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Improve mental health with neurofeedback

How you can train your brain to help reduce stress, enhance creativity and improve mental health.

Blaine Greteman | March 2009 issue

Beth Black, for example, fairly raves about the way Wuttke's neurofeedback regimen impacted her 7-year-old son. "Ethan's a completely different kid now," she says. When Black adopted Ethan at 5 months old, he'd already endured severe neglect and suspected pre-natal drug use by his mother, so it wasn't entirely surprising that the boy faced challenges. Still, by the time he entered first grade at age 6 it was clear to Black, director of the Family Art Therapy Center in Clayton, Georgia, that Ethan's problems were cause for serious concern. "We first noticed that when you teased him, he wouldn't understand or react normally, but would have these explosive tantrums," she explains.

Failing socially and academically, Ethan hated school despite the efforts of his teachers and his mother to implement a program of special instruction and behavioral therapy. "He said no one liked him and he wanted to die, and when he would get really upset he would have to exhaust himself before he could get control," Black recalls. A child psychologist labeled Ethan with ADHD and prescribed medication, but Black was desperate to avoid drugs and turned to Wuttke instead. Using an evaluative brain-wave scan, Wuttke determined that Ethan lacked normal levels of beta, the relatively fast waves associated with attention and concentrated thought.

They implemented a training program of neurofeedback and listening therapy to boost this band and improve the boy's concentration, and within two weeks Black was a believer. "For the first time ever, he could tell me a story in sequence; within three weeks, he was scoring 100s on his spelling tests and just blowing us and his teachers away." After seven weeks, Ethan was able to calm himself, and the explosive anger was a thing of the past.

Black was so impressed that she applied for a grant to use neurofeedback with the juvenile offenders sent to her clinic regularly for court-assigned behavioral therapy. Counseling these young offenders had been "a waste of money," according to Black, but the seven juvenile offenders who entered the program of intensive neurofeedback therapy flourished.

"The judge came to us at the end of this program," Wuttke remembers, "and said, 'What did you do to these kids?'" Within weeks those who'd dropped out were back in school, performing so well on standardized tests that their learning disabilities seemed to have disappeared.

Such stories abound. "Our whole family was in trouble because of my daughter's depression and discipline problems," says Joann Bullard, whose daughter received treatment at Wuttke's clinic in the Netherlands. "She was going to have to go on medication because there just weren't any other options," Bullard says, but after 60 sessions of neurotherapy, "there was a total turnaround, and we're grateful every day." Another father, Ben Odukwe, says he visited specialists around the world after his son Onura was diagnosed with mild autism, but saw no real results until the boy entered Jacob's Ladder school and began a neurofeedback program under Wuttke's supervision. Onura's father notes that the boy's "communication, his confidence, his handwriting and dexterity all transformed," and at age 16, he's entering mainstream school for the first time.

Neurofeedback doesn't cure conditions like ADHD, depression or addiction. Instead, it enables people to produce the appropriate brain waves, which helps provide the attention, rest or contemplative awareness needed to deal with underlying issues. You can't manufacture these brain waves by force of will. I quickly discovered that success comes from letting go. "It's not a conscious thing," Wuttke emphasizes. You have to "surrender to the process [and] let your brain take over. You are going to deep parts of the brain and neutralizing disruptive brain waves, and often in this extreme state of quietude, key memories and patterns come up, almost like you're in a half dream state, and there's sort of a rewiring that occurs."

Wuttke likes to say our brain tends to follow certain "scripts," patterns of thought that take us to the same place over and over. Neurofeedback, as it forges new pathways in the brain, helps us devise new scripts.

Even as the technology has advanced and the success stories have grown into a rich anecdotal lore, however, neurofeedback continues to face skepticism and resistance from parts of the medical establishment. It has only begun to gain widespread acceptance as a therapeutic tool recently. "It was an up-and-coming treatment modality in the 1970s," says Evans, who has worked with the technology in academic and clinical settings. But he says neurofeedback lost scientific credibility when the early, simple equipment was adopted by and became associated with "hippies" in pursuit of "instant Zen."


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Comments (12)

Is there a good resource for acquiring a biofeedback machine for ones-self? A practitioner may not be readily available for some of us, or affordable.

posted by odysseus on 2/23/2009 12:35 pm

International Autism expert, Lynette Louise, has referred us to some great videos on using neurofeedback programs on Autistic children: www.brainbody.net/Videos.html. You can follow Lynette on twitter @lynettelouise.

posted by katiek on 2/24/2009 1:19 pm

It is possible to work from your own home under the tutelage of a practitioner so distance is not a real factor ... price of the units is however ... many of the families I work with apply for grants and/or run fundraisers ... this is a therapy worth pursuing ... good luck

posted by lynettelouise on 2/24/2009 1:28 pm

Yes, I found an amazing guy that is 90 years old, but looks about 70 years old. His name is Hershel Toomim, Sc.D

www.biocompresearch.com/about-biocomp-research

In 1973, The Biofeedback Institute of Los Angeles (BILA) opened as a non-profit public service. Under the clinical direction of psychologist Marjorie Toomim, Ph.D, and the electrical mastery of Hershel Toomim, Sc.D., BILA has offered clinical psychotherapy and or EEG and HEG biofeedback to several thousand patients for over thirty years

