Zapping migraine pain



Beth Israel Deaconess Medical Center

According to Dr. Joshua Wootton, a psychologist at Beth Israel Deaconess Medical Center (a Harvard teaching hospital), a 22-year-old psychology student named Jennifer tried a variety of medications and trigger-point nerve block injections to treat the migraines she had suffered since she was 10, though none of these approaches really worked. Then she found out about biofeedback and meditation.

Read her inspiring story, in which she finds biofeedback training and meditation "completely zap the pain."

Wootten explains his process of using biofeedback to treat migraine pain:

“People can actually see on a computer screen what is happening in real time,” he says. “By increasing their awareness of how their bodies respond, patients can more easily devise strategies for improved response. For headache pain, we focus on musculoskeletal tension and autonomic nervous system dysfunction. Patients can see that by just being in pain they are raising their adrenaline levels and putting further strain on the system, exacerbating their pain and making it less treatable. I teach them an easy form [of relaxation] and ask them to practice it twice a day for 15 minutes each time.”

Jennifer's story is not unique: Behind Somatic Vision games and software tools, such as Alive, is Yuval Oded, a clinical psychophysiologist with long experience in the field treating many like Jennifer. Like Dr. Wootten, Oded combines biofeedback with cognitive behavioral therapy in his practice. Somatic Vision has crafted its Alive Workshops around his work and its results, and has included many of Oded's proven off-screen techniques in the Alive User Guide and in the Alive & Beyond 8-Week Program.

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