Psychiatry Archives

Virtual Reality Helps Young Burn Patients

3568pain1 Virtual Reality Helps Young Burn PatientsVirtual reality has been used for everything from phantom limb pain, to post-traumatic stress disorder, to phobia of public speaking, and training surgeons for laparoscopic surgeries. Now Hunter Hoffman, who is the director of the Virtual Reality Analgesia Research Center for the University of Washington, has helped to design a VR game called SnowWorld to help pediatric burn patients control their pain.

The game is called SnowWorld, and when young burn victims put on its high-tech helmet and get involved in playing, they lose sight of the nurses, equipment and other fearful sights and sounds around them. Instead, they’re immersed in an Arctic world where they lob virtual snowballs at penguins, snowmen and roaring woolly mammoths while speeding through hairpin turns in a canyon of ice.
SnowWorld’s designer, Hunter Hoffman, the director of the University of Washington’s Virtual Reality Analgesia Research Center in Seattle, explained that burn victims often re-experience the sensation of getting burned as their wounds are handled during daily care.
3568pain2 Virtual Reality Helps Young Burn Patients“So, our idea was to create this ‘cool’ scenario — imagery of snowflakes, an icy world of snowmen and penguins — things that are the antithesis of fire,” he said.
Pediatric burn victims, especially, need some form of non-medicinal pain control during their treatment. That’s because methods commonly used in adult patients — drugs like morphine, or artificially induced comas — are simply too risky for use in children.
“In fact, all they could give Nathan was a light dose of oxycontin,” Heidi Neisinger said.
Hoffman knew from his own research, and others’ as well, that pain requires sustained attention from the brain. He figured, then, that distraction might help ease it. That’s the theory behind SnowWorld, the first-ever use of virtual reality to help treat severe pain.
Hoffman, a psychologist, teamed up with Seattle-based virtual reality designers Ari Hollander and Howard Rose to perfect the latest version of the game.
“Designing a great virtual world is all about maximizing presence,” Hollander explained. “Trying to make you feel like you are really in that virtual environment.”
Helping kids block out their immediate environment to avoid the anticipatory aspect of pain is key, the experts said.

Read more from The Washington Post . . .
More from the American Pain Society . . .
Homepage . . .

Primetime Basic Instincts: Milgram Experiment on TV

Primetime Basic Instincts: Milgram Experiment on TV

Tonight at 10pm ET ABC News is planning to air its “Primetime” special that will show the recreation of the famous Milgram Experiment:

In 1961, social psychologist Stanley Milgram asked those same questions. That was the year Nazi Adolf Eichmann, on trial for his war crimes, denied responsibility for his actions by saying he was simply doing what his superiors told him to do.

Read More

Computer Characters Tortured for Science

Computer Characters Tortured for Science

Professor Mel Slater of the Catalan Polytechnic University has recreated the classic Milgram Experiment using a computer simulated woman, with some interesting results.

In the original experiment, conducted by Stanley Milgram in the 1960s, volunteers were told by an authority figure to deliver electric shocks to another person as punishment for incorrect answers to a test. The other person wasn’t really receiving the shocks, but the volunteers were tricked into thinking they were by shouts of pain and protest. Despite this feedback, some volunteers went on to deliver what would have been lethal shocks.

Read More

Whipping Up Enthusiasm (with whips)

Whipping Up Enthusiasm (with whips)

The crew over at Improbable Research has brought our attention to an old article about the therapeutic uses of whips to treat and/or cure depression and suicide. Maybe I watched too many USA vs Russia movies growing up, but just the thought of being whipped by a Russian would cure me right up.

Russian scientists from the city of Novosibirsk, Siberia, made a sensational report at the international conference devoted to new methods of treatment and rehabilitation in narcology. The report was called “Methods of painful impact to treat addictive behavior.”

Read More

FDA to Consider Transcranial Magnetic Stimulation System

FDA to Consider Transcranial Magnetic Stimulation System

Remember transcranial magnetic stimulation (TMS), a noninvasive procedure in which electrical activity of the brain is “buzzed” by an alternating magnetic field, through magnetic induction? We’ve followed TMS for quite some time now, for its purported usefulness in depression, schizophrenia, migranes, and vision — not to mention its potential to induce temporary “Rain Man” – like savant states.
According to the Associated Press, the FDA is planning to consider for approval a TMS device, developed for the treatment of major depression, called Neurostar System by Neuronetics.

Read More

New Test Superior to MMSE

The Folstein test, more commonly known as the MMSE (Mini Mental Status Examination), has been used by clinicians since 1975 to screen patients for signs of dementia. New research conducted by Dr. Tariq at St. Louis University demonstrates the effectiveness of a new screening tool for detecting mild cognitive decline.

A screening tool for dementia developed by Saint Louis University geriatricians appears to work better in identifying mild cognitive problems in the elderly than the commonly used Mini Mental Status Examination, according to a new study.

Read More

Net-Based Therapy for Depression

Net-Based Therapy for Depression

New research out of the Australian National University has found that cognitive behavior therapy and educational based websites can be effective in treating some forms of depression.

Researchers studied a group of patients who were referred to two web sites: The MoodGYM and education site BluePages. The MoodGYM is therapeutic in nature, a cognitive behavior therapy site dedicated to preventing depression by helping users to “identify and overcome problem emotions,” showing them how to “develop good coping skills for the future” in order to enjoy good mental health. BluePages is a depression education site, providing information about the symptoms of and treatments for depression.

Read More

A New Tool for Evaluating Learning Disabilities in Children

A New Tool for Evaluating Learning Disabilities in Children

Earlier this week, we profiled a new tool to detect pain in infants. Today, it’s learning disabilities in kids. Based on more than a decade of neuroscience research at Northwestern University, the BioMAP (Biological Marker of Auditory Processing) is now commercially available:

“Learning disabilities are believed to affect nearly one in 10 children, but their causes are difficult to pinpoint,” says Nina Kraus, director of Northwestern University’s Auditory Neuroscience Laboratory. Kraus and Northwestern researchers Trent Nicol and Steven Zecker have found that a third of the 1,000-plus children they have tested show a dysfunction in the way the brainstem encodes basic sounds of speech…

Read More

Combing for Clues to Anorexia and Bulemia

Combing for Clues to Anorexia and Bulemia

The tangled path the GI tract now leads through … hair. It turns out our durable and always-fashionable scalp adornment acts as a mirror of our eating habits, and can help determine whether patients are hiding some serious behaviors:

“Your body records your eating habits in the hair. So, we can use that to tell the nutritional health of an individual,” said lead researcher Kent Hatch, an assistant professor of integrative biology at BYU.

Read More