Friday, October 19, 2012

Radio Interview with Marlene and Ian "Strategies for Healing from Addiction"


When Begin Healing Inc. was recently displaying Alpha-Stim at Association of Christian Counselors conference in Branson, MO, we met Sharon and Gary Worrell from Strategies for Healing Inc. They were very interested in our device, and believed that many of their clients could benefit from it, so they invited us to be interviewed on their radio show called Strategies for Healing from Addictions.

Click here to go to their site and listen to the interview.

It was great to talk to the Worrells about their practice and how Alpha-Stim can treat the depression, anxiety, insomnia, and stress that can lead to or be caused by addiction.

Tuesday, October 9, 2012

Attention Disorder or Not, Pills to Help in School




CANTON, Ga. — When Dr. Michael Anderson hears about his low-income patients struggling in elementary school, he usually gives them a taste of some powerful medicine: Adderall.

The pills boost focus and impulse control in children with attention deficit hyperactivity disorder. Although A.D.H.D is the diagnosis Dr. Anderson makes, he calls the disorder “made up” and “an excuse” to prescribe the pills to treat what he considers the children’s true ill — poor academic performance in inadequate schools.

“I don’t have a whole lot of choice,” said Dr. Anderson, a pediatrician for many poor families in Cherokee County, north of Atlanta. “We’ve decided as a society that it’s too expensive to modify the kid’s environment. So we have to modify the kid.”
 click to continue reading

Thursday, October 4, 2012

CES in the Treatment of Depression

Part 1 of this two-part series reviews diagnoses, treatment modalities, and compares CES efficacy with that of the most popular pharmaceutical treatments for depression.

 By Daniel L. Kirsch, PhD, DAAPM, FAIS and Marshall F. Gilula, MD

According to NIH findings, one in 20 American adults experience major depression in a given year.1 The Depression and Bipolar Support Alliance report that 16 million people suffer from depression annually, with twice as many women afflicted as men. They estimate that as many as 25% of women suffer from depression serious enough to require treatment at least once in their lifetime.2The National Alliance on Mental Illness indicates that “major depression is the leading cause of disability in the United States and many other developed countries, and affects 15 million American adults or about 5 to 8% of the adult population in a given year.”3
Many other comorbid disabilities—such as cardiovascular events—can accompany depression. Depression may also result in chronically elevated levels of stress hormones, such as cortisol and epinephrine, and thus represents a condition that diverts metabolism away from tissue repair when needed for healing. Feelings of helplessness or of being out of control of one’s life also impair the immune system, increasing susceptibility to a wide spectrum of pathologies from infections to cancer. The fact that women are twice as likely as men to develop depression is also in accord with the finding that, in U.S. society, it is more likely for women to feel out of control of their lives.4
Aside from the general population, chronic pain patients almost invariable suffer depression as a direct result of their pain and accompanying disability. Almost any chronic illness, especially ones with no clearly effective treatment, have a high incidence of comorbid depression. Based on these descriptions of the physical manifestations of depression, it is clear that it can have a devastating effect in the pain patient and others with chronic diseases.
While depression is a common term for describing how one feels, the technical psychiatric definition goes beyond just a feeling of sadness. For such a commonly-used term, it behooves us to scrutinize some technical definitions and terms. Depression is a “mental state characterized by feelings of sadness, loneliness, despair, low self-esteem, and self-reproach; accompanying signs include psychomotor retardation or, at times, agitation, withdrawal from interpersonal contact, and vegetative symptoms such as insomnia and anorexia. The term refers to either a mood that is so characterized or a mood disorder.”5

