<code id='BD7963EE14'></code><style id='BD7963EE14'></style>
    • <acronym id='BD7963EE14'></acronym>
      <center id='BD7963EE14'><center id='BD7963EE14'><tfoot id='BD7963EE14'></tfoot></center><abbr id='BD7963EE14'><dir id='BD7963EE14'><tfoot id='BD7963EE14'></tfoot><noframes id='BD7963EE14'>

    • <optgroup id='BD7963EE14'><strike id='BD7963EE14'><sup id='BD7963EE14'></sup></strike><code id='BD7963EE14'></code></optgroup>
        1. <b id='BD7963EE14'><label id='BD7963EE14'><select id='BD7963EE14'><dt id='BD7963EE14'><span id='BD7963EE14'></span></dt></select></label></b><u id='BD7963EE14'></u>
          <i id='BD7963EE14'><strike id='BD7963EE14'><tt id='BD7963EE14'><pre id='BD7963EE14'></pre></tt></strike></i>

          explore

          explore

          author:focus    Page View:4
          Powdered ibogaine against a white background.
          Tabernanthe iboga, the shrub that contains the psychedelic substance ibogaine. Wikimedia Commons

          The psychedelic ibogaine is unlikely to ever receive approval as a treatment for opioid addiction, the federal government’s top addiction researcher said Thursday.

          The remarks from Nora Volkow, the longtime director of the National Institute on Drug Abuse, serve as a cautionary note amid widespread enthusiasm about ibogaine, a naturally occurring substance that drug companies and researchers have increasingly cast as a potential paradigm-shifting addiction treatment.

          advertisement

          But its potential cardiac side effects could stand in the way of receiving approval from the Food and Drug Administration, Volkow said.

          Get unlimited access to award-winning journalism and exclusive events.

          Subscribe Log In

          comprehensive

          How one medical school became remarkably diverse
          How one medical school became remarkably diverse

          ThefirstclassattheUniversityofCalifornia,Davismedicalschool,in1972,waspredominantlywhiteandmale.Chri

          read more
          Ending racial health disparities hinges on penalties, political will
          Ending racial health disparities hinges on penalties, political will

          AdobeThenation’swidespreadracialhealthdisparitieswon’tbeerasedwithoutchangestohowhealthcaresystemsar

          read more
          Drug repurposing or repositioning? The language matters
          Drug repurposing or repositioning? The language matters

          AdobeFindinganewmedicineisnevereasy.Butdevelopingtreatmentsforpatientswithrarediseases—conditionstha

          read more

          I was wrong about Geron's blood cancer drug. Now, is it a takeover target?

          MollyFerguson/STATIwaswrongaboutGeron.Foryears,I’vebelieved—anddeclaredpublicly—thatGeron’sefforttod