Mental Therapy by training brain waves


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Bio-feedback and Neuro feedback Brain Wave entrainment

Appearing like a bizarre scene from a 1960s science fiction movie:
Patients with electrodes attached to their skulls sit deep
in concentration, focusing their minds to control the beeps
and squiggly lines produced by an electronic monitor.

Now these fantastic visions are unfolding with increasing
frequency in real medical clinics around the country;
people with epilepsy, attention deficit disorder and other
forms of serious mental illness are treating these ailments
by learning to control electrical patterns in their own
brains. This therapy, known as neurofeedback, is emerging
as the hottest new twist on biofeedback.

Though biofeedback was first developed by psychologists,
its primary uses have been for illnesses below the neck.
Standard biofeedback teaches you first to become conscious
of normally unconscious functions such as pulse, digestion
and body temperature, then teaches you to control them in
response to sounds or other cues from monitoring devices.
These techniques have allowed patients to lower their blood
pressure, banish their headaches and control their
incontinence without using drugs.

Now new insights into the biology of mental illness have
made it possible to treat them in a similar fashion.

Aerobics for the brain

In neurofeedback (also known as neurotherapy), therapists
attach electrodes to patients' unshaved scalps. Through
these electrodes, a device measures electrical impulses
in the brain, amplifies them and then records them. These
impulses are divided into different types of brain waves.

For example, in order to concentrate on a task, parts of
the brain must produce more high-frequency beta waves.
To relax, the brain must produce more low-frequency theta
waves.

Using a program similar to a computer game (only without
a joystick), people learn to control the video display by
achieving the mental state that produces increases in the
desired brain wave. Some practitioners call it "aerobics
for the brain."

In epilepsy, where once only medications and surgery could
reduce seizures, neurofeedback is showing results. A German
study published in the April 1999 journal Clinical
Neurophysiology found that two-thirds of epilepsy patients
could reduce their seizure rate by learning to control very
low frequency brain waves in the cortex.

"In people with epilepsy, part of the brain has become
unstable, and occasionally it triggers the rest of the brain
into seizure," explains Siegfried Othmer, Ph.D., an Encino,
California, physicist who trains biofeedback therapists.
"Neurofeedback may help stabilize those circuits and reduce
the probability of seizures."


New understanding

The use of neurofeedback for psychiatric problems depends
on recent understanding about these diseases. In the 1960s,
when biofeedback was developed as a therapy, schizophrenia
and attention deficit were considered mainly the result of
emotional trauma or poor upbringing.

Consequently, biofeedback practitioners first focused on
obviously physical problems. Now scientists understand better
the electrical and chemical components of mental illness,
creating opportunities for neurofeedback.

Children with attention deficit hyperactivity disorder (ADHD)
use neurofeedback games to reduce theta waves and increase
beta waves, increasing their attentiveness. Joel Lubar, Ph.D.,
a psychologist at the University of Tennessee, Knoxville, who
originated neurofeedback treatment for ADHD in the 1970s, says
neurofeedback can produce some of the same brain wave changes
as drugs used to treat the disorder.

In a 1998 study published in the December issue of Applied
Psychophysiology and Biofeedback, researchers in Ontario,
Canada, taught ADHD patients biofeedback and learning
strategies. They found a significant improvement in symptoms
(such as impulsiveness and inattention) after 40 EEG biofeedback
sessions, as well as a change in the ratio of beta to theta waves.

"Biofeedback can not only help a child use brain waves they
don't usually employ, but it may also help increase blood flow
to specific parts of the brain involved with ADHD," says Lubar.
"Used with behavior therapies that incorporate classroom and
homework skills, neurofeedback can help these children become
less dependent on stimulants like Ritalin."

More than 700 groups nationwide are using EEG biofeedback for
ADD/ADHD, according to the Association for Applied Psychotherapy
and Biofeedback, an organization of biofeedback practitioners.
The ADHD therapists have reported that patients experienced a
60 to 80 percent significant improvement in symptoms and much
less need for medicine.

Dr. J. Alan Cook, a psychiatrist in Mt. Vernon, Washington,
uses it for 25 to 35 percent of his patients, treating such
problems as depression, addiction, bipolar disorder and ADHD.
"Once the training has been completed, patients seem to retain
the benefits long term," he says.

Crossing a new frontier in neurotherapy, researchers from London,
England, reported in the December 1999 International Journal of
Psychophysiology that a group of schizophrenic people had used
neurofeedback to create some of the same electrical patterns
that schizophrenia drugs produce in the brain. Though the
investigators couldn't tell from this short experiment how the
neurofeedback might affect the patients' symptoms, they considered
it a successful first step toward developing a new treatment.

As scientists understand better how the brain works -- or
fails to work -- they are finding more and more ways it can
heal itself.
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