Sounds like woo to me, balancing brain frequencies. I bet strokies would be totally unbalanced.
http://www.alphagalileo.org/ViewItem.aspx?ItemId=167712&CultureCode=en
A noninvasive neurotechnology, which uses sound to balance right- and
left-side brain frequencies was associated with lowered blood pressure,
improved heart rate variability, and reduced symptoms of migraine
headaches, according to two small studies presented at the American
Heart Association’s Council on Hypertension 2016 Scientific Sessions.
The neurotechnology, called High-resolution, relational, resonance
based, electroencephalic mirroring, or HIRREM® (Brain State
Technologies, Scottsdale, Arizona), uses sensors placed on the scalp to
measure brain electrical activity, and detect right/left imbalances, or
hyperarousal, according to study author Hossam A. Shaltout, R.Ph.,
Ph.D., assistant professor in the Hypertension and Vascular Research
Center at Wake Forest School of Medicine in Winston-Salem, North
Carolina.
“Most people have relatively balanced electrical activity between the
right side and left sides of the brain,” Shaltout said. “Imbalance,
with one side dominant, or more active, may reflect autonomic
dysregulation associated with the effects of chronic stress, which is
thought to play a role in high blood pressure, migraines, insomnia,
depression, hot flashes and more.”
In real time, HIRREM monitors brain electrical activity and
translates dominant brain frequencies into computer-generated audible
tones that are reflected back simultaneously via ear buds.
“Gradually, and on its own, with no conscious, cognitive activity
required, the electrical pattern tends to shift towards improved balance
and reduced hyperarousal,” Shaltout said.
In one study (Abstract P310), researchers looked at HIRREM’s impact
on 10 men and women with stage one hypertension at the start of the
study. After an average of 17.7 HIRREM sessions received over 10.2
in-office days, hypertensive patients showed an average reduction in
their systolic blood pressure, from 152 to 136 millimeters of mercury
(mm Hg), and a reduction in their diastolic pressure from 97 to 81 mmHg.
Insomnia severity improved in the small study group, and anxiety
seemed to improve. The researchers also found that heart rate
variability increased from an average 42 to 57 milliseconds, which is a
good thing, Shaltout said. Heart rate variability refers to variations
in the interval between heartbeats.
“The more flexibility and dynamic range the body has to be able to
change the heart rate in response to the blood pressure, the better,”
Shaltout said.
In another study (Abstract P602), the researchers examined the effect
of HIRREM on 52 adults who had reported they suffered from migraines.
The patients studied received 15.9 sessions over nine in-office days.
Comparing the data they collected before the therapy to two weeks after,
researchers found patients reported improvements for insomnia, mood,
and headaches.
These results are the first to suggest that HIRREM could offer
cardiovascular as well as behavioral benefits in the treatment of high
blood pressure. More research is needed to verify these preliminary
findings, Shaltout said.
These studies looking at hypertension and migraine are part of a
larger research program that has now enrolled over 400 participants in
one of five studies to assess the effect of HIRREM for multiple symptoms
and conditions,.
“If these findings are confirmed in larger controlled studies, HIRREM
may prove to be a valuable new approach for brain-based health care,”
Shaltout said.
Co-authors on both abstracts are Catherine L. Tegeler, B.S.; Charles
H. Tegeler, M.D. and Sung Lee, M.D., M.Sc. Author disclosures are on the
abstract.
The Susanne Marcus Collins Foundation, Inc., funded the study.
Abstract P310
Reduction of Blood Pressure and Improvement of Heart
Rate Variability in Hypertensive Cohort Aassociated With Use of a
Closed Loop Neurotechnology
Hossam A Shaltout, Catherine L Tegeler, Charles H Tegeler, Wake Forest Univ, Sch of Med, Winston Salem, NC
http://newsroom.heart.org/news/sound-therapy-may-balance-brain-signals-to-reduce-blood-pressure-migraines?preview=dedf4e13aaa0c99f3463554406db82da
Full bibliographic informationAbstract P602
Reduced
Symptoms And Improved Heart Rate Variability Associated With Use Of
Closed-Loop Noninvasive Neurotechnology By Migraineurs
Catherine L Tegeler, Hossam A Shaltout, Charles H Tegeler, Wake Forest Univ, Winston Salem, NC
No comments:
Post a Comment