delving into it, I'd recommend the TULIP red/infrared light+supplement stack.
Missjess
11 Feb 2014
So u experience the same dissociation as me? It's rlly fuking horrible isn't it! I can't get high in anything now and I cannot touch alcohol anymore either...my problems just got a whole lot worse after having a few glasses of alcohol :( his has lead me to believe that my NMDA receptors are fucked ....I'm hanging out and waiting for all the supplements I ordered. I have placed an order for glycine, sarcosine, piracetam, NAC and that hormone u mentioned pregnenolone. I am pretty interested in starting off with the NAC and either glycine or sarcosine to see what they will do for me I hope it helps me! It's so hard going around and even driving my car when I have no self like literally I'll be driving and my head feels like it's not even there and my arms r rlly detached. I am also waiting on my friend to come over from Canada he is bringing with him jdtic and I am rlly interested in trying that too.
abcmanomandriepunt1
17 Mar 2014
with supplements (side note : i'm very sensitive to practically every neurotransmitter altering substance, so i have to watch out): NAC 2.4g helped me tremendously with cognition, same goes for Lion's mane (i take about 5gram a day. i would recommend buying bulk powder since i didn't notice anything from extracts). they both are very effective in my opinion, and i didn't expect that from lion's mane since i thought it would be a long term benefit. I directly noticed feeling more grounded and in the moment from the lion's mane (a bit like my mdma experience while i was dp'ed). i do notice that i'm a tad bit too alert for movements in my vision from it, but the overal benefits are great and i hope the downsides aren't as bad as that from mdma usage...
i ordered sarcosine a couple of weeks ago but after reading missjess report on the hppd forum i decided to hold off that. i do read the hppd forum, cause i feel like i can relate more to hppd'ers then to most of the people on schizophrenia sites.
further i take ashwagandha for stress and calcium channel blocking properties. and some others for cognitive functioning : Q10, pqq, ground turmeric, 1g alcar, krill oil, rosemary, kelp vit c and coconut oil.
i eat a ketogenic diet since antiepileptics have been shown to work for dp/dr.
overal i've made a lot of improvement and i think i now have something to lose again so now i'm watching my supplement intake and especially the psychoactive ones, cause that stuff can be pretty dangerous if you ask me. I don't suffer from anxiety that much, but my 2d visions and especially seeing halo' s are disturbingly bad. I'm gonna wait another year and if stuff is still bad i'm gonna find a doc for a proper diagnoses and proper meds (lamictal/keppra) or so. Meanwhile i'm gonna keep things like this probably, and not mess around with my nmda receptors anymore (besides NAC, but well, that one helped

@bigpapachakra you inspirated me to do the full TULIP protocol. i believe ATP helps tons with cognitive problems!
good luck, i know things can be though. i used to be really a social person but this stuff turned me into a hermit. to set goals and keep doing things i decided to write novels and be the best novelist in my country. since i'm on disability i do have the freedom to do what i want and i'm now busy with my thirth mansuscript

Edit : my theory (very speculative) about this disease is not that it's due to hypo glutamate but due to hyper glutamate function. i do have a couple of reasons for that : a case study a bout a woman experiencing stroke in her left brain (left brain is full of nmda, right brain ampa). she experienced dissociative symtpoms, probably due to the know calcium influx and hyper glutamate in cells in the left brain. I think our problem is a bit the same : too much glutamate and calcium in the cells, which is mostly located at the left hemisphere. another one : people with temperal lobe epilepsy and migraines get the same problems as we do, and meds that help for that are calcium channel blockers and anti convulsants. I don't think glutamate agonists will cure this, but they might help with cognitive function.
then why do nmda antagonists cause dissociation? bite me. i've read a theory about that but that didn't make sense. it's too complicated and i decide to leave this advanced biochemical stuff over to the pro's and not me.
ciao!
Edited by tylerdurden, 17 March 2014 - 10:53 PM.
VERITAS INCORRUPTUS
18 Mar 2014
The Suboxone should not be addictive in the period you should require to reset, if you are not looking to actually get high and do not as well have a tendency toward MOR agonist/opiate abuse (or better abuse in general of any substance of course).
As such, a short course appropriately dosed is well worth the risk to reward I would think.
Missjess
22 Mar 2014
tritium
23 Mar 2014
Missjess
23 Mar 2014
socialpiranha
23 Mar 2014
I've decided to follow through with solveigs advice on the hppd forum...she had the exact same problems caused by Iboga and got hppd aswel...she takes lamictal and it put her hppd into remission including visuals etc ....I deff think the Iboga has changed my glutamate receptor functioning to excessive...but I also fear I have KOR agonist effect going on still...I am interested in lamictal and also suboxone but I doubt I can take them at the same time? Does anybody know? ....I tried sarcosine and it made everything worse for me...I was trying to agonize the nmda receptor but it didn't help me at all
Yes i was on lamictal when i first started taking suboxone but i dropped it because i found i didn't need it anymore with the subs, very addictive drug though be prepared to be on it for life or suffer horrible withdrawal coming off it. That being said it is the most potent antidepressant/anxiolytic/moodstabilizer i've ever used
socialpiranha
23 Mar 2014
Anybody know a reliable place to order lamictal online without a prescription?
http://www.unitedpha...amotrigine.html
Also an alternative worth looking into might be levitiracetam(keppra) i have seen it available online, i believe i've seen zonisamide(zonegran) offered online as well