
It is a drug-free therapy
Limbic resonance, also known as co-regulation, allows people to connect emotionally with one another on a neurochemical level and promote feelings of safety, trust, and understanding between individuals. When conducted face-to-face therapy is conducted in person, clients have access to private space where they can openly express themselves while cultivating limbic resonance – this isn’t possible when therapy sessions occur online as real time eye contact may not be possible with videoconferencing systems causing clients to avoid eye contact altogether which prevents limbic resonance from building properly.
TMS sessions use electromagnetic pulses to stimulate underactive areas of the brain that regulate fear regulation and stress response. This restores parasympathetic dominance, reduces adrenaline surges, and balances any energetic imprints left from past traumas.
It is a non-invasive treatment
The limbic system plays an essential role in brain health and wellbeing. If something goes awry with its complex circuitry, this may manifest in various psychiatric disorders including obsessive-compulsive disorder (OCD), major depressive disorder (MDD), and bipolar disorder; such conditions have increasingly been shown to share similar mechanistic underlyings within limbic CSTC network pathologies.
Ablative limbic system surgery entails stereotactic lesions to break apart the circuits implicated in these disorders, and has been employed successfully for decades with numerous applications across multiple clinical fields. Recently, however, several studies have demonstrated its efficacy among those not responding to traditional pharmacological or cognitive-behavioral treatments.
These procedures include dorsal anterior cingulotomy, anterior capsulotomy, subcaudate tractotomy and limbic leucotomy. A recent study concluded that limbic leucotomy (which involves lesioning frontothalamic white matter tracts in basal medial frontal cortex combined with lesion of the dACC) proved highly successful for treating OCD and intractable MDD in patients.
Transcranial Magnetic Stimulation (TMS) is a noninvasive technique to stimulate underactive areas of the brain involved with fear regulation, emotion processing and stress response. TMS can help alleviate anxiety, depression and posttraumatic stress disorder symptoms as well as restore parasympathetic dominance, calm adrenaline surges and rebalance energetic imprints from trauma; several research groups have published data supporting its efficacy for such conditions.






