Geriatric Healthcare Consultants Lake Havasu City AZ

Take transcranial magnetic stimulation (TMS). This noninvasive therapy uses magnetic fields to increase brain activity, and exciting new research shows it may alleviate depression in even the toughest of cases and may even treat conditions such as Alzheimer’s, insomnia, and memory loss.

Cynthia Darlene Barry
(480) 963-6144
725 W Elliot Rd
Gilbert, AZ
Specialty
Geriatric Medicine

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David P Eppehimer
(602) 528-1340
483 W. Seed Farm Rd.
Sacaton, AZ
Specialty
Internal Medicine, Geriatric Medicine

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Monica Schultz Vandivort, MD
(417) 841-3760
5335 E Brushy Oak Ln
Hereford, AZ
Specialties
Geriatrics, Geriatric Medicine-Internal Medicine
Gender
Female
Education
Medical School: Univ Of Ks Sch Of Med, Kansas City Ks 66103
Graduation Year: 1989

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Evgenije Savin
(928) 425-7108
5886 S Hospital Dr
Globe, AZ
Specialty
Geriatric Medicine

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Paul Charles Rousseau, MD
(602) 277-5551
21914 N 74th Ln
Glendale, AZ
Specialties
Geriatrics, Geriatric Medicine-Internal Medicine, Palliative Medicine
Gender
Male
Education
Medical School: Univ Auto De Guadalajara, Fac De Med, Guadalajara, Jalisco, Mexico
Graduation Year: 1978

Data Provided by:
Janet Campion
(520) 694-6000
1501 N Campbell Ave
Tucson, AZ
Specialty
Geriatric Medicine

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DeWall John Hildreth
(520) 625-1101
210 W Continental Rd
Green Valley, AZ
Specialty
Geriatric Medicine

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Philip Bruce James, MD
(602) 224-1900
4840 E Indian School Rd Ste 101
Phoenix, AZ
Specialties
Geriatrics, Geriatric Medicine-Family Practice
Gender
Male
Education
Medical School: Mc Master Univ, Sch Of Med, Hamilton, Ont, Canada
Graduation Year: 1984

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Harry Lavern Gale
(928) 772-1510
3223 N Windsong Dr
Prescott Valley, AZ
Specialty
Geriatric Medicine

Data Provided by:
Chi Q Duong, DO
(602) 971-5500
18404 N Tatum Blvd Ste 205
Phoenix, AZ
Specialties
Geriatrics, Geriatric Medicine-Family Practice
Gender
Female
Education
Medical School: Univ Of Hlth Sci, Coll Of Osteo Med, Kansas City Mo 64124
Graduation Year: 1995

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Magnetic Personality

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By Linda Childers

Most types of magnet therapy sound like snake oil. A spam email, obscure website, or glowing advertisement promises that magnets will cure all your ailments, restore your youth, and do everything but your taxes. But not all of the magnet therapies are bogus. Take transcranial magnetic stimulation (TMS). This noninvasive therapy uses magnetic fields to increase brain activity, and exciting new research shows it may alleviate depression in even the toughest of cases and may even treat conditions such as Alzheimer’s, insomnia, and memory loss.

During TMS therapy, doctors place a device containing a magnetic coil on your head, which generates magnetic pulses that travel to specific areas of your brain and create an electric current. This appears to activate the neurons there, although researchers haven’t figured out the exact mechanism yet. The procedure takes about 20 to 45 minutes, and you usually receive daily sessions for several weeks.

Metal coils and magnetic pulses may seem, well, strange. But many physicians—including Mark George, MD, a distinguished professor of psychiatry and radiology and director of the Center for Advanced Imaging Research and Brain Stimulation Laboratory at the Medical University of South Carolina—view TMS as a safe and effective way of relieving depression. “In our research, we’ve found that many people with depression who don’t respond to talk therapy and/or medications do respond to TMS,” George says. “One of the benefits of TMS is its unprecedented accuracy, which allows physicians to target the front area of a patient’s brain, an area associated with mood regulation.” By stimulating brain functions and chemical activity, George says, TMS effectively “jump-starts” the mood- regulating parts of the brain and significantly improves the condition of depressed patients.

Beyond Prozac

It certainly had that effect on Susan Morris, 49, of Camden, South Carolina. She had suffered from depression for many years and had tried talk therapy and various antidepressants, including Effexor, Wellbutrin, and Celexa, without success. “The medications either didn’t work, or they quit working after a short period of time,” she says. Last year, after a two-year bout of severe depression, Morris found herself on a downward spiral. “In October of 2007, I went through a period of depression when I feared I would hit rock bottom and not be able to get back up,” she says.

George, a pioneer in the field of TMS, suggested Morris undergo a series of half-hour TMS treatments over the course of three days. The results were immediate: Her depression lifted a day or two after the treatments. Others have had similar experiences. A 2007 study published in Biological Psychiatry, for example, looked at more than 300 people with severe depression and for whom antidepressants hadn’t worked. Half of the group received five TMS treatments a week, each session lasting 35 minutes. The other half of the group received placebo tre...

Author: Linda Childers

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