HEALTH Small studies of 40-hertz sensory stimulation confirm safety, suggest Alzheimer’s benefits

parsonswife

Veteran Member
Small studies of 40-hertz sensory stimulation confirm safety, suggest Alzheimer’s benefits


MIT researchers report early-stage clinical study results of tests with noninvasive 40-hertz light and sound treatment.
A pair of early-stage clinical studies testing the safety and efficacy of 40-hertz sensory stimulation to treat Alzheimer’s disease has found that the potential therapy was well-tolerated, produced no serious adverse effects, and was associated with some significant neurological and behavioral benefits among a small cohort of participants.

“In these clinical studies we were pleased to see that volunteers did not experience any safety issues and used our experimental light and sound devices in their homes consistently,” says Li-Huei Tsai, the Picower Professor in the the Picower Institute for Learning and Memory at MIT and senior author of the Dec. 1 paperdescribing the studies in PLoS ONE. “While we are also encouraged to see some significant positive effects on the brain and behavior, we are interpreting them cautiously, given our study’s small sample size and brief duration. These results are not sufficient evidence of efficacy, but we believe they clearly support proceeding with more extensive study of 40-hertz sensory stimulation as a potential noninvasive therapeutic for Alzheimer’s disease.”

In three studies spanning 2016-19, Tsai’s lab discovered that exposing mice to light flickering or sound clicking at the gamma-band brain rhythm frequency of 40 hertz — or employing the light and sound together — produced widespread beneficial effects. Treated mice modeling Alzheimer’s disease pathology experienced improvements in learning and memory; reduced brain atrophy, neuron and synapse loss; and showed lower levels of the hallmark Alzheimer’s proteins amyloid beta and phosphorylated tau compared to untreated controls. The stimulation appears to produce these effects by increasing the power and synchrony of the 40-hertz brain rhythm, which the lab has shownprofoundly affects the activity of several types of brain cells, including the brain’s vasculature. (More at the site)

Also Found this on x-

Dr Jack Kruse
I've using this pulse frequency for 15 yrs in my clinic. If the 150 ppm deuterium silt has "welded" the brain’s water lattice into a 78-dielectric sludge, the 0.66 eV (NIR) cannot penetrate. It "scatters" in the Refractive Index Failure.

The Frequency is: 40 Hz is the Gamma Rhythm of the human brain. It is the frequency of Cognitive Synchronization.

The Action: Flickering light at 40 Hz acts like a Mechanical Jackhammer on the water lattice. It introduces a rhythmic vibration that "shakes" the Meckel’s Cave and Sphenoid Switchboard.

The Result: This vibration "un-sticks" the deuterium anchors due to the KIE, allowing the metabolic water to return to a 160-dielectric state one the patient is moved from the treatment directly into sunlight.

Only then, once the deuterium "silt" is vibrating can the 0.66 eV (NIR) infrared light with grounding actually support the Proton Tunneling required for the microglia to "wake up". Works really well for mental ILLNESSES

Amazon sells the lights we are going to try this for DH
 

library lady

Veteran Member
Small studies of 40-hertz sensory stimulation confirm safety, suggest Alzheimer’s benefits


MIT researchers report early-stage clinical study results of tests with noninvasive 40-hertz light and sound treatment.
A pair of early-stage clinical studies testing the safety and efficacy of 40-hertz sensory stimulation to treat Alzheimer’s disease has found that the potential therapy was well-tolerated, produced no serious adverse effects, and was associated with some significant neurological and behavioral benefits among a small cohort of participants.

“In these clinical studies we were pleased to see that volunteers did not experience any safety issues and used our experimental light and sound devices in their homes consistently,” says Li-Huei Tsai, the Picower Professor in the the Picower Institute for Learning and Memory at MIT and senior author of the Dec. 1 paperdescribing the studies in PLoS ONE. “While we are also encouraged to see some significant positive effects on the brain and behavior, we are interpreting them cautiously, given our study’s small sample size and brief duration. These results are not sufficient evidence of efficacy, but we believe they clearly support proceeding with more extensive study of 40-hertz sensory stimulation as a potential noninvasive therapeutic for Alzheimer’s disease.”

