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Who Can Benefit?
Because of its wide scope of application, neurofeedback has met
its share of the same healthy skepticism that every new approach
claiming numerous benefits encounters. Nonetheless, twenty years
of clinical experience support the therapy, and there are well-documented
clinical reports concerning the effectiveness of neurofeedback for
the following therapeutic applications. See Case
Histories and Testimonials
for more information.
• Addiction • Anxiety
• Attachment Disorder • Attention Deficit Disorder (ADD) •
Attention Hyperactivity Disorder (ADHD) • Chronic
Pain • Autoimmune Dysfunction • Depression
• Chronic Fatigue Syndrome (CFS) • Eating Disorder
• Conduct Disorder |
• Learning Disabilities • Epilepsy •
Personality Disorders • Obsessive-Compulsive Disorder
• Sleep Disorders • Post-Traumatic Stress Disorder
• Tourettes Syndrome • Stroke / Traumatic Brain
Injury (TBI) • Parkinson’s Disease •
Cognitive Decline in the Elderly |
Often, neurofeedback can help people “get out of the groove”;
it can help break undesirable established mental or behavioral patterns.
A lot of the syndromes above are self-reinforcing: by satisfying
an addiction, it becomes stronger, and succumbing to anxiety makes
the world seem even scarier, also strengthening the pattern. Neurofeedback
can help break such cycles by providing reinforcement for ‘normal’
function. Please see References, below, for the actual clinical
reports.
In ADHD clients, impulsivity, distractibility, and hyperactivity
may all respond to training. This can drastically improve school
performance for children. Cognitive function, measured as raw IQ
score, may improve as well: three controlled clinical studies found
average increases of 10, 19, and 23 IQ points for representative
groups of ADHD children.
Maladaptive
behavior, especially in children, can change in other ways as well.
Temper tantrums, aggression, cruelty, or violence are all aspects
of behavior that may experience reduction or become better controllable
by the child.
In the case of depression, there can be a gradual recovery of "affect",
or emotional responsiveness, and a reduction in effort fatigue.
Clients suffering from panic attacks or anxiety tend to experience
a gradual improvement in their ability to regulate or control their
attacks. Furthermore, both severity and frequency of anxiety episodes
and panic attacks reduces until the condition normalizes.
Likewise, neurofeedback therapy of epilepsy clients tends to cause
a similar reduction in both frequency and severity of seizures.
In agreement with the referring neurologist, the dosage of anticonvulsant
medication may ultimately be reduced, which in turn usually leads
to a reduction of its side effects.
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