Dec 182009
 

February 2006 Issue:

Train Your Brain – Mental exercises with neurofeedback may ease symptoms of attention-deficit disorder, epilepsy and depression–and even boost cognition in healthy brains.

By Ulrich Kraft

At first the computer game looks awfully easy for an eight-year-old–like something out of the Stone Age of arcades in the 1980s. A red triangle “arrow” appears on the monitor’s blue screen, and then the nose of a cartoon airplane glides into view from the left. If the arrow points upward, Ben must make the plane climb. When he succeeds, a spiky yellow sun beams.
     

A second glance shows that all is not as it seems. For one thing, Ben has no joystick. Instead several electrodes glued to the boy’s face and to the skin under his hair let him pilot the plane by thought alone. Such “mind reading” offers many possible applications. It has, for instance, enabled “locked-in” patients–who cannot speak or gesture–to communicate with caregivers [see “Thinking Out Loud,” by Nicola Neumann and Niels Birbaumer; Scientific American Mind, Premier Issue, Vol. 14, No. 5, 2004].

By controlling their brain waves, the patients manipulate letters and words on a computer screen. Practice with neurofeedback may also benefit those who suffer from epilepsy, attention deficits, depression and other debilitating mental disorders. The experimental therapy, also called EEG biofeedback, may even help rev up healthy brains, improving cognitive performance….

Read the full article here: http://www.neurofeedback.org/images/Scientific_American_Mind_Train_Your_Brain_02_06.doc

 Posted by at 10:55 pm
Dec 012009
 

Bicycling Magazine recently ran a few interesting articles on how exercise can help improve symptoms of ADHD, Depression, and Anxiety, as well as boosting memory. While everyone knows that keeping fit and active is one of the keys to staying physically healthy, it is interesting to see how this is finally being recognized and quantified in the field of mental health as well. The first article is not particularly detailed, but offers a good, high level, overview: http://bicycling.com/article/0,6610,s1-3-12-21052-1,00.html

Additionally, one of the articles went into a surprising amount of detail about the power of the pharmaceutical industry and how they direct the public focus at drug treatments, at the expense of public awareness of alternatives. Bicycling points out that the first studies of exercise as an ADHD treatment were done 30-years ago, yet few people are aware that there are equally effective alternatives to drugs. They suggest that this may be due to the large pharmaceutical industry contributions to the various advocacy organizations, although the general sentiment is that, over the last few years, organizations like CHADD (Children and Adults with ADHD) have made a concerted effort to also share information on alternative therapies for ADHD: http://bicycling.com/article/0,6610,s1-3-12-21051-1,00.html

Nov 202009
 

Aerobics For The BrainChicago Tribune Article, edited; November 2007

After 20 years of anti-depressant drugs and therapy, Lisa Ferguson still struggled with anxiety, poor sleep and panic attacks. Then she met a doctor who suggested neurofeedback. Ferguson gave it a month, saw improvement and stuck with it. “My sleep is incredibly better,” she said. “I can function during the
day without ruminating, without worrying. It’s been wonderful.”

A recent article in the Chicago Tribune recounted similar impressive clinical data for patients with a host of cognitive disorders using neurofeedback therapy. Aerobics for the brain, neurofeedback is a mental exercise designed to optimize brain function by altering dysfunctional brain-wave patterns.

Dr. Kyle R.Bonesteel, assistant professor of neurology at Loyola University Medical
Center says that neurofeedback, used as part of a multifaceted treatment plan, improves a variety of specific cognitive impairments besides depression, ADD and ADHD. In his clinic, he helps people with insomnia, traumatic brain injury,
post-traumatic stress, chronic fatigue, mild autism and epilepsy — often without medication. Research indicates that neurofeedback produces some of the same brain-wave changes as drugs used to treat ADD and ADHD.

You can chemically condition the brain with pills or do it with neurofeedback,” Bonesteel said. But neurofeedback trains more specifically than pills, without the side effects. It also changes the brain for the better in an ongoing way.”

Julie Hancher’s 8-year-old son, Nathan, who experienced many problems at school, was diagnosed with ADHD. “He was having trouble focusing and being attentive to the teacher,” said Hancher, who lives in the northwest suburbs. “He was getting angry and having trouble completing his assignments.”

Taking large doses of Concerta, a timed-release variation of the same ingredient in Ritalin, “was making him too lethargic and sleepy,” so she and her husband were desperate for an alternative. They located a neurofeedback clinic where their son used a video-game interface, such that controlling brain waves takes the form of slowing or speeding up a rocket ship or race car.

“I just play the game, it’s fun,” Nathan said. He goes once a week for an hour. “We saw gradual improvement,” Hancher said. “He’s more attentive, with improved coping skills and less anxiety. He takes less medication, and he’s totally focused in therapy.

Neurofeedback is based on a kind of brain mapping called quantitative electroencephalography, or QEEG. It involves measuring brain-wave frequency
that correlates to mental states. Cognitive disorders, such as attention-deficit disorder (ADD) or anxiety, show up as aberrant brain waves. The objective is to normalize brain waves.

Depending on the condition and its severity, neurofeedback treatment might take 20 to 40 or more one-hour sessions. But positive results seem to stick.

Dr. Elsa Baehr, director of NeurQuest Ltd. in Skokie, has treated people with neurofeedback therapy for 15 years. We have data on patients 5 years, 10 years, 13 years after treatment,” she said. The condition is holding. They’re not depressed. It’s been a very effective treatment.”

Full article available here: http://archives.chicagotribune.com/2007/nov/11/health/chi-1111_health1_rq_dnov11

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.

 Posted by at 8:03 pm