"A/B" extraction of alkaloids from root-bark (iboga)

topic posted Sat, March 21, 2009 - 11:26 AM by  calaquendi
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hello..new here. lots of decent and concerned people here glad to be among u.
in brief: a friend placed an order for 50g of exceptional-grade iboga root-bark from a trusted vendor. this is to be used to aid me in a long and difficult struggle to master an opiate addiction. some background: was on a high dose (100mg) of methadone at a clinic for six years, about 18 months ago i finally got outa there 'for good' thanks to suboxone. over the last six months ive been using opiates again and although its far from the habit it was, its still very much alive and a big ass problem. im at wits end. i have thoroughly researched ibogaine's risks/benefits and am a trained EMT. furthermore, i have seen this stuff do the impossible with a close friend. a few years back i drove w him to gainesville ~this was his 'go at it' it was eric taubs outfit...ive never seen anything like it. i want that for myself. as of this writing its almost four years to the day and this guy is in the best shape of his life. i feel i could really benefit from this medicine.
i and my friends are well versed in alkaloid extrction from a variety of botanicals, but i have questions regarding the efficacy of a simple acid-base xtrct? i dont doubt we could "pull" the alkaloid contents from this bark, but this would result in a free-base and i dont know a practical method for hcl conversion. would the free-base extract work? i know there are more alkaloids in this than purified hcl, but this actually sounds beneficial, as i have read total alkaloid can be of value with respect to the visionary elements of the experience. i want this so bad.. i know its naive to put all your eggs in one basket, but my friends, im running out of eggs!
i just know what i've seen in other's experiences and by god it's worth a try...any responses/opinions are welcomed! thanks~ and bless u
posted by:
calaquendi
Kentucky
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  • Hello, my name is Randy. I am in search of Ibogaine to consume for Chemical addiction as well as spiritual enlightenment. I have struggled for several years or so binging on disorientating substances. I have been sober for about two months now. I have to gain my self control or I will loose my family or maybe even my life. I feel like Ibogaine may help me stay sober. I love my family and life so much. Please if anyone knows where or how I can attain some Ibogaine please, I live in Michigan and am willing to travel. Thank you.
    • come on folks, get with it. You have to have it illegally shipped into the country, or canada or mexico if you will drive. Its not really all that cool or helpful to think any of us will help you 'score' a schedule A substance in america- you could be anyone. And schedule A is felony time. Figure out a more novel approach for scoring, it just puts us all at risk to go cyber with trying to hook up.
      • What Flint said.

        Randy, I understand you may be new at this, but please do not post the same question in multiple threads. That's just not done. I left the ones to which someone answered alone but deleted the rest of your copy/paste posts. It would have been better to have started a new dedicated thread as Flint suggested.

        If you can travel, then you might want to seek out treatment in Canada or Mexico where they have some legal clinics. These are not exactly "cheap" from what I understand, but probably still worth checking into given the alternative outcome which you've touched upon. There are legal clinics all over the world actually. If you have cash and determination...
  • Hi Cala. From my reading and email correspondence with Chris Jenks, the guy who posted the TA extraction over on Mindvox, the freebase TA is stable and it can be dosed just fine. The HCl in your stomach would convert the alkaloids. I have yet to try this method, but think I will give it a shot on the rest of the root bark I have.

    Basically, you extract the powdered root bark with vinegar, Four times should get over 90% of the alkaloids from the bark.

    Once the vinegar is collected, one should filter it, possibly through an old t-shirt, then coffee filters to remove all the plant particles and gunk.

    Next, one needs to take professional strength, non-sudsy ammonia and add it slowly to the vinegar. The solid freebase alkaloids should begin to precipitate out of the solution, and form a fairly hard solid. One should stop adding ammonia when the precipitate starts to form.

    This freebase TA extract can then be filtered from the vinegar and left to dry in font of a fan. This proved to be very stable to Jenks, and he says it works great for storage and dosing, and one need not take it any further if it is simply for dosing.

