Nov 212009
 

Applied Psychophysiology Biofeedback. 2002 Dec;27(4):231-49.
Monastra VJ, Monastra DM, George S. FPI Attention Disorders Clinic, Endicott, New York USA

 

NOTE THAT MANY ADDICTS HAVE ADD OR ADHD.

One hundred children, ages 6-19, who were diagnosed with attention-deficit/hyperactivity disorder (ADHD), either inattentive or combined types, participated in a study examining the effects of Ritalin, EEG biofeedback, and parenting style on the primary symptoms of ADHD. All of the patients participated in a 1-year, multimodal, outpatient program that included Ritalin, parent counseling, and academic support at school (either a 504 Plan or an IEP). Fifty-one of the participants also received EEG biofeedback therapy. Post treatment assessments were conducted both with and without stimulant therapy.

Significant improvement was noted on the Test of Variables of Attention (TOVA; L. M. Greenberg, 1996) and the Attention Deficit Disorders Evaluation Scale (ADDES; S. B. McCarney, 1995) when participants were tested while using Ritalin. However, only those who had received EEG biofeedback sustained these gains when tested without Ritalin.

The results of a Quantitative Electroencephalographic Scanning Process (QEEG-Scan; V. J. Monastra et al., 1999) revealed significant reduction in cortical slowing only in patients who had received EEG biofeedback. Behavioral measures indicated that parenting style exerted a significant moderating effect on the expression of behavioral symptoms at home but not at school.

Sep 262009
 

Date: (Thursday, August 31, 1995)
J Clin Psychol. 1995 Sep;51(5):685-93.
Saxby E, Peniston EG. Biofeedback Center, Pacific Grove, CA USA.

This was an experimental study of 14 alcoholic outpatients using the Peniston and Kulkosky (1989, 1991) brainwave treatment protocol for alcohol abuse. After temperature biofeedback pre-training, experimental subjects completed 20 40-minute sessions of alpha-theta brainwave neurofeedback training (BWNT).

Experimentally treated alcoholics with depressive syndrome showed sharp reductions in self-assessed depression (Beck’s Depression Inventory). On the Millon Clinical Multiaxial Inventory-I, the experimental subjects showed significant decreases on the BR scores: schizoid, avoidant, dependent, histrionic, passive-aggression, schizotypal, borderline, anxiety, somatoform, hypomanic, dysthmic, alcohol abuse, drug abuse, psychotic thinking, and psychotic depression. Twenty-one-month follow-up data indicated sustained prevention of relapse in alcoholics who completed BWNT.

Aug 182009
 

American Journal of Drug and Alcohol Abuse, August, 2005 by William C. Scott, David Kaiser, Siegfried Othmer, Stephen I. Sideroff

Neurofeedback has been successfully used to treat patients with alcoholism and drug addiction. Peniston and Kulkowsky (1989) used neurofeedback with chronic alcoholics. Those alcoholics treated with neurofeedback had significantly fewer relapses as compared to a control group of alcoholics that did not receive neurofeedback. Those patients treated with neurofeedback had reduced levels of depression as well. On four-year follow-up (Peniston & Kulkowsky, 1990), fully 80% of those patients treated with neurofeedback remained sober, compared to only 20% of the control group.

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