QEEG Analysis of Cranial Electrotherapy: A Pilot Study [Abstract]
Kennerly, Richard. Journal
of Neurotherapy (8)2, 2004. Presented at the International Society for
Neuronal Regulation annual conference, September 18-21, 2003 in Houston, Texas.
Introduction
Cranial electrotherapy
stimulation (CES) is the use of low level electrical current applied to the
head for therapeutic purposes. Cranial electrotherapy stimulation is also known
as electrosleep, cranial electrotherapy (CET), cranial stimulation (CS),
transcranial electrotherapy (TCET), neuroelectric therapy (NET), cranial TENS
and auricular electrical stimulation. The FDA authorizes the production and
sale of medical devices for cranial electrotherapy in the United States
for the treatment of depression, anxiety, and sleep disorders. To date 112 of
126 published studies in the US
on CES have had positive outcomes, involving 4,541subjects (in all 126 studies)
without significant side effects from the treatment (Kirsch, 2002). The current
study was conducted to determine the effect of cranial electrotherapy on
cortical activity as measured by QEEG before and after a single 20-minute use
of CES. This pilot study is being followed up by a double blind placebo
controlled study of cortical activation changes from baseline with three and
six weeks of CES treatment.
University of North Texas Neurotherapy Lab:
http://www.unt.edu/neurotherapy/frmQEEG.htm
Method
Digital EEG for QEEG analysis
was obtained from 30 research volunteers using a Neurodata-24 digital EEG
system. CES was providing with Alpha-Stim 100 cranial electrotherapy units set
to .5 hertz. QEEG data was processed and analyzed with the NeuroGuide system.
Statistical analysis of the data was conducted with the NeuroGuide, SPSS and
JMP statistical packages. Digital EEG, blood pressure, heart rate,
electrodermal activity and finger temperature was acquired during a baseline
condition, during cranial electrotherapy, immediately after electrotherapy, and
after three weeks of daily use of cranial electrotherapy.
Results
During CES at 0.5 Hz
significant increases were seen across the entire cortex in delta and gamma
frequencies, this effect was uniform for all volunteers. After a single
20-minute session of CES decreases were seen in delta and theta frequency
activity with concomitant significant increase in alpha activity. The study
volunteers generally reported feeling more relaxed after 20-minutes of CES.
Some volunteers reported feeling as if their head had cleared and they felt
more awake. Research volunteers who reported pain or anxiety before the single
session of CES treatment reported significant reductions in pain and anxiety
after the 20-minute treatment.
Conclusions
This pilot study indicates
that CES at 0.5 Hz entrains delta and gamma frequencies during active
stimulation. After a single 20-minute treatment with CES there is a significant
increase in alpha frequency activity and a significant decrease in delta and
theta activity. The post treatment maps indicate the effect of single session
cranial electrotherapy treatment on QEEG is congruent with the reports of the
research volunteers of decreased anxiety, increased alertness and increased
relaxation.
References
Kirsch, D. L. (2002). The Science Behind Cranial Electrotherapy Stimulation. Edmonton, Alberta:
Medical Scope Publishing Corporation.
The above is a quantitative
EEG brain map (QEEG) showing the changes in brain activity by traditional EEG
bands of 30 volunteers after a 20 minute treatment with Alpha-Stim® CES at 0.5
Hz. Blue shows a decrease in activity after Alpha-Stim® while red shows an
increase in activity. There is an increase in alpha activity (relaxation brain
waves) with a simultaneous decrease in delta activity (sleep brain waves) after
using Alpha-Stim® for 20 minutes. The changes near the ears were found on raw
EEG to be artifact.
The above is a representation
of the electrical activity of the brain by frequency after 20 minutes of use of
Alpha-Stim CES at 0.5 Hz. The EEG of 30 research volunteers was averaged and
analyzed by computer to generate the average of brain changes in brain activity
after 20 minutes of Alpha-Stim. This is a difference brain map, where a
decrease in activity after the use of Alpha-Stim is shown in shades of blue and
an increase in activity is seen in shades of yellow and red (green indicates no
change). The above map shows that there is a decrease in delta, the 1, 2, and 3
Hz frequencies associated in waking individuals with impaired cognitive
functioning. Significant increases are seen in alpha frequencies with peak
activity at 9 Hz. Increases were also seen in activity at 12, 13 and 14 Hz,
with 13 and 14 Hz activity centering on C3. It is common practice in EEG
biofeedback (Neurotherapy) to train increases of 13-15 Hz activity (SMR) at C3
to create increased relaxation and treat epilepsy, ADHD, attentional problems
and other disorders
(http://www.eegspectrum.com/Applications/ADHD-ADD/EfficacySMR-BetaIntro2/). The
pattern of changes seen after a single session of Alpha-Stim in the 30 research
volunteers is congruent with the self reports of increased relaxation with
improved cognitive functioning.
The above map is a relative power map, which is a percentage map showing
activity in the brain at each frequency as a percentage of 100% (all activity
of the brain). The activity changes represented by the relative power map show
the same general pattern of decreases in slow waves associated with sleep and
cognitive impairment and increases in alpha and SMR frequencies, which are
associated with relaxation.
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