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FAMILY
CHRISTIAN
COUNSELING
Jamestown
Office Complex
3035 NW 63rd St.
Suite 101
OKCity, OK 73116
(405) 842-0684
(405) 842-2110 fax |
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Title:
WHAT IS NEUROFEEDBACK AND
HOW COULD IT HELP ME?
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Author:
KATHY ROGERS, M.S.W, LCSW
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Neurofeedback or neurotherapy is biofeedback for the
brain. Some therapists call it "brain training". Why
would I want to consider brain training for myself or
my child? If my counselor has suggested that it is
time for a medication evaluation, but I wish to avoid
the side effects of medication, then brain training
may be an option. If my counselor indicates a problem
with attentional issues but does not know if the
culprit is Attention Deficit Hyperactivity Disorder or
anxiety, then neurotherapy may be a part of evaluation
and treatment. If the medication dosage for ADHD
behavioral symptoms is so strong that it interferes
with attention then neurotherapy may be a more
effective treatment modality. If medication and talk
therapy are not providing relief from symptoms such as
anger and irritability neurotherapy can calm the
central nervous system. Neurotherapy can address
symptoms of anxiety, depression, bipolar disorder,
addictive cravings, eating disorders, Obsessive
Compulsive Disorder, Tourettes Syndrome, Reactive
Attachment Disorder, Autism, Sensory Integrative
Dysfunction, and Posttraumatic Stress Disorder.
Students, athletes and individuals in the performing
arts use neurofeedback training to enhance peak
performance. Neurotherapy may be used instead of or as
an adjunct to talk therapy.
A clinician trained in neurotherapy looks at how
symptoms can be regulated by intervening on the level
of brain functioning. An example is a child who is
struggling with peer relationships and making slow
progress with trying to build social skills. A
neurotherapist would train over the right rear
quadrant of the brain because this is the site that
regulates emotional warming and the ability to read
social cues. An adolescent with rage problems would be
trained over the temporal lobes. An adult with a
trauma history would receive training over the
parietal lobes.
What happens during a Neurofeedback session?
The therapist attaches EEG sensors over the training
site selected to address particular symptoms.
Electrical activity is monitored by the therapist's
computer. The client's computer then provides visual
feedback in the form of a game presentation and
auditory feedback in the form of short beeps. The
client's brain is rewarded when it produces brainwaves
that improve calmness and alertness. The idea is to
teach the brain to idle in a calm focused state, much
like a car idling at a stop sign. The feedback is like
sprinkling a trail of crumbs that says to the brain,
"Come over here. You'll like this."
How does it work?
Brain function is not only biochemical but is also
bioelectric. It communicates with itself and the rest
of the body by creating brain waves of different
frequencies. These brain waves determine our mental
and emotional arousal. Delta waves are large amplitude
slow brain waves associated with sleep. Theta waves
are associated with a dreamy state as when one is just
awakening. Alpha waves represent an open focused
relaxed meditative state; addictive cravings are a
result of a brain that produces insufficient alpha.
Beta waves at 12 to 18 hertz are responsible for calm
focused or alert focused states needed to perform
tasks effectively.
If the brain is producing too much delta, theta or
high beta at a particular site its function at that
site will be impaired. A brain with high delta in the
right rear quadrant will be asleep on the job and
unable to respond to social messages. A brain with
excessive high beta at the same site will be too
aroused to attend to those same messages. In either
case training down these underarousal or overarousal
states will allow the client to apply what is being
learned in counseling. Neurotherapists train brains to
achieve regulated arousal states and normalize client
ability to function without disturbing symptoms.
How do I know this is not a placebo effect?
The first neurofeedback trainees were cats used in
NAASA rocket science research to stave off seizures
induced by exposure to rocket fuel. Their brains were
trained to produce increased amplitude of brain waves
at 12 to 15 Hz frequency. These cats were exposed to a
volatile rocket fuel called hydrazine. The untrained
cats in the control group seized at 1 hour. The brain
trained cats were more resistant to seizures: 25%
remained seizure-free and 75% of the cats were able to
resist seizures for 2 hours.
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