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DEPRESSION

Depression

Over the last ten years, thousands of mental health professionals have become increasingly aware of the limitations of medication and psychotherapy for depression. SSRI medications like Prozac or Lexapro are considered “standard” solutions. They target the brain.

Problem with reliance on medications:

  1. Many individuals still struggle.

  2. Once on anti-depressants, it is hard to get off them. The brain becomes reliant on medication. This makes it more difficult to manage your own mood – to get out of depression or become motivated on your own.

Brain training in depression

Thousands of health professionals – psychologists, psychotherapists, psychiatrists and mental health professionals now use neurofeedback daily with their clients.

How do you train mood and depression?

A great deal of research shows evidence of a neurological basis for depression. Certain image patterns often correlate to depression (see example below).

QEEG offers brain diagnostics. This can help identify areas of the brain to target (an example is below). After training, many depressed clients report changes in mood, motivation, and become more stable. Many clients report being less susceptible to depression or moodiness after training.

Depressed or down?

Think of depression – or just chronically being down – as being “stuck.” Anyone can have an experience that gets them down or depressed. It’s when you can’t lift yourself out of it that depression becomes a problem. Even under difficult circumstances, many people can lift their mood. They may struggle, but not stay depressed or down. When someone gets stuck, they can’t do that. They can’t break out of it on their own. Friends will say – “get a grip”, or “cheer up”. If you could, you would. When the brain is stuck in a pattern of being down, it’s not psychological. Research has shown physical patterns in the brain often correlate with depression.

You can exercise your brain back to health. Training the brain helps break up the stuck pattern. Most patients report the impact of training on mood is very powerful. We’ve seen cases that people notice being in a better mood within a few sessions. However, to stabilize mood regulation, more training is required. Training is not a one time “fix”. Training helps the brain practice a better pattern of mood regulation. After all, the brain learns. The brain teaches you everything you know. It can learn to regulate mood.

The two images below (brain maps) are from different people. The map on the left is from a person with a long history of depression. On the left, there is a colored orange and yellow area. It represents an excess amount of slow brainwave activity. This pattern is often associated with depression. The picture on the right displays a relatively normal brain, without depression.

Depression: News
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Depression: Image
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