What causes those with an Eating Disorder (ED) to look in a mirror and see an obese person? The answer is found in the brain. The Electroencephalograms (brain wave analysis) in the 50 plus women studied in an Eating Disorder residential center revealed serious brain dysfunction in all. And, the good news is that these brain dysfunctions can be remedied, offering the greatest possibility of restoring healthy life patterns.
Reflecting the source; addressing the problem
As generally acknowledged by therapists involved in ED treatment for Anorexia and Bulimia, intervention has proven only modestly effective. Because of this known difficulty, Psychologist Dr. Peter Smith of Tucson, Arizona added Neurofeedback to the more traditional treatment modalities at a major ED residence center. Three different Neurofeedback training approaches were used:
- Symptom based (neurological training based on the symptoms only with no Quantitative EEG (computerized brain wave analysis) before training.
- QEEG analysis with traditional Neurofeedback training protocols.
- The NeuroMatrix approach with Clinical/QEEG (evaluating the brain wave patterning plus computerized evaluation), and training with researched- designed training protocols)
The objectives of the study were: 1) To determine if Neurofeedback would improve clinical outcomes for Anorexics and Bulimics, and 2) to evaluate outcome differences in the three Neurofeedback (brain wave training) approaches in use at the time.
Dr. Smith showed that adding Neurofeedback to the ED resident treatment plan clearly had benefits beyond traditional treatment. BDI (depression) scores, neuroticism scores, and EDI (Eating Disorders Inventory) scores demonstrated significant improvement over traditional treatment. Weight changes were all in the desired direction.
At the end of the study in a follow up telephone survey, it was found that 22% had decreased meds in the No QEEG before training group, 21% in the QEEG and traditional Neurofeedback protocols, and 61% in the NeuroMatrix Neurofeedback group.
For those interested, abstracts of these studies are found here:








