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5.9.19
Resonant_Therapy-Mental_Healthcare
Resonant_Therapy-Mental_Healthcare
The sound frequencies used in these sessions
are based upon Rife sets for resonant therapy
devices.
* Thalamic Diseases. The thalamus relays motor and
sensory information to the cortex, it regulates as well
consciousness, sleep and alertness.
* Dissociative disorders, characterized by a disruption in the normal
functioning of consciousness, identity, memory, or perception.
* Dysthymic Disorder is characterized by chronic depression,
but with less severity than a major depression.
* Brain diseases, caused by injury or disease which affects
the electrical impulses among nerves.
* Dementia, serious loss of global cognitive ability in a previously
unimpaired person.
* Asperger syndrome, autism spectrum disorder (ASD) that is
characterized by significant difficulties in social interaction, alongside
restricted and repetitive patterns of behavior and interests. It differs
from other autism spectrum disorders by its relative preservation of
linguistic and cognitive development.
* Psychotic disorders, severe mental disorders that cause abnormal
thinking and perceptions. People with psychoses lose touch with reality.
Two of the main symptoms are delusions and hallucinations.
* Apraxias, loss of the ability to perform activities that a person is
physically able and willing to do.
* Autistic disorder, characterized by impaired social interaction and
communication, and by restricted and repetitive behavior.
* Alzheimer disease, most common form of dementia among older
people. Dementia is a brain disorder that seriously affects a person's
ability to carry out daily activities.
* Bipolar disorder, condition in which people go back and forth between
periods of a very good or irritable mood and depression.
* Schizophrenia, mental disorder characterized by a breakdown of
thought processes and by poor emotional responsiveness.
* Attention deficit disorder with hyperactivity, characterized by either
significant difficulties of inattention or hyperactivity and impulsiveness
or a combination of the two.
* Movement disorder, any neurological condition that affects the speed,
fluency, quality, and ease of movement.
* Aphasia, disturbance in formulation and comprehension of language
that results from damage to the brain.
* Vascular dementia or multi-infarct dementia, is dementia caused by
problems in the supply of blood to the brain.
* Agnosia, inability to recognize the import of sensory impressions.
* Anomia, impairment of one's ability to name persons and objects.
* Motor neuron disease, group of progressive neurological disorders
that destroy motor neurons.
* Mutism, being unable or unwilling to speak as a result of a physical
or psychological disorder.
* Neurologic gait disorders, deviations from normal walking.
* Prosopagnosia, an impairment in the recognition of faces.
* Tourette syndrome, characterized by repetitive, stereotyped,
involuntary movements and vocalizations.
* Hyperacusis, over-sensitivity to certain frequency ranges of sound.
* Demyelinating diseases, characterized by damage to the myelin
sheaths that cover the nerves.
* Essential tremor, progressive neurological disorder of which the
most recognizable feature is a tremor of the arms or hands that is
apparent during voluntary movements such as eating and writing.
* Neurogenic arthropathy, gradual and usually painless degeneration
of a joint, limb or muscle because of a lack of sensation in the
injured tissue.
* Phobic disorders, persistent, unrealistic, intense anxiety about and
fear of certain situations, circumstances, or objects.
* Chorea, brief, repetitive, jerky, or dance like uncontrolled movements
caused by muscle contractions that occur as symptoms of several
different disorders.
* Communication disorders, diseases or conditions that partially or
totally prevent human communication.
* Nonverbal learning disorder, condition characterized by a significant
discrepancy between higher verbal skills and lower motor, visuo-spatial,
and social skills.
* Restless legs syndrome, neurological disorder characterized by an
irresistible urge to move one's body to stop uncomfortable or odd
sensations.
* Stiff-person syndrome, neurologic disorder characterized by progressive
rigidity and stiffness, primarily of the axial musculature, that is
superimposed by spasms, resulting in postural deformities.
* Trichothiodystrophy, disorder that involves production of abnormal, brittle
hair. easily broken -lacking sulfur. While mild cases may involve only the hair.
More severe cases also cause delayed development, significant intellectual
disability, and recurrent infections.
* Tricotillomania, a type of impulse control disorder that involves an
irresistible urge to pull out hair.
* Muscle spasticity, disorder of the body's motor system in which certain
muscles are continuously contracted.
* Seasonal affective disorder, winter depression, winter blues, summer
depression, summer blues, or seasonal depression,
* Psychological sexual dysfunctions, any difficulty experienced by an individual
or a couple during any stage of a normal sexual activity.
* Hysteria dissociative, neurotic disorder whereby specific internal mental
contents (memories, ideas, feelings, perceptions) are lost to conscious
awareness and become unavailable to voluntary recall.
* Somatoform disorders, group of mental problems characterized by
physical complaints that aren't caused by a physical disease or
condition.
* Multiple sclerosis, nervous system disease which affects both brain
and spinal cord.
* Adiadochokinesis, inability to perform rapid alternating movements.
* Cerebellar ataxia, loss of movement and coordination, due to damage
or degeneration of the cerebellum.
* Cerebral palsy, an abnormality of motor function, the ability to
move and control movements.
* Myeloencephalitis, inflammation of the spinal cord and brain.
* Multiple system atrophy, progressive brain disorder that affects
movement and balance and disrupts the function of the autonomic
nervous system.
* Narcolepsy-cataplexy syndrome, disorder of overwhelming sleepiness
due to deficiency of a brain chemical called hypocretin.
* Seizures, changes in behavior that occur after an episode of
abnormal electrical activity in the brain.
* Seizure disorder, any condition in which seizures may be a symptom.
* Tonic clonic seizures, or Grand Mal, most commonly associated with
epilepsy and seizures in general.
* Personality disorder borderline, a pervasive pattern of instability in
interpersonal relationships, self-image and emotions.
* Neurosis obsessive compulsive, anxiety disorder characterized by
recurrent, unwanted thoughts (obsessions) and/or repetitive behavior
(compulsions).
* Choreoathetosis, involuntary movements in a combination of chorea
(irregular migrating contractions) and athetosis (twisting and writhing.
* Dyslexia symptoms, difficulty with phonological awareness, phonological
decoding, processing speed, orthographic coding, auditory short-term memory,
language skills/verbal comprehension, and/or rapid naming.
* Hypersomnia periodic, characterized by persistent episodic hypersomnia
and cognitive or mood changes.
* Bruxism, excessive grinding of the teeth and/or excessive clenching of
the jaw.
* Vertigo aural, or Meniere's Disease, a disorder of the inner ear that can
affect hearing and balance to a varying degree.
Algorithmic piano music mixed with sound frequencies.
This work is dedicated to the public domain and
may be reproduced without authorization.
http://resonant-therapy.webs.com/
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