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Old 03-01-2013, 06:34 PM
Bopeep1 Bopeep1 is offline
New Member
 
Join Date: Mar 2013
Posts: 2
10 yr Member
Bopeep1 Bopeep1 is offline
New Member
 
Join Date: Mar 2013
Posts: 2
10 yr Member
Smile She was stumped?

Quote:
Originally Posted by ballerina View Post
My physical therapist is finally warming up to my tDCS home treatments. She recently commented that she guessed "it would be OK for me to use the device because I "have a doctorate, after all, it's not like you are a bricklayer." In total astonishment I asked her if she felt comfortable providing a bricklayer with a TENS unit to use at home. She replied, "Of course I would." When I asked her to define for me how the technology of tDCS is substantially different from that of a TENS unit she was stumped. Finally she stated that TENS units are not experimental and tDCS is. I then suggested that perhaps she should let Blue Cross/Blue shield know that because even though TENS units have been around for 40 years, I was required to purchase my TENS unit out of pocket because it was considered to be experimental. I reminded her of her skepticism when I suggested that graded motor imagery and mirror therapy might help me. Now she uses both of these treatment modalities with other patients.

Maybe she should be paying me.

Please do not be intimidated by this treatment. It is not rocket science. I am still seeing improvements each day. Probably the best thing about my treatment is the decrease in the numerous sensations that can make us nuts, i.e. dizziness, tingling, freezing cold one minute and sweating the next, joint aches and pains, headaches, weird vision issues, a general overwhelming feeling of overall feelings of being unwell, extreme reaction to minor aches and pains like bumps, paper cuts, burning, stiffness, reactions to loud noises and vibrations, and sensitivity to touch and temperature changes. This treatment will not cure me but it is making it easier to manage the degree to which I suffer.

I hope my journey can help others.

Wishing everyone a Happy Thanksgiving!
She should be paying you! The difference between TENs and direct current stim. is direct current. TENs is intermittent current. You could burn your skin with it and it is the continuous current for twenty minutes that stimulates the frontal lobe. My little machine ramps up then times your session. It turns off automatically after twenty minutes and aborts immediately if you are getting too much current (because of too much pressure on the electrode). I am still getting use to the device. TMS is $7,000; insurance does not pay for it, and you may have to repeat it. Only offered in a clinic. Plus, it is unpleasant (sounds like an MRI) and each session lasts an hour.
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