Health Report — What Carbo/Taxol Actually Did To Your Nerve Fibres, And What Reaches Them
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HEALTH REPORT
Patient Perspectives in Survivorship Care
Survivorship · Chemotherapy-Induced Peripheral Neuropathy · First-Person
A Patient's Investigation

I survived cancer. Then I spent fourteen months figuring out why nothing was reaching the nerve damage chemo left behind.

Gabapentin, Lyrica, Cymbalta, B12, alpha-lipoic acid — none of them touched the burning in my feet or the numbness in my hands. The reason has nothing to do with my nerves being too damaged. It has to do with where the damage actually lives — and why every pill I was offered was working on the wrong end of the wire.

Older woman's hands resting on a wooden table in soft natural light
My husbands silent way of supporting me... A plastic cup after the 4 ceramics I broke.

The first time I dropped a coffee cup, my husband thought I was being dramatic. The second time, he stopped saying anything. By the fifth time, there was a plastic mug in the cupboard he'd put there without telling me.

I finished my last round of carboplatin and paclitaxel fourteen months ago. The cancer is gone. What stayed is the version of my hands and feet that can't feel a paintbrush, can't button a cardigan without watching the buttons, and won't tell me where the floor is.

That last one is what scared me. It started slowly — a numbness in my fingertips during round three of chemo. By round six it had spread into the balls of my feet. Then a few months after treatment ended, the numbness in my feet turned into burning at night. The kind that makes you sleep with a pillow between your skin and the sheets, because the sheets are unbearable. The kind that wakes you up at 2 a.m. and won't let you go back down. I read a lot of books that year. I had no choice.

And when I'd stand up in the morning, the floor felt like sand. Loose. Unreliable. Like walking on a beach in the dark. I started holding the kitchen counter on my way to the coffee pot. I was an art teacher for thirty-one years. I'm sixty-four. I'm not supposed to be holding the counter.

Everything they offered me made me feel worse than the neuropathy did

My neurologist started me on gabapentin. Six weeks in, I felt like I'd had two glasses of wine before lunch every day. I couldn't drive in the late afternoon. I couldn't follow a recipe. I came off it.

Then Lyrica. Same fog, different brand. Then Cymbalta — that one flattened my mood without touching the burning. Then a list of things from the survivor forums: B12, alpha-lipoic acid, acupuncture, a CBD balm from a health food store, Nervive. Each one for at least two months. None of them moved the dial in any honest way.

The closest thing to relief I got was a compounded cream from a pain clinic — and it took a four-month referral wait and ninety dollars a tube to find that out. It helped enough that I started asking a different question.

If a cream worked better than three different prescription pills — why was nobody talking about creams?

A bedside table at night with a mug and a book under warm lamplight
2 a.m. became the only time I had to read. The burning in my feet didn't care that I had a morning.

The reason has nothing to do with how damaged your nerves are. It has to do with where the damage is.

What I'm about to tell you took me three weeks of late-night reading to piece together. Most of it came from Reddit threads in survivor communities, and then from a clinical guideline document my oncologist never mentioned — the ESMO-EONS-EANO 2020 Clinical Practice Guidelines on chemotherapy-induced peripheral neuropathy. ESMO is the European cancer society. The guideline is public. Anyone can read it.

Here's what it comes down to.

Chemotherapy doesn't damage your nerves the way a stroke or a pinched disc does. It damages a very specific kind of nerve — the small fibers that live in the skin of your hands and feet. Within millimeters of the surface. Those are the wires that report temperature, vibration, light touch, where the floor is. When chemo metabolizes, it pools at those endings. They burn out from the tip backward.

Gabapentin, Lyrica, Cymbalta — those drugs work in your central nervous system. Your spinal cord. Your brain. They try to turn the volume down on a pain signal at the place where the signal arrives.

The damage is at the other end of the wire.

It was like calling a plumber for an electrical fire. The professional was real. The tools were real. They were just designed for a different problem in a different part of the house.

And it isn't one thing going wrong at that nerve. It's three. That's the part that finally unlocked it for me — and the part nobody in the eight specialists' offices I'd been in had ever sat me down and explained.

One — the damage is still happening. Chemo started a chemical reaction inside the nerve fibers that didn't stop when treatment ended. A self-amplifying loop where damaged tissue leaks toxic byproducts, which damage more tissue, which leaks more byproducts. Like a kitchen fire nobody called the fire department for — not engulfing the house, just smoldering inside the walls for months. Until that fire is out, nothing can heal.

Two — the surviving nerves are starving. Not every fiber is gone. A lot of them are damaged but still alive — cut off from the materials the nervous system uses to rebuild itself. Like workers at a remote outpost whose supply line went down months ago. Still there. Still trying. Running on empty.