    However, to further purify the extract and turn the alkaloids to a HCl salt, one will take this freebase TA extract, and add dry acetone to the extract. Grinding it up fine to expose the most surface area should allow for a more thorough extraction. I would suggest at least 2-3 washes with acetone, then combine the acetone washes. It should leave behind most of the plant matter, while dissolving all the iboga alks in the freebase TA.

    Now, to get these alks from the acetone, one takes muriatic acid (aka hydrochloric acid in water usually between 28-31% concentration) and adds it dropwise to the solution. Ibogaine HCl should begin to precipitate out. One stops adding the concentrated acid water when the alkaloids stop precipitating. One can filter out the ibogaine HCl and let it dry. This should be pretty pure ibogaine HCl.

    Now there will still be some ibogaine and other mixed alkaloids left in the acetone, but to recover them, one must evaporate the acetone. The problem is that when evaporated, the alkaloids are in an unstable oil form.

    This oil is dissolved in water (as little as needed to dissolve all the oil) then again professional strength, non-sudsy ammonia is added to the water. The other freebase alkaloids will precipitate out of the water/ammonia solution, and these can be collected/filtered from the solution. These are the rest of the alkaloids in freebase form. One could add these alkaloids to the ibogaine HCl for a full alkaloid extract of iboga.

    As I stated earlier, I haven't tried this method yet, however this is exactly how the man who wrote the tek on the internet and at least one other person I have spoken with have had success several times. I will probably try this method very soon on the 40g of bark I have left, and will report back here. I was going to just use the bark to chew or swallow as needed for boosters (fighting cigarette addiction) after I do my vinegar extract for my opiate addiction, but if this might help others, I will give it a shot and work out any details.

    Hope this helps!

    GD
    • Sorry, for this line "One should stop adding ammonia when the precipitate starts to form. " it should have read, "One should stop adding ammonia when the precipitate stops forming." Sorry there is no edit feature, hehe.

      Also a side note, I touched on it briefly, but the freebase alkaloids will be converted to the HCl salt form in the stomach, where the concentration of hydrochloric acid is very high. This will convert any freebase to the salt form in the stomach and will be readily absorbed.

      GD
      • Free-base alkaloids oxidize' this is the reason for no free-basing Iboga alks'

        Acid extration gives Acetic salts or HCL if you use HCL acid in solution'

        If you extract with pure methanol then free-base with ammonia' wash in distilled water' then convert to a acetic acid salt or HCL' you oxidise the moles' taking the hight off the Iboga alks' the experience is very tiring and has no punch'

        Extract with acid and dry!

        Blessings'

        Nobu +
        • Below is the extraction and references I was referring to. I have also had some email correspondence with him, and he claims the freebase alkaloid extract, with vinegar and ammonia to precipitate, is very stable and works fine for dosing, and is much more pure than the plain vinegar extract. i will be doing the plain vinegar extract with Nobuoni's method, and I will perform the extraction on the rest of the bark using Chris Jenks method. When I have the time, I will report on the results. He claims also that when having the alkaloids in a solvent, they are very susceptible to light and can be destroyed very quickly. It's the presence of moisture with the alkaloids, in the sun, that he claims will destroy the alkaloids very quickly.

          This is a reply that can be found on the internet, by him:

          Quote:

          From my years of experience and analysis it doesn't seem that ammonia
          does any harm to ibogaine and similar alkalloids. Indeed, the patent for
          transforming voacangine into ibogaine has voacangine refluxing for hours
          with methanolic potassium hydroxide, yet it survives.

          What I HAVE found to be a problem wrt stability is the physical state of
          the ibogaine. True, the hydrochloride is generally more stable as a solid
          or in solution compared with the base, but the big difference is whether
          it is a solid or liquid, and whether it is exposed to light. You can get
          rid of ibogaine very quickly by dissolving it in an inert solvent like
          petroleum and exposing to direct sunight. The least destructive solvent I
          found for ibogaine or ibogaine HCl was ethanol or water (for the HCl). So
          as Junkboy points out, if your acetate happens to absorb enough water to
          make itself a liquid, it will probably be less stable over time than if it
          had remained solid. Rather than reformulating your extract, I suggest
          keeping it in a cold, dry, dark place. That will probably be good enough.