Definitions

Mood disorder is now the preferred term in both the World Health Organization’s (WHO) 10th revision of International Statistical Classification of Diseases and Related Health Problems (ICD-10) and the American Psychiatric Association’s (APA) fourth edition of Diagnostic and Statistical Manual of Mental Disorders (DSM-IV). Official mood disorder categories in current use include bipolar disorders (with manic or hypomanic, depressive, or mixed episodes) and major depressive disorders and their respective attenuated variants known as cyclothymic and dysthymic disorders.6 Many of the older terms such as “atypical depression,” “endogenous depression,” and “involutional melancholia” are included within major depressive disorders. The older “depressive neurosis” has been replaced and absorbed by dysthymic disorder.
Table 1 summarizes the DSM-IV diagnoses that involve depression.7 The specific psychiatric criteria for a Major Depressive Disorder, listed on pages 168-9 of the DSM-IV-TR, require that “five (or more) of the following symptoms have been present during the same 2-week period and represent a change from previous functioning. At least one of the symptoms is either depressed mood or loss of interest or pleasure and the symptoms are not obviously secondary to a general medical condition or “mood-incongruent delusions or hallucinations.” The symptoms are:
  1. . Depressed mood most of the day, nearly daily, and/or irritable mood in children and adolescents.
  2. Markedly diminished interest or pleasure in most activities.
  3. Significant weight loss when not dieting—or weight gain.
  4. Insomnia or hypersomnia nearly every day.
  5. Psychomotor agitation or retardation.
  6. Fatigue or loss of energy.
  7. Feelings of worthlessness or excessive or inappropriate guilt.
  8. Diminished ability to think or concentrate, or indecisiveness.
  9. Recurrent thoughts of death beyond a fear of dying, recurrent suicidal ideation, or a suicide attempt or specific plan.

Treatment Protocols

The National Institutes of Health (NIH) describes depression as a serious medical condition that affects thoughts, feelings, and the ability to function.1 Depression is labeled a treatable disorder of the brain, with 80% of patients responding to treatment. The NIH, as well as other researchers, declare depression to be mainly a biochemical problem and, therefore, the first line of treatment should be psychopharmaceutical intervention, possibly accompanied by psychotherapy, counseling, exercise, or other wellness techniques. In the following sections, we will focus on three basic modalities in the treatment of depression: psychoanalysis-related, pharmaceutical, and micro-current cranial electrotherapy stimulation

Electromedicine: CES in the Treatment of Depression, Part 2

 By Daniel L. Kirsch, PhD, DAAPM, FAIS and Marshall F. Gilula, MD

Daniel L. Kirsch, PhD; Marshall F. Gilula, MD

Cranial electrotherapy stimulation (CES) is the FDA recognized generic category for medical devices using microcurrent levels of electrical stimulation applied across the head via transcutaneous electrodes for the treatment of anxiety, insomnia and depression. CES treats depression by passing tiny electrical currents—similar to those found naturally in the body—imperceptibly through the brain. The microcurrent, delivered in a unique waveform, moves electrons through the brain at a variety of frequencies collectively known as harmonic resonance. This normalizes the electrical activity of the brain as measured by an electroencephalogram (EEG). The patient undergoing CES treatment will often report a pleasant, relaxed feeling of well-being. Improvement is usually experienced during treatment, but may be seen hours later, or even the day after treatment. Depression control is often experienced after two to three weeks of daily treatment. Ear clip electrodes, moistened with an appropriate conducting solution, are applied for 20 minutes to an hour or more on an initial daily basis for 3-6 weeks, followed by a reduced schedule of 2 or 3 treatments a week until the depression is resolved, and then further reduced to an as-needed (p.r.n.) basis.
This article focuses on the meta-analysis of CES studies of depression along with a discussion of individual study designs and outcomes. It is important to note that protocols for some CES studies were poorly designed; inconsistent patient selection and concurrent use of other pharmaceutical modalities rendered the results inconclusive with regard to CES efficacy in treating depression. The authors have carefully selected only valid studies to provide the most complete and accurate meta-analysis of CES depression treatment outcomes.
Early CES Studies In Treating Depression
Rosenthal conducted some of the earliest CES studies of depression when CES was first introduced in the U.S. His work was primarily with psychiatric outpatients, although he sometimes used medical staff as controls. He was basically trying to find out what, if anything, CES treatment would do for his patients, how many sessions it might require, and what level of current it took to get results.1-4
Please refer to the June 2007 issue for the complete text. In the event you need to order a back issue, please click here.

