Benefits

Benefits

Sound Therapy is an outstanding new technology designed for accessibility, affordability and ease of use. Its potential health benefits are extensive and may include the following effects:

  • New vitality and sense of well being
  • Relief of tiredness and stress
  • Deep relaxation and relief of anxiety
  • Heightened creativity and mental capacity
  • Increased energy, focus and performance
  • Deep, beneficial sleep and an end to insomnia
  • Improved hearing for those with industrial deafness or hearing loss due to aging
  • Relief of tinnitus (ringing in the ears)
  • Better balance and recovery from dizziness or vertigo
  • Improved concentration and learning ability
  • Improved behaviour and communication in children
  • Increased voice quality and vocal range
  • Better communication, relationships and greater family harmony
Brain Damage PDF Print E-mail

After a brain damage caused by injury there is always a chance of recovery to varying degrees. Sound Therapy is an intervention which may increase the probability of a faster and more total recovery. The sooner it is introduced after the injury or stroke, the greater the likelihood of healing. Some stroke patients who use Sound Therapy have been seen to make an unexpectedly quick recovery, often with functioning returned to a surprisingly high level.

After brain damage the brain is faced with having to develop new pathways or reroute information to compensate for the damaged area. Sound Therapy may be effective in helping to create new brain pathways and reforming essential connections between more distant parts of the brain. The complex, multilayered harmonic and melodic information within the classical music stimulates many parts of the brain, helping to engender a form and structure which assists with various forms of sensory processing.

Sound Therapy may improve integration in the cerebellum, an area near the brain stem which controls many automatic functions and overall sensory and motor integration. The filtering which causes sudden bursts of high frequency sound may stimulate increased firing of neurons. When a neuron fires, it sends a message to other neurons in both chemical and electrical form. Often the process of firing off a message also creates new interneuronal connections called dendrites or axons. This means that using Sound Therapy may build new brain connections, increasing the neural network, exactly what is needed to recover from a stroke.

Research and Media

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To learn more about how Sound Therapy could aid recovery from brain damage, request one of our Free Reports.

 

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