          I have been surprised how stable TA produced by the vinegar/ammonia
          method is. It seems to retain its potency even after years in the dark at
          room temperature, just like the hydrochloride. The reason this surprises
          me is that if the TA is extracted with a solvent and the solvent is
          allowed to evaporate, I normally get an oil. If the TA only appears solid
          because the oily alkaloids are homogenized with an equal part of solid
          "filler", then I would expect it to be as unstable as a solution of
          ibogaine base, or even less so due to the high surface area, but it seems
          to do much better, thankfully.

          Chris

          End Quote

          There are other people who swear by this method, and claim that it has worked well for them.

          Respectfully,

          GD





          Extraction studies of Tabernanthe iboga
          and Voacanga africana.

          Original Reference: Nat Prod Lett 2002 Feb;16(1):71-6
          Jenks CW.

          Abstract: The root bark of Tabernanthe iboga contains ibogaine as its predominant alkaloid and has been an important source of it. Ibogaine is used experimentally to interrupt drug addiction and allow therapeutic intervention, but is currently unaffordable to doctors in less economically developed countries. To meet this need, an extraction of alkaloids from T. iboga root bark was optimized and simplified to use only diluted vinegar and ammonia, and was successfully applied to related alkaloids from Voacanga africana bark also. The alkaloids were converted to their hydrochlorides and purified, and the minor alkaloids were recovered.

          Keywords: Addiction treatment, Drug addiction, Ibogaine, Ibogaline, Voacangine, Tabernanthe iboga, Voacanga africana
          INTRODUCTION

          The root bark of the Tabernanthe iboga shrub has been used for centuries in West African ceremonies by Bwiti initiation society members entering adulthood (1). The Bwiti believe that the initiates meet their deceased ancestors and thus form a more tangible link with their past and traditions. The principle alkaloid in the root bark is ibogaine (2), which itself possesses pharmacological effects similar to those of the root (3). These effects, which last about 36 hours in human beings after a single oral dose, may include nausea, incoordination, visual after images and closed-eye imagery, introspectiveness, and many psychological experiences which could be of psychotherapeutic value, such as the re-experiencing of past memories in an unthreatening manner (4,5).

          The ability of ibogaine to interrupt addiction was discovered in 1962 by Howard Lotsof of New York (6). Howard was addicted to heroin and took an extremely rare opportunity to ingest ibogaine due to his interest in psychedelics. After the experience he realized that both his desire for heroin and the expected symptoms of withdrawal were absent. This freedom from addiction continued over the following months, and the ability of ibogaine to interrupt addictions to heroin, methadone, cocaine, methamphetamine, and nicotine has since been demonstrated in animals as well as hundreds of human subjects5. Howard Lotsof began patenting the use of ibogaine for treating drug addictions (7) in 1985 and campaigned between 1982 and 1994 to obtain FDA approval for this use. This campaign included initiating research agreements with academic institutions in Canada, Europe, the United States and Central America as well as the National Institute on Drug Abuse (8). In spite of severe financial obstacles for researchers in this area, ibogaine continues to be the focus of continued research and experimental treatment in both animals and humans (5).

