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Stanford Psychiatrist Reports TMS Depression Treatment Achieves 60-90% Remission in Five Days

Huberman Lab · Essentials: Psychedelics & Neurostimulation for Brain Rewiring | Dr. Nolan Williams · June 4, 2026
Stanford Psychiatrist Reports TMS Depression Treatment Achieves 60-90% Remission in Five Days
Huberman Lab
Huberman Lab
Essentials: Psychedelics & Neurostimulation for Brain Rewiring | Dr. Nolan Williams
"What we've found is that folks will, within 1 to 5 days, in more cases than not, and depending upon if you're looking at this open label or in trials, somewhere between 60 and 90% of the time, they will go into full-on remission in the sense they're totally normal from a mood standpoint at the end of this."
Dr. Nolan Williams described Stanford's accelerated TMS protocol, which compresses 7.5 months of traditional treatment into 5 days using spaced learning theory. Patients receive 90 minutes of magnetic brain stimulation spread across 10 hours daily for 5 consecutive days, targeting the dorsolateral prefrontal cortex. Some patients have maintained remission for up to 4 years, though durability remains variable.

About this episode

In this Huberman Lab Essentials episode, host Andrew Huberman interviewed Dr. Nolan Williams, a Stanford psychiatrist and neurologist specializing in treatment-resistant depression and brain stimulation technologies. The conversation centered on revolutionary approaches to treating severe depression, particularly Williams' Stanford Neuromodulation Therapy (SNT), which achieves 60-90% remission rates within 1-5 days by compressing 7.5 months of traditional TMS treatment into an intensive protocol. Williams revealed the American Heart Association recently added depression as the fourth major cardiovascular risk factor alongside hypertension, cholesterol, and diabetes, underscoring depression's systemic health impact. The discussion challenged foundational psychiatric assumptions, with Williams explicitly stating the chemical imbalance theory is false and proposing 'Psychiatry 3.0' focused on correctable brain circuits rather than serotonin deficits or irreversible childhood trauma. Williams presented first-in-human ibogaine research with Navy SEALs and special forces veterans, reporting dramatic resolution of moral injury and PTSD symptoms after 24-36 hour sessions described as 'ten years of psychotherapy in a night.' The conversation covered psilocybin trials showing two-thirds clinical improvement in depression, MDMA's efficacy for PTSD with effects lasting years, and a Brazilian prison study demonstrating ayahuasca reduced recidivism rates. Williams emphasized these substances should never be recreational and require strict medical supervision, positioning psychedelic-assisted therapy as a potential breakthrough combining drug effects with psychotherapeutic processing. Throughout, he stressed the importance of rigorous clinical trials and treating depression as a fixable electrophysiological problem rather than permanent deficiency.

Key takeaways

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