Traumatic experiences can cause brain changes that result in the traumatic memory being stuck in a loop in particular brain circuits. The brain’s ability to process these traumatic memories also becomes impaired. Your brain’s normal healthy state or “default mode network” shifts to a state where the limbic (emotional) mind becomes more active with less control from the frontal cortex.
Traditional
treatments for PTSD symptoms typically involve psychotherapy, like
trauma-focused cognitive behavioral therapy, and pharmacotherapy, including
SSRIs. Yet, these standard approaches yield a clinically meaningful response in
only about 50% of patients, and as many as 72% fail to achieve remission (1).
Research spanning the last decade reveals that rTMS therapy can substantially
alleviate the core symptoms of PTSD in over 60% of individuals resistant to traditional treatments (1,2). This includes reducing intrusive flashbacks and nightmares, diminishing hyperarousal, lessening avoidance of trauma-related stimuli, and improving negative changes in mood and cognition.
Repetitive transcranial magnetic stimulation (rTMS) is a non-invasive, highly effective treatment that uses electromagnetic impulses that pass easily through the skull to stimulate abnormal brain activity without any systematic side effects or downtime.