          The most popular natural source of ibogaine has been the root bark of T. iboga (2), but the shrub only grows naturally in Africa (3) and currently requires professional training to extract. Existing procedures (2,9) use haloalkanes or alcohols for the extraction and chromatography for the purification of iboga alkaloids and are expensive and difficult because their objective was only to identify the alkaloids present. Ibogaine can also be prepared semisynthetically (10) or synthetically (11), and these methods hold great promise for future development but are currently expensive. Meanwhile affordable ibogaine is needed by researchers and doctors exploring treatment options for addiction in less economically developed countries. This article presents a convenient, inexpensive, and efficient procedure to isolate and purify the alkaloids from T. iboga root bark and enable affordable processing of the bark in Africa without exportation.
          RESULTS AND DISCUSSION

          Analysis of T. iboga root bark using silica TLC, eluting twice with ethyl acetate followed by staining with iodine vapor, showed ibogaine as a dark brown spot (Rf = 0.16) with a trail (depending on concentration), a red spot (Rf = 0.07) belonging to ibogaline below it, and a small brown spot (Rf = 0.21), assumed to be ibogamine, slightly above it. The percentages of ibogaine, ibogaline, and ibogamine appear to be 80%, 15%, and 5% respectively judging by the size and density of the stained spots. The spot for ibogaline gave a red stain using Keller's reagent (12), confirming its identity (9). Occasionally a batch of root would contain ibogaine and ibogamine but little or no ibogaline, and perhaps this was a related Tabernanthe species (9). TLC analysis of root wood, stem bark or leaves of the T. iboga plant showed negligible ibogaine.

          The optimized extraction method involved stirring powdered root bark with vinegar and filtering. Boiling the bark made the vinegar impossible to filter and was unnecessary. Although filter paper or coffee filters worked on a small scale, a cloth sack was more appropriate for large scale filtration. Either shredded or powdered root or root bark were efficiently extracted using this method, although large shavings trapped some alkaloid under the bark. The yield wasn't improved by extracting for longer than an hour, increasing the concentration of acetic acid, or using a larger volume of acetic acid solution. Each extraction of shredded root bark removed about half as much alkaloid as the previous one, so that three extractions gave approximately 87% of the alkaloid potentially extractable from the root. Further extractions were practical only for large batches or if the extracts were then used to extract fresh root in a batch process.

          Ammonia was convenient for basifying the filtered extracts, although other inorganic bases should have worked also. The resulting solid precipitate of total alkaloids (TA) was fortuitous since the expected oil would have necessitated laborious extraction. The TA took fewer hours to filter if the upper liquid was first siphoned off after the solid settled. The TA was dried at room temperature or with gentle warming. Solutions left sitting for more than a few days were contaminated by bacteria.

          The TA solid showed no detectable change according to TLC even after months of exposure to indirect sunlight and air. The solidity and stability of the TA were unexpected because the evaporated acetone extract of it gives an unstable oil.

          The alkaloids in the TA solid were purified (2) by extraction with acetone, leaving a significant amount (50-65%) of dark, insoluble material behind. The dissolved alkaloids were precipitated as their hydrochlorides by adding concentrated hydrochloric acid (HCl) and filtered. The solid was stable during years of storage and being enriched in the major alkaloids is called purified total alkaloid hydrochlorides (PTA HCl). The relative quantities of TA and acetone were optimized for this procedure to maximize the yield of PTA HCl, but the optimum volume of HCl depended on the moles of extracted alkaloid determined by titration with Hcl.

          A significant quantity of ibogaine and other alkaloid hydrochlorides remained in the acetone after this procedure, and the solution darkened over time. Evaporating the acetone gave an oil which was also too unstable to store, but dissolving it in water and adding ammonia gave a solid of the residual alkaloids (RA). This powder was stable during storage, and together with the extracted TA residue and PTA HCl, weighed almost the same as the original TA.

          Recrystallization of PTA HCl from 95% ethanol gave ibogaine HCl with a significant amount of ibogaline still present. Each successive recrystallization removed about half of the remaining ibogaline, but at a cost in yield. Ibogaine HCl crystals dissolved slowly in the boiling ethanol while the solution darkened. Recrystallization from water or mixtures of water and ethanol seemed to remove a larger proportion of ibogaline but also darkened. Recrystallization from 95% ethanol gave greater purification and yield for the base (2) than for the ibogaine HCl, but the base was less stable for both handling in solution and storage, unless melted and solidified into a solid chunk. Chromatography using activity III basic alumina, eluting with cyclohexane followed by benzene or toluene, separated ibogaine (490 mg) and ibogaline (109 mg) from TA, but this method was costly and laborious on a large scale.

