Case Study Explores Hypnosis as Potential Treatment for MS

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AntonioBR
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Case Study Explores Hypnosis as Potential Treatment for MS

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Case Study Explores Hypnosis as Potential Treatment For Multiple Sclerosis Symptoms


Two Dragons Hypnotherapy recently announced the results of a one-year case study that assessed the effects of hypnotherapy on a patient with multiple sclerosis (MS) named Kristen. Case studies such as these, while not enough to establish new scientific conclusions on how to effectively treat a disease such as MS, add to a growing number of novel therapeutic approaches that are gaining more and more attention among patients.

At age 24, Kristen noticed that her vision started to become blurry, leading her to do a check-up at the optometrist. The doctor thought at first she had optic neuritis, a nerve disorder widely known as the first sign of MS. “I said, ‘Oh my God,’” Kristen explained in a recent news release about the case study. “That’s when I started to freak out.”

MS affects about 350,000 people in the United States and can cause loss of hearing, blindness, and paralysis. Unfortunately, the only available medications currently for MS only treat symptoms and not the underlying cause.

In her efforts to learn more about treatment options, Kristen began researching Mind Body Medicine (MBM). MBM therapies like hypnosis, yoga, and acupuncture have been acknowledged as potential treatment resources, with NIH-funded studies showing that MBM therapies are successful in improving patients’ pain intensity, quality of life and anxiety for many diseases.

Kristen eventually met Cynthia Chauvin, a hypnotherapist in Northern Virginia who has been using hypnosis as a therapy for over ten years, and who wanted to assess the efficacy of the technique. “I’ve been interested in seeing if hypnosis could be used to help someone literally heal themselves,” explained Chauvin in the news release. “But it needed to be the right person.”

Chauvin felt that for her to explore hypnosis to treat medical conditions, she had to find a patient who would truly believe in the potential of the technique, and Kristen was the ideal candidate.

Kristen suffers from relapsing remitting MS, however, doctors told her that she will likely reach progressive MS. To delay her symptoms’ progression, she wanted to try hypnosis.

In hypnotherapy, the therapist uses the power of hypnosis to “suggest” behaviors in patients for comedic effect. “Sing in Martian, believe that a belt is a snake or fall in love with a complete stranger,” said Chauvin. “It’s all in good fun. But it’s also a clue as to what’s possible.”

The therapist also helps the patient to un-learn negative behaviors, such as a smoking habit. Chauvin calls her technique “trance-based learning.”

In the first session, Kristen’s MS symptoms included a sandpapery feel in her hands and numbness. Over six sessions, Chauvin put Kristen in a trance, and then “suggested” that her body repair the connections that MS has destroyed.

“We’re visualizing building bridges and getting the body and nerves talking again, something that multiple sclerosis literally interferes with,” explained Chauvin. “I don’t think this is just about changing her body to a relaxed state; I suspect we’re actually re-wiring her system on some level.”

“I don’t talk about the malady at all,” said Chauvin. “The entire session is about connectivity, working with Kristen’s deepest innate abilities and letting her body do the rest. I never use the words healing, it infers disease. I only refer to the body establishing a healthy balance on a cellular level.”

Chauvin clarified in the news release that the sessions are quite simple: “I put her into a deep relaxed state and using a basic structure I have developed, I improvise the session from that point.”

Mind-body medicine techniques are now recognized to have a positive effect on some diseases, with prestigious research centers such as Georgetown University and Harvard University launching programs on the mind-body connection. The National Institutes for Health is also actively supporting complementary medicine investigations.

“Since its establishment 16 years ago, the center has funded thousands of important research projects. Without this work, the American public would lack vital information on the safety and effectiveness of many practices and products that are widely used and readily available,” said NIH Director Francis S. Collins, M.D., Ph.D. in the news release.

After two sessions of hypnotherapy, Kristen noted that the sandpapery feel in her hands had vanished, with an MRI performed after 12 weeks showing the lesions in her brain had gone from severe to a stable state.

Kristen attributes the positive symptoms’ delay to Chauvin’s work. “I’m a lot more grounded, not as much mind chatter,” she said. “Things don’t bother me as much as they used to. I’ve reduced my stress level, and I don’t react the same way to things, my body doesn’t react the same way.”

Chauvin is now using hypnosis on other patients with chronic conditions, and according to her, the results so far have been impressive. Although there is no scientific evidence, which would require large randomized trials, the fact that Kristen’s symptoms went from a daily frequency to absent is evidence of the potential of the therapy’s effectiveness. “I would recommend Cynthia for any physical ailment you’re trying to move past,” said Kristen in the news release. “Especially if you’ve been told you have something chronic and incurable. Before you get stuck in that mindset, I would definitely recommend Cynthia’s work with hypnotherapy because I think it will make a big difference.”

“Those that believe they can be healed, can be healed,” said Chauvin. Kristen continues to be treated at Two Dragons Hypnotherapy and she is also under care of a neurologist.


https://multiplesclerosisnewstoday.com/ ... -symptoms/
AntonioBR
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Re: Case Study Explores Hypnosis as Potential Treatment for

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Kristen has been working with Certified Hypnotherapist Cynthia Chauvin on her Multiple Sclerosis symptoms. After three months of sessions with Cynthia, her symptoms are gone and her MRI has come back with amazing news.

Video: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=ZiiXbY8NmUQ
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NHE
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Re: Case Study Explores Hypnosis as Potential Treatment for

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AntonioBR wrote:Kristen has been working with Certified Hypnotherapist Cynthia Chauvin on her Multiple Sclerosis symptoms. After three months of sessions with Cynthia, her symptoms are gone and her MRI has come back with amazing news.
Relapse Remitting. Three months is about the length of time a typical relapse takes to clear up. With a relapse remitting disease and a sample size of 1, it's impossible to say what caused the remission (no matter how badly one wishes to believe it).
Anunymouse
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Re: Case Study Explores Hypnosis as Potential Treatment for

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Hypnosis is fun, I used to do with for gags with friends (willing friends, no creepy 70's sci fi stuff :) ) I have no doubt that I could put someone under and have them 'feel' less of an issue or ignore an issue just like I had my college room-mate answering his shoe every time the phone rang. I have 100% doubt that I could make someones brain fix itself. As far as your brain and the rest of your organs are concerned, you don't exist. Because they don't know they exist. So there's no way to 'convince' them to do something different than what they're doing.
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Re: Case Study Explores Hypnosis as Potential Treatment for

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smh
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