http://www.practicalpainmanagement.com/treatments/interventional/stimulators/electromedicine-ces-treatment-depression-part-2

Monday, September 10, 2012

Sept. newsletter from American Institute of Stress

The September issue of the American Institute of Stress newsletter is fully dedicated to PTSD and the treatment of this tragic disease. Click here to read the full Issue.

Looking to treat your or your family member's PTSD? Go to www.beginhealing.com to read more about cranial electrical stimulation (CES) and how it can help. 

Military Spouse "Silencing the Stress" - Alpha-Stim success story

Helping our active duty service members and veterans is a top priority for Begin Healing so I am happy to share with you the most recent news article on Alpha-Stim in Military Spouse. "Silencing the Stress" provides a detailed report on the success of Alpha-Stim. 

Thursday, August 30, 2012

Use of Alpha-Stim at NICoE

National Intrepid Center of Exellence (NICoE) talks about some of the modalities utilized there. Cranial electrotherapy stimulation (CES) and microcurrent electrical therapy (MET) are mentioned under complementary medicine.

http://www.nicoe.capmed.mil/Shared%20Documents/CAM_Fact%20Sheet_FINAL_06%2018%2012.pdf

Tuesday, August 28, 2012

Are We Too Shallow About Drugs to Truly Help Vets With PTSD?




Seven months ago, PFC Sonny Mazon opened my eyes to the tragic link between depression, drugs, incarceration, and suicide in the military community.
I had been so naïve. Of course, during the deployment many of us swapped stories of comrades abusing prescription drugs like Ambien while overseas, and I had a vague sense that this would get worse when my platoon returned home in 2009. Even so, I never expected that almost 2 years after I left the Army I would still be receiving tragic news about my soldiers, their families, and the ending that awaits those who never get the help they need.
click here to continue reading on the Huffington Post site...

Tuesday, August 21, 2012

Promising PTSD treatment faces hurdle (Stars and Stripes)

By WYATT OLSON
Stars and Stripes
http://www.stripes.com/news
Published: August 19, 2012