          The yield (2.0-2.2%) of PTA HCl from the acetic acid extraction of root bark shavings exceeded those of ethanol or chloroform extractions (0.2-1.1%) and left relatively little alkaloid which could be extracted by other means. The alkaloids which could be extracted using petroleum ether from the acetic acid extract which had been basified and had the TA filtered out amounted to only 1-2% of the weight of the TA.

          Solutions and solid samples of TA, PTA base and PTA HCl were exposed to direct sunlight and air for 10 days to assess their relative stabilities. Only the solids remained intact in sunlight, and the hydrochloride was more stable than the base in general. The rates of decomposition for the alkaloids in different solvents were, from least to greatest: ethanol, water, acetone, chloroform, and petroleum ether.

          The most promising alternative source of ibogaine was its semisynthesis from voacangine, obtained from the bark of the Voacanga africana tree. A patent (10) by Janot and Goutarel claims that while T. iboga root bark contains only 0.3% ibogaine, the more abundant and accessible trunk bark of V. africana contains 0.5% voacangine, which can be easily converted into ibogaine. Extraction of V. africana trunk bark using vinegar (see the experimental section) was highly successful in isolating crude alkaloids. However, extensive attempts to isolate or even identify voacangine in this mixture, or to convert the mixture into ibogaine according to the patent, were completely unsuccessful. A later publication (13) found only 0.14% voacangine in the bark, and suggests that the concentration of voacangine varies.
          EXPERIMENTAL SECTION

          Extraction of T. iboga root (TA). One kg (2.5 L) of powdered T. iboga root and 5 L of 0.5% acetic acid were placed in a 6 L plastic bucket, stirred occasionally for one hour, and filtered through a cloth sack. The sack was wrung to expel all possible liquid from the root powder and the filtrate (pH = 3-4) was basified using 60 mL of 30% ammonia. The resulting flocculent, medium greenish-brown precipitate of TA was patiently gravity filtered through 30 cm filter paper and thoroughly rinsed with distilled water. This procedure was repeated twice more on the same root powder. The filter papers bearing the TA were placed on paper towels on a wire rack and left in a warm draft until successive weighings detected no more than 0.3% loss per day. The hard, dark brown solid weighed 30.037 g (3.0%) and was ground in a mortar and sifted to give a fine brown powder.

          Conversion of alkaloids to the hydrochlorides (PTA HCl). 28.00 g of powdered TA was placed on a filter paper in a funnel and 450 mL of acetone was added in portions with gentle stirring. The funnel was removed and 2 mL of concentrated HCl was slowly added dropwise to the flask with swirling, occasionally adding a trace of PTA HCl from a previous batch to initiate precipitation. After waiting a few minutes to allow precipitation to begin, dropwise HCl (2.8 mL) was added with swirling until the liquid became acidic according to pH paper. A final 0.4 mL of HCl was added dropwise and the flask was placed in the refrigerator overnight. The yellow powder was scraped from the sides of the flask, filtered, rinsed with 84 mL of acetone, and dried at room temperature to give 9.493 g (33.9%) of PTA HCl. The black, spent TA weighed 14.521 g (51.9%) after drying.

          Ibogaine HCl. 9.712 g of PTA HCl was patiently dissolved in 150 mL of boiling 95% ethanol, set overnight at room temperature, refrigerated for two hours, and the mother liquor was decanted from the yellow crystals (4.412 g). Recrystallizing again from 80 mL of 95% ethanol gave 3.666 g of mostly pure ibogaine HCl.

