loader image
Sunday, November 9, 2025
74.2 F
McAllen
- Advertisement -

Reducing Insomnia & Improving Autonomic Nervous System Function

Translate to Spanish or other 102 languages!

These tones linked to brainwaves are echoed back in real time via earbuds. This allows the brain a chance to listen to itself, to look at itself in an acoustic mirror. Image for illustration purposes
These tones linked to brainwaves are echoed back in real time via earbuds. This allows the brain a chance to listen to itself, to look at itself in an acoustic mirror. Image for illustration purposes

Mega Doctor News

- Advertisement -

 By Wake Forest University School of Medicine

Newswise — WINSTON-SALEM, N.C. – A good night’s sleep is crucial to health and well-being. Numerous research studies have shown that insomnia can increase the risk of cardiovascular events, obesity, diabetes and other illnesses. Now, a new study from researchers at Wake Forest University School of Medicine shows significant improvements in not only sleep quality, but also in improved autonomic nervous system function using a closed-loop, acoustic stimulation neurotechnology.

The study is published online in Global Advances in Integrative Medicine and Health.

- Advertisement -

Cereset ResearchTM with Standard Operating Procedures (CR-SOP) is the evolution of HIRREM®, or high-resolution, relational, resonance-based electroencephalic mirroring, a noninvasive, closed-loop technology that uses scalp sensors to monitor brainwaves and software algorithms to translate specific frequencies into audible tones of varying pitch.

These tones linked to brainwaves are echoed back in real time via earbuds. This allows the brain a chance to listen to itself, to look at itself in an acoustic mirror.

“CR-SOP allows the brain to reset from stress patterns that contribute to insomnia,” said Charles H. Tegeler, M.D., chair of neurology at Wake Forest University School of Medicine. “During the intervention, the brain continuously updates with respect to its own activity patterns, resulting in auto-calibration or self-optimization.”

While still echoing brainwaves, as with legacy HIRREM, CR-SOP uses an updated platform with faster computers, new sensors and hardware, and computer management during the protocols. This results in faster echoing of brainwaves, shorter sessions and reduced dependence on technologist expertise.

- Advertisement -

In this randomized and controlled study of 22 adults, researchers compared changes on the Insomnia Severity Index (ISI), a self-report instrument to assess insomnia symptoms. About half of the participants received 10 sessions of CR-SOP linked to brainwaves while the control group received 10 sessions of randomly generated auditory tones. Sessions were received over a mean of 15.3 days. Researchers also recorded heart rate and blood pressure to assess autonomic cardiovascular regulation. 

After completion of the sessions and at follow-up visits up to six weeks later, subjects in the CR-SOP group reported reduced insomnia symptoms. They also showed statistically and clinically significant improvements in autonomic function across multiple measures such as heart rate variability (HRV) and baroreflex sensitivity (BRS) compared to those who received random tones. HRV is a powerful biometric that reflects the health of the autonomic nervous system, and BRS measures blood pressure regulation. HRV is correlated with a host of important health and well-being outcomes.

These findings are in line with previous HIRREM research that showed a reduction in insomnia symptoms.

According to Tegeler, the study also used standard operating procedures so that all subjects received the same sequence of protocols. Taken together, this greatly increases the scalability of this approach so that more people might have access, more quickly, he said.

“Closed-loop acoustic stimulation can improve sleep as well as autonomic function in those who suffer from insomnia,” Tegeler said. “This pilot study demonstrates these benefits with CR-SOP from sessions received over a short period. This is also an important step in showing the intervention’s potential scalability for treating more people.”

Ongoing clinical trials are focused on stress and anxiety in health care workers as well as caregivers. 

HIRREM and Cereset Research are registered trademarks of Brain State Technologies based in Scottsdale, Arizona and have been licensed to Wake Forest University School of Medicine for collaborative research since 2011.

This study was supported by research grants from The Susanne Marcus Collins Foundation Inc. and the Wake Forest Clinical and Translational Science Institute.

- Advertisement -
- Advertisement -

- Advertisement -

More Articles

A Specific Human Gene Can Help the Heart Repair Itself from Heart Attack or Heart Failure

A naturally occurring gene called Cyclin A2 (CCNA2), which turns off after birth in humans, can actually make new, functioning heart cells and help the heart repair itself from injury including a heart attack or heart failure when the gene is turned back on.

Global Reviews Call for Urgent Action on Endometriosis in Most World Regions

Endometriosis is estimated to affect one in 10 reproductive-aged women worldwide – but research reveals stark global inequities in how the chronic condition is recognized, treated and prioritized in national health systems.

Researchers Unlock New Way to Help Fight Skin Cancer

Researchers at the UNC School of Medicine and UNC Lineberger Comprehensive Cancer Center have identified a potential solution. In a new study published in the Journal of Clinical Investigation, researchers have found that by inhibiting a problematic protein, the immune system can better fight off melanoma, decreasing tumor growth and bolstering the body’s immune cells.

Tips for Coping with the Time Change

If you’re starting to feel more depressed and less motivated now that the sun is setting sooner, you’re not alone.
- Advertisement -
×