Devices such as Electromedical Products 
International’s Alpha-Stim M are used to 
administer cranial electrotherapy stimulation 
treatment for troops suffering from PTSD.
YOKOTA AIR BASE, Japan — For decades, Ed Gaumer’s restless sleep was plagued with snippets of dreams arising from his three tours in Vietnam as a Marine in 1967-70. By day, he was hyper-alert to certain smells and sounds, any of which might leave him breathless and scanning for threats.
They were classic symptoms of post-traumatic stress disorder, and by 2005 the flashbacks were interfering with his civilian job for a Defense Department agency that provided logistical support for overseas operations.
Based at Wright-Patterson Air Force Base near Dayton, Ohio, Gaumer began seeing a psychologist who had experience treating soldiers in combat zones, who introduced him to cranial electrotherapy stimulation, or CES, a treatment she used on combat-stressed soldiers in Iraq.
“For 40 years I’d been kind of chasing the things in my flashbacks. I’ve finally been able to put them to rest so I can move on,” Gaumer said, crediting CES.
While CES worked for Gaumer, others might not get the chance to see whether they respond to the treatment.
An FDA panel recommendation to change the classification of CES devices could take them off the market until lengthy and expensive testing is completed.
The possible delay comes at a time when there is no single magic-bullet therapy for the symptoms of PTSD — including anxiety, depression, insomnia — and a growing number of doctors are turning to alternative methods like CES to treat servicemembers and veterans.
Researchers found that CES activates and deactivates certain parts of the brain via micro-electrical current delivered by a device resembling a smartphone with ear buds.
Although the mechanisms of how CES works aren’t fully understood, mental health professionals who advocate its use say that it is easily folded into any treatment regimen because there are no serious side effects or harmful interactions with prescription drugs and other therapies. Most devices cost between $500 and $1,500.
The owner of the largest producer, Texas-based Electromedical Products International, said the technology has been proven safe and effective on thousands of patients while on the market for 40 years. But now, a U.S. Food and Drug Administration panel has recommended changing the classification of CES devices — a move that could take them off the market pending lengthy, expensive testing.
Col. Dallas C. Hack, director of the Army Combat Casualty Care Research Program at Fort Detrick, Md., told Stars and Stripes that the prevalence of CES treatment in the military is “moderately widespread,” but its use depends mainly on whether a particular practitioner has adopted it.
In January, Hack sent a letter to the FDA on behalf of the Army requesting expedited review of CES because “continued and uninterrupted availability of these devices for further study is in the best interest of patients.” The letter noted that a Veterans Affairs study found “limited efficacy of drugs in the treatment of depression in soldiers who are suffering from PTSD.”
An alternative to drugs
Sales of CES devices to the military have grown steadily since 2007.
EPI, whose Alpha-Stim brand dominates the industry, filled 3,000 prescriptions for the device for the Department of Defense, Tricare and the Veterans Administration from 2007 to mid-2011, according to company data submitted to the FDA.
The Army Office of the Surgeon General’s Pain Management Task Force in 2010 recommended CES for pain management.
CES is a key component of PTSD treatment in the Warrior Combat Stress Reset Program at the Darnall Army Medical Center in Fort Hood, Texas, according to a letter submitted to the FDA by program director Jerry E. Wesch. CES is particularly useful in suppressing hyper-arousal and improving sleep, Wesch wrote, noting his comments did not reflect Army policy.
The program also uses CES to treat pain and headaches, “a real boon for the many combat soldiers in our program who have chronic neck, back and joint pains.”
“I am reluctant to treat PTSD in our population without this tool in the mix,” he wrote, adding that about 80 percent of the 500 soldiers completing the program had opted to use CES in their follow-up plan.
Kathy Platoni, the Ohio clinical psychologist who treated Gaumer, is an Army Reserve colonel and a psychology consultant to the chief of the Medical Service Corps. She has used CES extensively during deployments in Iraq and Afghanistan.
The devices were routinely used to lessen symptoms typically arising from PTSD: insomnia, irritability and outbursts of anger, lack of concentration and feeling “jumpy.”
“Medications in many cases render soldiers mission incapable,” she said. CES “allows soldiers to function without medications that might impair them.”
