2004
DOI: 10.1300/j184v08n01_05
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Case Study of Trigeminal Neuralgia Using Neurofeedback and Peripheral Biofeedback

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Cited by 39 publications
(43 citation statements)
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“…An even better response was reported by Walker (2011), who found that 54% of patients with recurrent migraines experienced complete headache cessation after completion of NFB, with additional 39% of patients experiencing a greater than 50% reduction in migraine frequency. NFB was also reported to effectively treat burning mouth syndrome, complex regional pain syndrome, and trigeminal neuralgia (Jensen, Greirson, Tracy-Smith, Bacigalupi, & Othmer, 2007;Kenchadze, Iverieli, Okribelashvili, Geladze, & Khachapuridze, 2011;Sime, 2004). Ibric and Dragomirescu (2009) found that of 74 patients who had been unsuccessfully treated for pain from chronic disease, injury, surgery, or other sources, 68 (92%) reported a clinically significant improvement in their pain following at least 19 sessions of neurofeedback.…”
Section: Discussionmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…An even better response was reported by Walker (2011), who found that 54% of patients with recurrent migraines experienced complete headache cessation after completion of NFB, with additional 39% of patients experiencing a greater than 50% reduction in migraine frequency. NFB was also reported to effectively treat burning mouth syndrome, complex regional pain syndrome, and trigeminal neuralgia (Jensen, Greirson, Tracy-Smith, Bacigalupi, & Othmer, 2007;Kenchadze, Iverieli, Okribelashvili, Geladze, & Khachapuridze, 2011;Sime, 2004). Ibric and Dragomirescu (2009) found that of 74 patients who had been unsuccessfully treated for pain from chronic disease, injury, surgery, or other sources, 68 (92%) reported a clinically significant improvement in their pain following at least 19 sessions of neurofeedback.…”
Section: Discussionmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Preliminary reports have also been published on the use of neurofeedback with chronic fatigue syndrome (Hammond, 2001b); Tourette's (Tansey, 1986); obsessive-compulsive disorder (Hammond, 2003(Hammond, , 2004Surmeli, Ertem, Eralp, & Kos, 2011); Parkinson's tremors (M. Thompson & Thompson, 2002); tinnitus (Crocetti, Forti, & Bo, 2011;Dohrmann, Elbert, Schlee, & Weisz, 2007;Gosepath, Nafe, Ziegler, & Mann, 2001;Schenk, Lamm, Gundel, & Ladwig, 2005;Weiler, Brill, Tachiki, & Schneider, 2001); pain (Ibric & Dragomirescu, 2009;Jensen, Grierson, Tracy-Smith, Bacigalupi, & Othmer, 2007;Sime, 2004); physical balance, swallowing, gagging, and incontinence (Hammond, 2005a); children with histories of abuse and neglect (Huang-Storms et al, 2006) or reactive attachment disorder (Fisher, 2009);cerebral palsy (Ayers, 2004); restless legs and periodic limb movement disorder (Hammond, in press); physical and emotional symptoms associated with Type I diabetes mellitus (Monjezi & Lyle, 2006); essential tremor; and for ''chemo fog'' (Raffa & Tallarida, 2010;Schagen, Hamburger, Muller, Boogerd, & van Dam, 2001) following chemotherapy or radiation treatments.…”
Section: Other Clinical Applications Of Neurofeedback Trainingmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Similarly, touch of the affected limb may evoke the exact same sensation in that anatomically distant area (McCabe et al 2003). This finding is considered to be indicative of the neuroplastic changes known to occur in the somatosensory cortical maps (Maihöfner et al 2003;2004). Referred sensations in CRPS and other chronic pain conditions with known cortical reorganisation are commonly lost, or reduced in intensity, if the patient watches the clinician touch their limb (McCabe et al 2003;Hunter et al 2003).…”
Section: Altered Sensory Perceptionsmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Neurofeedback Training (NFT) has been found to be generally helpful in calming over excitable and over aroused nervous systems in other populations with chronic pain (Caro & Winter 2001;Sime 2004). For these reasons it is thought to be of potential use in those with CRPS but only one small, uncontrolled study has been published to date and NFT was not the only intervention (Jensen et al 2007).…”
Section: Neurofeedback Trainingmentioning
confidence: 99%
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