Lifestyle 5 of America’s greatest medical breakthroughs revealed as the nation marks 250 years

Image

For most of America’s 250 years, mental illness was largely treated indirectly with medication, or not at all when medication was ineffective, according to Dr. Russ Voltin, a West Virginia-based practicing psychiatrist and medical consultant at BrainsWay.

The biggest breakthrough, Voltin told Fox News Digital, has been neuromodulation therapies like deep transcranial magnetic stimulation (TMS), which are “clinically proven to non-invasively target the brain circuits involved in conditions such as depression and OCD, helping rebalance neural activity at its source.”

“Mental health is brain health, and for the first time, we have treatments designed to address it that way.”

Doctor consoles woman during check-up as she holds head in apparent distress or pain

For most of America’s 250 years, mental illness was largely treated indirectly with medication, or not at all when medication was ineffective. (iStock)

A generation ago, a patient who didn’t respond to medication had very limited options, he said.

“Today, a clinician can offer noninvasive brain stimulation in an outpatient chair – no anesthesia, no sedation, none of the prominent side effects of medication, and all with limited lifestyle interruption.”

The FDA recently expanded clearance for an accelerated Deep TMS protocol that shortens the initial phase of depression treatment from about four weeks of daily visits to just six treatment days.

“Mental health is brain health, and for the first time, we have treatments designed to address it that way.”

“For someone in a depressive crisis, this is the difference between waiting and getting better,” the expert said.

In clinical trials, roughly 78% of patients reached remission and more than 80% were still in remission a full year later.

Depressed woman

“The biggest shift is that for people who once cycled through medication after medication with no relief, durable recovery is now a realistic goal rather than a hope.” (iStock)

“As a clinician, that last figure is the one that matters most: People going back to work, repairing relationships and re-entering their own lives, not just scoring better on a questionnaire,” Voltin said.

“The biggest shift is that for people who once cycled through medication after medication with no relief, durable recovery is now a realistic goal rather than a hope.”

Read the full article