Gaumer, who now lives in Akron, compares the immediate after effects of CES to the elation felt after intense exercise. “You feel good. You feel light on your feet,” he said.
There is a slight tingling sensation at the connection points, which is on the earlobes for the model Gaumer uses. He said he knows the current is a notch too high if he feels pressure on his temples.
At first, he used it daily, often during his “talk therapy” sessions with Platoni. He began sleeping better and started understanding the origin and nature of his flashbacks.
“What happens is that these little flashes of memory are hidden in your mind,” he said. “You’re trying to figure out what’s real and what’s not. I did that for years.”
CES, he said, “kind of opened up some of that so that I can finally start walking back in time and finding out why some things bother me more than others. That was part of the healing.”
Most users feel the effects of CES after one use, but lasting benefits normally come only after repeated, regular use.
Studies on CES suggest that the microcurrent stimulates certain nerve cells in the brain stem that produce chemicals called serotonin and acetylcholine. Those chemicals act on the nerve cells throughout the brain and nervous system.
Various levels of CES micro-current have been found to alter alpha brain waves, sometimes activating areas, shutting down others. Those zones are apparently responsible for feelings of agitation, anxiety, depression and physical pain in some people.
Dr. Stephen Xenakis, a retired Army brigadier general and psychiatrist in Washington, has been prescribing CES for about two years.
“I like it for patients who’ve been on many drugs, and you don’t want to give them another drug,” said Xenakis, who sits on the medical advisory board for Fisher Wallace Laboratories, a maker of CES devices. He said he is not paid by the company and owns no stock in it.
“Anxiety makes pain feel worse,” he said. “And, of course, if you have pain, then you feel more anxious — or you feel depressed about it. All these things interact.”
FDA steps in
The FDA began stringent regulation of medical devices in 1976, although many that were in use at the time were “grandfathered” in without broad testing. The Safe Medical Devices Act of 1990 required the FDA to re-examine those grandfathered devices to determine what classification they should carry — Class I, II or III. Class III devices are considered life-support or life-sustaining, such as pacemakers.
In February, an FDA panel proposed formally categorizing CES devices as Class III, which would require extensive trials for market approval. Although acknowledging the device posed no serious risks — some users have reported headaches, and it’s advised that people with epilepsy not use it — the panel disregarded dozens of studies published in medical journals indicating varying levels of effectiveness.
“They threw out all our studies, which left us with no research,” said Daniel L. Kirsch, chairman of EPI.
Explaining their elimination, the panel’s report concluded: “The reviews that FDA has performed on the data have demonstrated that while there is an abundance of published literature on the use of CES for the treatment of anxiety, depression and insomnia, the studies have limitations that preclude favorable interpretations of the effectiveness results, even if those results are mostly positive.”
The watchdog group Public Citizen submitted a letter to the FDA supporting its proposed reclassification. It urged the FDA to require “rigorous, well-designed, controlled, double-blind clinical trials” for all CES devices. The group wrote that the device’s most serious risk was “a worsening of the condition being treated due to the ineffectiveness of the device.”
Xenakis, like other CES proponents, said that no competent doctor would stick with a treatment that wasn’t working when others were available. “In my practice I like to only make one or two changes in treatment at a time to figure out what’s working or not working,” he said.
In a letter to FDA Commissioner Margaret Hamburg, EPI complained that the review panel had not followed federal regulations that define valid scientific evidence as including “well-documented case histories conducted by qualified experts” and “reports of significant human experience with a marketed device.”
Xenakis questions the wisdom of the FDA taking any action that would remove a therapy option with so many servicemembers returning from Iraq and Afghanistan with PTSD and other emotional disorders.
“My feeling is, from the standpoint of the military, we’re facing what I’d say is an epidemic,” Xenakis said. “We’ve got hundreds of thousands of people with problems with alcohol and misconduct and suicide risk, all those kinds of things. We’ve got treatments that are safe that might work. We’ve got to jump on it.”

