Position Paper on Cranial Electrotherapy Stimulation by Ray B. Smith, Ph.D.
Known effectiveness of Cranial Electrotherapy Stimulation (CES) in mental health.
Theoretical impact of CES in PTSD treatment.
References:
Smith, Ray B. (2007) Cranial electrotherapy stimulation; Its first fifty years, plus three: A monograph. Tate: Mustang, OK.
Smith, R.B., and F.N. Shiromoto (1992) The use of cranial electrotherapy stimulation to block fear perception in phobic patients. Current Therapeutic Research, 51(2):249-253.
Shiller, D. Marie-H. Monfils, Candace M. Raio, David C. Johnson, Joseph E. LeDoux, Elizabeth A Phelps (2009) Preventing the return of fear in humans using reconsolidation update mechanisms. Nature, published online 9 December, 2009.
- Anxiety: 38 clinical studies of anxiety, 21 of which were double blind, showed a mean improvement of 58%, with a range of from 38% to 94% improvement.
- Depression: 18 clinical studies of depression, 7 of which were double blind, showed a mean improvement of 47%, with a range of from 25% to 80% improvement.
- Insomnia: 19 clinical studies of insomnia, 7 of which were double blind showed a mean improvement of 62%, with a range of from 37% to 93% improvement.
- Cognitive Dysfunction: 13 studies of cognitive dysfunction of various kinds, 54% of which were single or double blind, showed a mean improvement of 44%, with a range of from 23% to 86% improvement.
Theoretical impact of CES in PTSD treatment.
- PTSD is caused by traumatic memories coming to the fore unbidden, which disrupt the person's personality and behavior while active.
- Eliciting the traumatic memory(s) during therapy is necessary but can be a difficult and long drawn out process because the memory can trigger the PTSD response and defeat therapy.
- CES can prevent the emotional response to traumatic memory while the current is on.2
- Recalled memories can be deleted from the brain within 3 to 10 minutes from the time they are called up, and other memories inserted if the patient remains calm and does not go into the PTSD response, thus ending the PTSD.
References:
Smith, Ray B. (2007) Cranial electrotherapy stimulation; Its first fifty years, plus three: A monograph. Tate: Mustang, OK.
Smith, R.B., and F.N. Shiromoto (1992) The use of cranial electrotherapy stimulation to block fear perception in phobic patients. Current Therapeutic Research, 51(2):249-253.
Shiller, D. Marie-H. Monfils, Candace M. Raio, David C. Johnson, Joseph E. LeDoux, Elizabeth A Phelps (2009) Preventing the return of fear in humans using reconsolidation update mechanisms. Nature, published online 9 December, 2009.