Stress Test Mount Juliet TN

Wouldn’t it be great if someone followed you around all day and tapped you on the shoulder whenever you were about to become stressed—a gentle reminder to take a moment to breathe and relax? You may find that reminder in biofeedback.

Norman R. Henry
(615) 754-7553
1003 Clark Ct
Mt. Juliet, TN
Services
Couples Psychotherapy, Family Psychotherapy, Individual Psychotherapy, Adjustment Disorder (e.g., bereavement, acad, job, mar, or fam prob)
Ages Served
Adolescents (13-17 yrs.)
Adults (18-64 yrs.)
Children (3-12 yrs.)
Older adults (65 yrs. or older)
Education Info
Doctoral Program: Oklahoma State University
Credentialed Since: 1984-05-07

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Amy Hack Johnson
(615) 871-9996
Tennessee Oncology
Hermitage, TN
Services
Behavioral Health Intervention involving Medical Conditions/Disorder, Behavioral Health Intervention involving Life Threatening/Terminal Disease, Adjustment Disorder (e.g., bereavement, acad, job, mar, or fam prob)
Ages Served
Adults (18-64 yrs.)
Older adults (65 yrs. or older)
Adolescents (13-17 yrs.)
Education Info
Doctoral Program: University of Kentucky
Credentialed Since: 1997-03-31

Data Provided by:
Psychiatric Center At Summit Medical Center
(615) 316-4350
5655 Frist Blvd
Hermitage, TN
Industry
Mental Health Professional, Physical Therapist

Data Provided by:
Tt Ans S Family Foundation
(615) 712-7742
105 Bonnabrook Dr
Hermitage, TN
Industry
Mental Health Professional

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Lori Bunch Life Lesson Therapy
(615) 824-7822
315 W Main St
Hendersonville, TN
Industry
Mental Health Professional

Data Provided by:
Jana Williams
(615) 391-3735
233 Jackson Meadows Dr
Hermitage, TN
Specialty
Psychiatry

Data Provided by:
Alexander J Chalko
(615) 889-4447
5653 Frist Blvd
Hermitage, TN
Specialty
Psychiatry

Data Provided by:
Narciso Cuseodio Gaboy
(615) 316-0940
1312 Central Ct
Hermitage, TN
Specialty
Psychiatry

Data Provided by:
Clinical Consulting Associates
(615) 822-3027
133 Indian Lake Rd
Hendersonville, TN
Industry
Mental Health Professional, Psychologist

Data Provided by:
Terrell M. McDaniel
(615) 822-1222
131 Sanders Ferry Rd. Ste. 203
Hendersonville, TN
Ages Served
Adults (18-64 yrs.)
Education Info
Doctoral Program: Auburn University
Credentialed Since: 1988-05-31

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Putting Stress to the Test

Provided by: 

By Matthew Solan

Wouldn’t it be great if someone followed you around all day and tapped you on the shoulder whenever you were about to become stressed—a gentle reminder to take a moment to breathe and relax? You may find that reminder in biofeedback.

An effective, high-tech approach to stress management, biofeedback uses sensors, computers, and visual images to record your reaction to different stressors. Biofeedback teaches you how to recognize the signs of stress in your body—such as changes in breathing pattern, heart rate and rhythm, and perspiration—and how to control those responses.

“Biofeedback is about knowing how to properly react and ‘feed back’ better information to your body,” says Beth Golden, PhD, a board-certified biofeedback practitioner at The Therapeutic Body Center in St. Petersburg, Florida. Once you identify your unique “stress triggers,” you can use relaxation exercises to calm yourself. “This teaches your body what a relaxed state should feel like,” says Golden. Over time your body learns to shift to a relaxed state automatically whenever it senses stress.

Since ongoing stress can trigger an assortment of ailments, experts have used biofeedback to fight many illnesses and disorders in which stress plays a vital role, such as chronic pain, diabetes, migraines, and anxiety. It can even help treat health issues like compulsive eating and insomnia, which often worsen with stress.

Yet biofeedback offers more than stress management: It can also help increase your energy when you feel sluggish and unfocused. Celeste De Bease, PhD, program director of the Biofeedback Clinic and Certification Center at Widener University in Chester, Pennsylvania, compares it to the way you might tune a car engine. “When your car is revved too hot, you need to cool it down, and when it’s too low you need to speed it up,” she explains. “It’s the same with your nervous system. Sometimes it needs to be calmed down; other times it needs to be stimulated—biofeedback can teach you how to do both.”

Stress sessions
There are four common types of biofeedback: surface electromyogram, thermal, galvanic skin response, and electroencephalogram. Here’s a look at each, how they work, and what science has found they can accomplish.

Surface Electromyogram (SEMG). An SEMG uses electrodes to measure muscle tension and alerts you either by a visual image or a sound when your muscles tense. SEMG has been used to treat muscle injuries and chronic pain like headaches, backache, neck pain, and TMJ (jaw) pain, as well as conditions such as asthma and diabetes, in which stress reduction helps to alleviate symptoms. For example, a recent study published in Diabetes Care discovered that type-2 diabetics were able to decrease average blood sugar levels and muscle tension when they used SEMG biofeedback and relaxation exercises for three months.

Thermal Biofeedback. Stress hormones cause the temperature in your hands and feet to drop. With thermal biofeedbac...

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