Three — the survivors that did make it are stuck broadcasting false alarms. The fibers that came through chemotherapy didn't come out quiet. Chemo flipped their internal switches — turned up the "send pain" channels, shut off the "calm down after firing" channels. The result is a nerve fiber broadcasting constant random pain signals with no injury occurring. It's a smoke alarm with a fried sensor. Blaring all day, all night, through the weekend. No smoke. No fire. And no amount of waving a towel at it makes it stop.

Three problems. Happening at the same time. At a place oral medication has almost no way to reach in meaningful concentration.

This is why nothing worked. Not because the medicine wasn't strong enough. Because every drug was working on one piece, in the wrong location, at a dose too diluted to make a real difference where it needed to.

What actually reaches small nerve fibers in skin

The pivot, once I understood it, was almost embarrassingly obvious.

If the damage is millimeters under your skin, in your hands and feet — then anything that's going to help has to get millimeters under your skin, in your hands and feet. That's not philosophy. That's just where the wire is.

You don't paint a watercolor by pouring the bucket on the roof. You put the pigment where the paper is.

Every oral CIPN treatment — gabapentin, Lyrica, B12 capsules, duloxetine — has to enter through your stomach, pass through your liver, dilute into five liters of blood, and arrive at the nerve ending at a fraction of its original concentration, chemically transformed along the way. It's like trying to water one specific plant in the corner of your garden by flooding the entire neighborhood and hoping enough of it reaches the roots.

A topical skips every step of that. The compounds cross the skin and reach the nerve directly — at concentrations nothing taken orally can survive long enough to deliver. Topical isn't a format preference. It's a delivery strategy built around the actual anatomy of where the damage lives.

And once you're delivering at the right place, the research kept pointing to the same three-layer approach. One fix for each of the three problems. In order. Because the order matters — you can't renovate a house that's still on fire.

Dried botanicals including Devil's Claw root and frankincense resin arranged on parchment
The compounds aren't new. The combination — at clinical doses, applied to the right place — is.
The Three Layers · In Sequence
1

Put The Fire Out

Stop the self-amplifying inflammatory loop that's still corroding the nerves. PEA — palmitoylethanolamide — interrupts the glial cell cytokine output keeping the nerve in active self-destruction. Until the smoldering stops, nothing can rebuild.

2

Restock The Supply Line

Deliver the materials the nervous system uses to rebuild itself, in the forms it can actually absorb. Benfotiamine — the fat-soluble form of B1 that crosses cell membranes ordinary B1 can't. Methylcobalamin — the active form of B12 that participates in rebuilding myelin. Arnica supports both by keeping the local circulation moving so the rebuilding materials reach the fibers that need them.

3

Reset The Alarm

Send the calm-down signal to the fibers stuck broadcasting. Therapeutic-grade L-menthol activates the TRPM8 receptor — a specific switch on peripheral nerve fibers. Boswellia (AKBA-standardized) blocks the 5-LOX inflammatory pathway. Devil's Claw (harpagoside-standardized) blocks the COX-2 inflammatory pathway. Three separate routes into the same problem.

The menthol piece is the one nobody had ever explained to me correctly. The cooling isn't masking anything. The cooling is what TRPM8 activation feels like. A 2022 review in Frontiers in Molecular Neuroscience established that almost all of menthol's pain-quieting effect comes from activating that receptor specifically. TRPM8 is exactly what pharmaceutical companies are studying right now as a treatment target for chemo neuropathy.

There's a published Phase II clinical trial — the one cited in the ESMO guidelines — where a topical menthol formula was tested specifically on chemotherapy patients with treatment-related neuropathic pain after other options had failed. Seventy-five percent showed measurable pain reduction.

And one detail that matters if you had oxaliplatin: menthol activates TRPM8, which is the calm-down receptor. Oxaliplatin damaged TRPA1, the cold-danger receptor. They are completely separate pathways. Menthol doesn't touch TRPA1 — it's like a working door chime on the passenger side of a car with a broken alarm on the driver's side. Pressing one doesn't trigger the other. Which means this approach is safe for the FOLFOX and CAPOX patients for whom cold sensitivity has made every other topical impossible.

Once I understood the three layers, the question wasn't whether a topical could help nerve pain. It was whether anyone had actually built one with all three layers in the right doses.

What I was looking for, and what I found

Most of what I found wasn't it. Frankincense balms with trace amounts of Boswellia. Menthol roll-ons with the cheap synthetic kind. B12 in capsules that don't reach skin at all. PEA in supplement form — when PEA needs to be delivered to the nerve, not to my stomach. The compounded cream from the pain clinic was the only thing I'd ever tried where someone had clearly thought about where the damage was before formulating it — but it was still missing layers one and two.

Eventually someone in a survivor forum mentioned a brand that had built a topical around all three layers, at clinically meaningful doses, with the actives verified by HPLC testing and a certificate of analysis published per batch. It's called Herbavera. I ordered it skeptically. I read the COA before I opened the jar.

