How
Alpha-Stim® Cranial Electrotherapy Stimulation (CES)
Works
James
Giordano, Ph.D.
How does
Alpha-Stim cranial electrotherapy stimulation (CES)
technology work? The exact mechanism by which Alpha-Stim
produces effects is not fully known. However, based on
previous and ongoing studies, it appears that the
Alpha-Stim microcurrent waveform activates particular
groups of nerve cells that are located at the brainstem.
These groups of nerve cells produce the chemicals
serotonin and acetylcholine which can affect the
chemical activity of nerve cells that are both nearby
and at more distant sites in the nervous system. In
fact, these cells are situated to control the activity
of nerve pathways that run up into the brain and that
course down into the spinal cord. By changing the
electrical and chemical activity of certain nerve cells
in the brainstem, Alpha-Stim appears to amplify activity
in some neurological systems, and diminish activity in
others. This neurological ‘fine tuning’ is called
modulation, and occurs either as a result of, or
together with the production of a certain type of
electrical activity pattern in the brain known as an
alpha state which can be measured on brain wave
recordings (called electro-encephalograms, abbreviated
EEG). Such alpha rhythms are accompanied by feelings of
calmness, relaxation and increased mental focus. The
neurological mechanisms that are occurring during the
alpha state appear to decrease stress-effects, reduce
agitation and stabilize mood, and regulate both
sensations and perceptions of particular types of pain.
These effects can be produced after a single treatment,
and repeated treatments have been shown to increase the
relative strength and duration of these effects. In some
cases, effects have been stable and permanent,
suggesting that the electrical and chemical changes
evoked by Alpha-Stim have led to a durable re-tuning
back to normal function. Electromedical Products
International, Inc. is dedicated to continued research
into the mechanisms and effects through which Alpha-Stim
can be beneficial to patients with pain, anxiety,
depression and sleep disorders.

Alpha-Stim
CES engages the serotonergic (5-HT) raphe nuclei of the
brainstem. 5-HT inhibits brainstem cholinergic (ACh) and
noradrenergic (NE) systems that project supratentorially.
This suppresses thalamo-cortical activity, arousal,
agitation, alters sensory processing and induces EEG
alpha rhythm. As well, 5-HT can act directly to modulate
pain sensation in the dorsal horn of the spinal cord,
and alter pain perception, cognition and emotionality
within the limbic forebrain.
Legend: Blue arrows: inhibitory
interactions
Purple arrows: excitatory interactions
X : suppressed
pathways/interactions
Abbreviations: ACh:
actetylcholine; LDT: laterodorsal tegmental
nucleus of the brainstem; PPN: pediculo-ponitne
nucleus of the brainstem; NE: norepinephrine;
LC: locus ceruleus, 5-HT: serotonin
Note: Diagram
not to scale
James
Giordano, Ph.D. is a UNESCO Fellow and Scholar
in Residence at the Center for Clinical Bioethics,
Georgetown University Medical Center, Washington, DC.
Dr. Giordano is also Visiting Scholar at the Center for
Ethics, Dartmouth Medical School, Hanover, NH, and
Invited Lecturer at the Roundtable in Arts and Sciences,
Oxford University, UK. As a neuroscientist, Dr.
Giordano's ongoing work is focused upon neural
mechanisms of pain, the philosophy of pain research and
practice of pain medicine, and the neuroethical issues
inherent to the development and use of emergent
technologies in neurology and psychiatry. Dr. Giordano
received his Ph.D. in biological psychology from the
City University of New York. He was a NIEHS
post-doctoral fellow in neurotoxicology and neuroscience
at The Johns Hopkins University, Baltimore, MD, served
as Visiting Scientist in the Department of Clinical
Neuropharmacology, Max Planck Institute for Psychiatry,
Munich, Germany, was an American Psychological
Association Visiting Fellow in neuroimaging at the
Martinos Center for Advanced Imaging, Harvard University
Medical School/Massachusetts General Hospital, and
completed post-graduate training in bioethics at the
Neiswanger Institute for Bioethics and Health Policy,
Loyola University/Stritch Medical School, Chicago, IL.
The author of over 65 refereed publications on pain,
ethics and medical philosophy, Dr. Giordano serves as
Neuroscience Section Editor for the Pain Physician
journal, Bioethics Editor for the American Journal of
Pain Management, and Ethics Section Editor for the
journal Practical Pain Management.
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