Just Google anything on biofeedback or neurobiofeedback and his name will come up

Corkey

posted by Corkey on 2/25/2009 9:09 pm

I am very grateful for this excellent article on EEG neurofeedback by Blaine Greteman. It is one of the most comprehensive and balanced informational pieces I've read yet. As a past president of both of the 2 major international biofeedback and neurofeedback associations - International Society for Neurofeedback and Research (www.isnr.org) and the Association for Applied Psychophysiology and Biofeedback (www.aapb.org), I have been working for years to help our field reach the "Tipping Point." Getting curent information about neurofeedback and self-regulation out to the public is key to reaching that goal, and I think Blaine Greteman has contributed tremendously to our efforts. If I had a dollar for every client or patient I've seen over the past 20 years who said, "Why didn't my doctor, dentist, therapist, shrink, company, school, team or SOMEBODY tell me about this sooner" I could have retired years ago. But I love my life's work too much to retire!

Thanks, ODE and Blaine! Lynda Kirk, MA, LPC, BCIA-EEG Fellow, QEEG-D Clinical Director - Austin Biofeedback and EEG Neurotherapy Center www.austinbiofeedback.com

posted by lyndakirk on 2/26/2009 7:44 am

posted by PaulaM on 2/26/2009 1:22 pm

I did neurofeedback for a head injury several years ago with Dr. Deborah Stokes in Alexandria, VA. I had tinnitus, brain fog, insomnia and migraines and after about 40 sessions, the majority of my problems were much improved. The results have held and although I still struggle with insomnia at times, I now have my life back and have been able to go back to work, continue my hobbies and spend more time with my grandchildren. Before finding neurofeedback, I was told by the doctors that nothing could be done for me. I hope that this technique soon becomes more accepted by the medical field. Paula Mitchell, Annandale, Va

posted by PaulaM on 2/26/2009 1:22 pm

I am a Past President of the International Society for Neurofeedback & Research and want to say this article was well done. Neurofeedback offers an alternative to relying on only medication treatment for conditions such as ADD/ADHD, head injuries, depression, anxiety, OCD, uncontrolled epilepsy, learning disabilities, autism, and insomnia. People can read more about neurofeedback at www.isnr.org which is the website for the international society.

However, don't let just anyone try to change how your brain is functioning. It has become a buyer beware marketplace. You need to be aware that there are an increasing number of lay people who are obtaining neurofeedback equipment in violation of FDA regulations and then presuming that they are qualified to put electrodes on people's heads and treat serious brain-based disorders. This can be dangerous. To protect yourself (1) seek out a practitioner who is BCIA certified (www.bcia.org) AND (2) who is a licensed health care provider in your state or country. Both are important. To read about some of the risks in having neurofeedback done by an unqualified person, you can read my article from the Journal of Neurotherapy on this subject which can be found at www.neurofeedbackconsult.com/hammondarticle.pdf

D. Corydon Hammond, Ph.D., University of Utah School of Medicine

posted by Hammond on 2/26/2009 4:17 pm

I would like to add one more comment. Home training with neurofeedback can be done, but I strongly recommend that it only be done after an assessment by a licensed health care professional and BCIA certified therapist who then supervises the home practice. To do otherwise is a risk you don't want to take.

D. Corydon Hammond, Ph.D.

posted by Hammond on 2/26/2009 4:21 pm

While it is true that many clinicians use neurofeedback to work with their clients, it is also true that thousands of people around the world have trained themselves or family members with excellent results. I too started with my own brain and established a practice of four offices in Atlanta from 1992-2001 before starting to teach NF to clinicians and home trainers. I've worked with both all over the US, Europe, Australia, South America and a bit into Asia. Training your brain does require some good guidance and development of some basic skills, but the trainee is the one who does the work and gets the credit. There are lots of resources available at brain-trainer.com. NF is, above all, a self-regulation technology--probably the greatest since meditation. Though many meditators would say you should not start without a teacher/guide, many do--have life-changing results.

posted by pvdtlc on 2/27/2009 9:03 am

I am here to share some good thoughts for you guys. I know this really can help. This is about choices for healing - body, mind, spirit. Create Your Health (CYH) is designed to inspire and give you choices regarding improving your life – physically, emotionally, and spiritually. Each episode will introduce you to a particular therapeutic tradition and demonstrate what a treatment within that practice is like. Check out their website createyourhealth.com and discover several alternative health practices and take charge of your life to be able to live pain free again - no drugs and no surgeries.

posted by jennydrea on 8/ 6/2009 8:41 am

have never thought about it like that before. Thanks so much for the depth and understanding at which you covered the topic. it's a useful piece of information not only for me but for many others. have read a lot on the topic at different blogs and books (download mainly from www.picktorrent.com but this piece really gives food for thought, it's a great site!

posted by hitcliff on 8/12/2009 12:24 pm

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