Think Away Your Pain

Released on = April 24, 2007, 6:51 am

Press Release Author = Laurence Magne

Industry = Healthcare

Press Release Summary = Pain can be mysterious, untreatable and debilitating, and
its causes can be unknown. But if you could see the pain -- or, at least, your
brain\'s reaction to it -- you might be able to master it.

Press Release Body = From the desk of Dr Magne, author of Cancer Free For Life

Pain can be mysterious, untreatable and debilitating, and its causes can be unknown.
But if you could see the pain -- or, at least, your brain\'s reaction to it -- you
might be able to master it.

A study from researchers at Stanford University suggests that it\'s possible, and the
results could lead to better therapies for those suffering from crippling chronic
pain.

The researchers asked people in pain to try to control a pain-regulating region of
the brain by watching activity in that area from inside a real-time functional
magnetic resonance imaging machine. Initial results showed subjects could reduce
their pain, some quite dramatically.

It\'s the first evidence that humans can take control of a specific region of the
brain, and thereby decrease pain. The study showed that for many people with chronic
pain, available treatments like medication or surgery simply don\'t work. But this
exercise, which researchers have termed \"neuroimaging therapy,\" could one day help
some of the millions of Americans who suffer from untreatable chronic pain.

In the study, eight healthy subjects who\'d been subjected to a painful stimulus and
eight chronic pain patients underwent a series of images which tracked activity in
the brain. Subjects watched this area on a monitor in real time during the
procedure. Prompted by researchers\' suggestions of trying to lessen their own pain
by ignoring it or imagining it as benign, they set out in a mental game of
hot-and-cold to lessen their discomfort.

Twenty-eight healthy subjects and four pain patients were also put into control
groups that tried to control pain by viewing other patients\' brain data or using
other mental strategies, but no imaging machine. These tactics didn\'t show a
significant reduction in pain.

The pain patients reported that the imaging machine helped them decrease their
overall pain 64 percent. Healthy subjects said they saw a 23 percent increase in
their ability to control the strength of their pain, and a 38 percent increase in
their ability to master its unpleasantness.

A pain psychologist said she thinks the study lends scientific data to what
scientists already knew empirically -- that people can decrease their own pain by
focusing on certain thoughts.

It probably also helped that subjects could watch their brain activity unfold on a
screen, she said. For years, some therapy methods have allowed patients to monitor
and try to control their biofeedback by concentrating on things like skin
temperature and heart rate.

Patients may even be able to think away other problems like depression, anxiety and
dyslexia. \"We don\'t yet have a good answer to what happens if you keep practicing
and practicing." Visualization has been shown to help reduce the symptoms and
feelings of pain, by focusing on the area of pain and imagining it in color, then
changing the color. These techniques can be applied to any type of pain.



Web Site = http://cancer-free-for-life.com

Contact Details = Dr Magne has been researching the origins and causes of disease
and cancer for the past 25 years. Visit www.cancer-free-for-life.com to receive a
FREE report on The 10 Ways to Cure Cancer Immediately.

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