New Alpha-Stim "M" and "AID" models to be launched soon

Friday, May 18, 2012

Alpha-Stim Provides Japanese Survivors With Stress Management Assistance

Article from Free-Press-Release.com 

Dallas/Fort Worth, Texas, United States of America (Free-Press-Release.com) June 7, 2011 --
Mineral Wells, TX, June 7th, 2011 – On May 11th, 2011, Japan was struck by the most powerful earthquake ever recorded in human history. With so much devastation, not to mention from the earthquake but also from the subsequent tsunami, many individuals and companies have offered their support. One such company, Alpha-Stim, recently offered Japan the help it needs with a generous donation. Alpha-Stim technology uses a medical device for the management of anxiety, depression and problems sleeping. The Kirsch family, who owns Alpha-Stim technology, is planning to donate these devices to help survivors of the recent disaster.

This isn't the first time that Alpha-Stim and the Kirsch family have given to a worthy cause. The company also donated devices for the Haiti earthquake relief efforts. The small devices were left in the care of mayors of small communities in Haiti, where the individuals affected by the disaster would be trained in how to use them.
Alpha-Stim is working with the PAC (Police Assistance Coalition) in order to help deliver the devices to disaster-stricken Japan. The company is also working with the PAC to help deliver the Alpha-Stim devices to law enforcement officers who receive the PAC Police Valor Award, and also to officer's family members if the award is given after the officer's death. Alpha-Stim therapy is used extensively by the US Army at Ft. Hood and at Brooke Army Medical Center in Texas on wounded warriors and those suffering from post traumatic stress disorder. It is also used in 67 Veteran's Hospitals for PTSD and pain management.
To help others realize the benefits of this new technology, Dr. Kirsch recently gave an interview regarding the benefits of electromedicine and Alpha-Stim. Electromedicine, the doctor explained, is a field of study by scientists, doctors and researchers the world over that involves the use of very mild electric currents in order to relieve pain and other symptoms. Dr. Kirsch explained during the interview that the human body is an electrochemical organism. In the west, he stated, doctors are taught to treat the chemical aspects using drugs. So, the doctor asked, what if there was a way to treat the body by improving the electrical aspect? This, he continued, is what Alpha-Stim is designed to do.

Alpha-Stim, according to Dr. Kirsch, is cleared by the FDA for the treatment of pain, depression, anxiety and insomnia. These are the symptoms of Post Traumatic Stress Disorder (PTSD). All of this without the use of any prescribed drugs. The doctor states that the low-level microcurrent has been shown to work even when pharmaceuticals have failed.
About Alpha-Stim.com: Alpha-Stim 100, Alpha-Stim SCS and Alpha-Stim PPM are all devices that have been cleared by the FDA for the treatment of anxiety, insomnia, depression and pain. For those experiencing stress or any of these other symptoms related to an illness, the patient will use an Apha-Stim device to deliver a low-level current via clips on their earlobes. Done for certain periods of time, the device has been shown to work better than pharmaceuticals for the treatment of pain and other symptoms.

Contact Information:
Dr. Daniel L. Kirsch
Electromedical Products International, Inc
2201 Garrett Morris Parkway
Mineral Wells, TX 76067-9034 USA
1-800-FOR-PAIN (367-7246) in USA & CANADA
Tel: (940) 328-0788
Fax: (940) 328-0888
AlphaStimEPIIP@gmail.com
http://www.alpha-stim.com/

http://www.free-press-release.com/news-alpha-stim-provides-japanese-survivors-with-stress-management-assistance-1307465719.html

Friday, May 11, 2012

No Exit?


 We learned last year from a National Health and Nutrition Examination Survey that more than 10% of Americans are taking anti-depressants.  This data would not be difficult to swallow if these drugs were proven to be effective and are prescribed responsibly by heath care practitioners, but they are not. Instead it is widely known that anti-depressants are not effective for mild to moderate depression. 





Thursday, May 3, 2012

Chip Conley: Emotional Equations


Though we might not be in control of every aspect of our environment, we are in control of how we react to our environment....
In this video clip of Chip Conley, he presents a mathematical equation that is at work when we feel anxious. Being aware of how anxiety works is the first step in taking control of your anxiety.

Tuesday, April 24, 2012

Alpha-Stim in Australia

 A video from the Australian division of Alpha-Stim.  In Australia, Alpha-Stim is sold over-the-counter. Why it is still a prescription device in the U.S. has more to do with politics of our medical system than it does a realistic account of the safety and benefits of cranial electrical stimulation.

“We can sell Alpha-Stim® technology over-the-counter in every nation but the USA. We have introduced the Alpha-Stim® SCS initially in Europe, Canada, and Australia, and we are beginning to market it in Asia and most of the rest of the world. The product is safer than aspirin, so there is no reason Alpha-Stim® technology shouldn’t be sold over-the-counter. Unfortunately, the regulatory process in the United States is so expensive and difficult that I don’t see that happening here in the near future." 


- Daniel L. Kirsch, Ph.D, F.A.I.S of Electromedical Products International, Inc. (EPI)