214
Participants
Start Date
September 29, 2020
Primary Completion Date
September 30, 2025
Study Completion Date
September 30, 2025
Deep Brain Reorienting (DBR)
Trauma processing through DBR involves bringing up a traumatic memory and encouraging the client to focus on tensions arising in the muscles of the shoulders, neck, head and face (i.e., those involved in orienting toward a threatening person/event). The rationale is as follows: Physiologically, orienting to a stimulus, whether external or in the mind's eye, comes before any affective response to it. Here, it is hypothesized that there is activity in certain midbrain structures , i.e.,Superior Colliculi (SC) and Periaqueductal Gray (PAG). The deep layers of the SC bring on a brief (orienting) tension in the neck as well as preparing for eye movements, which is later followed by the processing of raw affect in the PAG. In session, if we can attend to this tension - even if we have to backtrack from the emotion that follows - we can establish an anchor in the body that precedes the affect and is hypothesized to protect against emotional overwhelm.
RECRUITING
London Health Sciences Centre - University Hospital, London
Canadian Institutes of Health Research (CIHR)
OTHER_GOV
London Health Sciences Centre Research Institute OR Lawson Research Institute of St. Joseph's
OTHER