          Recovery of residual alkaloids (RA). Most of the acetone was distilled from the filtrate from the preparation of PTA HCl and the remainder was evaporated using a stream of air. The dark residue was dissolved in 400 mL of distilled water, filtered, and basified to pH 9 using 3 mL of 30% ammonia. The medium yellow suspension was filtered through a fresh coffee filter paper and left on a warm surface to dry. The chunks of light, chalky, off-white alkaloid residue weighed 4.750 g (17.0%).

          Extraction of V. africana trunk bark (VTA). One kg of powdered trunk bark was extracted in the same manner as the T. iboga root above, resulting in 59.723 g (6.0%) of crumbly brown voacanga total alkaloids (VTA).

          Conversion of alkaloids to the hydrochlorides (VPTA HCl). 75.00 g of VTA was treated in a manner similar to the PTA HCl above, resulting in 35.929 g (43.6%) of medium brown VPTA HCl. The spent VTA weighed 31.534 g (42.0%).

          Recovery of residual alkaloids. The filtrate from the preparation of VPTA HCl was treated in a manner similar to the PTA HCl filtrate above, resulting in 12.119 g (16.2%) of chalky, off-white solid.

          Acknowledgment: I would like to thank my friends Karl Naeher and Eric Taub for their encouragement and support in this research.
          REFERENCES

          1. J. W. Fernandez. Bwiti: An Ethnography of the Religious Imagination of Africa. Princeton University Press, Princeton, NJ, (1982).
          2. D. F. Dickel; C. L. Holden; R. C. Maxfield; L. E. Paszek and W. I. Taylor. "The alkaloids of Tabernanthe iboga. Part III. Isolation studies." Journal of the American Chemical Society, (1958), 80, 123-125.
          3. R. E. Schultes and A. Hofmann. The Botany and Chemistry of Hallucinogens, 2nd ed. C. C. Thomas, Springfield, IL, (1980), 233-240.
          4. C. Naranjo. The Healing Journey. Pantheon Books, Div. Random House, NY, (1973), 174-228.
          5. P. Popik; R. T. Layer and P. Skolnick. "100 Years of ibogaine - neurochemical and pharmacological actions of a putative anti-addictive drug." Pharmacological Reviews, (1995), 47(2), 235-253. S. G. Sheppard. "A preliminary investigation of ibogaine: case reports and recommendations for further study." Journal of Substance Abuse Treatment, (1994), 11(4), 379-385.
          6. S. Nadis. "The mystery of ibogaine: can an African psychedelic cure addiction?" Omni, (July 1993), 15(9), 14.
          7. H. S. Lotsof. "Rapid method for interrupting the narcotic addiction syndrome." United States patent, (1985), 4,499,096; Cocaine and amphetamine: US patent, (1986), 4,587,243; Alcohol: US patent, (1989), 4,857,523; Nicotine: US patent, (1991), 5,026,697; Poly-drug dependency: US patent, (1992), 5,152,994.
          8. Howard Lotsof, personal communication. Also see www.ibogaine.org
          9. N. Neuss. "Alkaloids from Apocyanaceae. II. Ibogaline, a new alkaloid from Tabernanthe iboga Baill." Journal of Organic Chemistry, (1959), 24, 2047-2048.
          10. M-M. Janot and R. Goutarel. "Derivatives of the ibogaine alkaloids." United States patent, (November 19, 1957), 2,813,873.
          11. B. M. Trost; S. A. Godleski and J. P. Genet. "A total synthesis of racemic and optically active ibogamine. Utilization and mechanism of a new silver ion assisted palladium catalyzed cyclization." Journal of the American Chemical Society, (1978), 100(12), 3930-3931.
          12. A. Hofmann and F. Troxler. "Esters of Indoles." United States patent, (January 29, 1963), 3,075,992. C. C. Keller. "Neue Studien uber Secale Cornutum, Ergotinin, Cornutin, Spasmotin." Schweizerische Wochenschrift fur Chemie und Pharmacie, (1896), 34, 65-74.
          13. D. W. Thomas and K. Biemann. "The alkaloids of Voacanga africana." Lloydia, (1968), 31(1), 1-8.

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