Older hands holding a paintbrush in soft afternoon light
The cardigan is the daily test. The paintbrush is the long-term one.

The formula, in plain English

Herbavera Cream · Active Compounds & Layer Map
PEA95% palmitoylethanolamide
L1 + L3Interrupts the ongoing inflammatory loop driving the nerve toward self-destruction. The only ingredient targeting the glial cell feedback at the source.
Benfotiamine98% standardized · fat-soluble B1
L2Crosses lipid cell membranes ordinary B1 can't. Delivers the metabolic cofactor nerve fibers use for energy and structural repair.
Methylcobalamin99% standardized · active B12
L2The neurologically active form. Directly participates in rebuilding myelin — the protective coating around nerve fibers that chemo stripped away.
Arnica Montana15% sesquiterpene lactones
L2 + L3Improves local microcirculation so rebuilding materials reach the nerve, and inhibits NF-κB inflammatory signaling upstream of where ibuprofen works.
Boswellia70% boswellic acids · 30% AKBA
L3Blocks the 5-LOX inflammatory pathway most directly involved in nerve inflammation. 2024 research suggests AKBA may also protect nerve cells from inflammatory damage.
Devil's Claw20% standardized harpagoside
L3Blocks COX-2 and iNOS — a separate inflammatory pathway from Boswellia. European pharmacopoeia has used it for nerve-adjacent pain for over a century.
L-MentholUSP grade · 99% purity · natural
L3TRPM8 receptor activation — the same target pharma is studying for CIPN. The cooling you feel is the receptor working, not the product masking. Specifically safe for oxaliplatin patients.

It's a cream. I apply it to my hands and feet in the morning, and again before bed. No prescription. No referral. No four-month wait. Nothing passes through my liver. My oncology team knows I use it.

The menthol layer activates within a couple of minutes the first time — that's the TRPM8 doing its job, and you can feel the moment it engages. The deeper layers — the part that lets you button a cardigan without looking, the part that quiets the burning at 2 a.m., the part that puts the floor back under your feet — took me about five weeks of consistent twice-daily use.

See the formula and the COA
Certificate of analysis published per batch · Free U.S. shipping

Other women, eventually

Bare feet on a wooden deck in soft early morning light
Standing barefoot on the deck without flinching is a small thing. It wasn't a small thing eight months ago.
"I survived ovarian cancer. I did not survive it to spend the rest of my life unable to feel my husband's hand. Five weeks in — I can feel his hand again."
— Maureen, ovarian cancer survivor · 2 years post-treatment
"The first night the sheets didn't burn my feet, I cried. I had forgotten that sheets were supposed to feel like nothing."
— Lisa, breast cancer · 18 months post-carbo/taxol
"Oxaliplatin took my balance. I was using a cane on uneven ground. I'm not now. That is the whole review."
— Ellen, colon cancer · 3 years post-FOLFOX

Herbavera offers a ninety-day guarantee with no return required — you can keep the jar. That was the first thing anyone in this space had ever offered me that wasn't a thirty-day trial-to-paid-subscription trap. It's the only reason I tried it, honestly.

If the only thing I'd done differently was find this six months earlier, I'd have my hands back six months sooner. That's the trade I think about.

Read the science and the formula
90-day guarantee · No return required · Free U.S. shipping
I wrote this because nobody told me, and someone should have. — Carol M.
Reader Questions
Can I use this while I'm still taking gabapentin or Lyrica?
Yes. Topical application doesn't interact with systemic medications — different delivery route, different mechanism. I'd still tell your oncology team you're using it, the way I did.
How is this different from Voltaren, Aspercreme, or lidocaine patches?
Those are formulated for musculoskeletal pain — muscles, joints, soft tissue. Lidocaine numbs the area; it doesn't address what the chemo did. Voltaren is an NSAID for joint inflammation, not nerve inflammation. Different problem, different tool.
What if I have oxaliplatin-induced CIPN with cold sensitivity?
Menthol activates TRPM8, which is the calm-signal receptor. Oxaliplatin damaged TRPA1, the cold-danger receptor. They are completely separate pathways — menthol doesn't touch TRPA1. This is specifically why the formula is safe for FOLFOX, CAPOX, and other platinum-based regimens.
How long until I'd know if it's working for me?
The menthol layer activates within minutes — that's the receptor engagement. The deeper layers took me four to six weeks of twice-daily use. The ninety-day guarantee gives you time to know.
Is this approved by the FDA?
It's a topical cosmetic with botanical and nutritional actives — not a prescription drug, so it's not FDA-approved the way medications are. The individual ingredients are well-documented in published research, and the certificate of analysis verifies the active compound concentrations per batch.
How long does one jar last?
Applied to both hands and both feet twice a day, a jar lasted me roughly five weeks. The subscription option works out cheaper if you decide to keep using it.
See the formula at tryherbavera.com
Certificate of analysis · Ingredient sourcing · 90-day guarantee