In three studies spanning 2016-19, Tsai’s lab discovered that exposing mice to light flickering or sound clicking at the gamma-band brain rhythm frequency of 40 hertz — or employing the light and sound together — produced widespread beneficial effects. Treated mice modeling Alzheimer’s disease pathology experienced improvements in learning and memory; reduced brain atrophy, neuron and synapse loss; and showed lower levels of the hallmark Alzheimer’s proteins amyloid beta and phosphorylated tau compared to untreated controls. The stimulation appears to produce these effects by increasing the power and synchrony of the 40-hertz brain rhythm, which the lab has shownprofoundly affects the activity of several types of brain cells, including the brain’s vasculature. (More at the site)

Also Found this on x-

Dr Jack Kruse
I've using this pulse frequency for 15 yrs in my clinic. If the 150 ppm deuterium silt has "welded" the brain’s water lattice into a 78-dielectric sludge, the 0.66 eV (NIR) cannot penetrate. It "scatters" in the Refractive Index Failure.

The Frequency is: 40 Hz is the Gamma Rhythm of the human brain. It is the frequency of Cognitive Synchronization.

The Action: Flickering light at 40 Hz acts like a Mechanical Jackhammer on the water lattice. It introduces a rhythmic vibration that "shakes" the Meckel’s Cave and Sphenoid Switchboard.

The Result: This vibration "un-sticks" the deuterium anchors due to the KIE, allowing the metabolic water to return to a 160-dielectric state one the patient is moved from the treatment directly into sunlight.

Only then, once the deuterium "silt" is vibrating can the 0.66 eV (NIR) infrared light with grounding actually support the Proton Tunneling required for the microglia to "wake up". Works really well for mental ILLNESSES

Amazon sells the lights we are going to try this for DH
Thank you for sharing this. Please let the forum know the results after you try it.
 

GenErik

Veteran Member
I'm curious if the flickering light would set off/affect cluster headaches my dh, Erik, suffers from, along with MCI (mild cognitive impairment).
Genny
 

summerthyme

Administrator
_______________
I'm curious if the flickering light would set off/affect cluster headaches my dh, Erik, suffers from, along with MCI (mild cognitive impairment).
Genny
Does he have issues with his headaches with other lights?

This is what AI said when I asked about it triggering seizures...

Light flickering at 40 Hz can trigger seizures in people with photosensitive epilepsy, although the risk is lower than with frequencies between 5 and 30 Hz. While 5–30 Hz is considered the most common range for triggering seizures, sensitive individuals can react to flashes up to 60 Hz.

When I refined the prompt to include cluster headaches, this was the answer...

Cluster Headaches & Light: According to studies, bright, flashing, or flickering lights can trigger cluster headache bouts for nearly a quarter of patients.

40 Hz Flicker Effects: While 40 Hz light stimulation is often used in Alzheimer’s research, it can still cause headaches or nausea in sensitive individuals. The brain's electrical activity (EEG) responds strongly to this frequency.

Sensitivity: While migraines are more traditionally linked to light-induced pain, patients with headache disorders, including cluster headaches, often experience photophobia during attacks

So, it's an individual thing...

One other note...the mechanism of Alzheimers dementia is quite different than many other types. If someone has vascular dementia, this therapy may not affect it at all. It all sucks for the families affected.

Summerthyme
 

crossbowboy

Certifiable
The music of the Spheres.

Everything is vibration and resonance at the subatomic level, just as it is at the macro level. If you're lacking insanity, visit the Physics section of your local library.
And tip your bartender.

Look into the acoustic properties of the Grand Gallery in the largest Pyramid.

Despite what we know, we have lost so much of what we knew before...
 
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