Guest guest Posted July 28, 2005 Report Share Posted July 28, 2005 Group, I am really in need of some collective advice. I would love to hear from all, especially those who have had some success in a case similar to what I am about to describe. I need specific detailed advice. All is welcomed. I've got a 8 YO AD(H)D son, Jake. He has had 120+ sessions of NFB - SMR reward/theta inhibit (this was all I knew then). My theory is that this has perhaps moved him out of the hyperactivity class and can now be considered primarily ADD type. Last school year teachers ratings support the ADD classification. My wife and I would say we have seen no overall change from the NFB sessions, but perhaps we are overlooking the subtle changes that have occurred. I did a TLC assessment on Jake several months ago and recently took Pete's level I and II training in Milwaukee. Great class! Pete suggested I do another assessment which I did this last week-end. Results were comparable with the first assessment as far as my novice experience can tell. Based on my understanding of what I learned from Pete, the primary finding from Jake's assessment is that he has reverse activation of the Theta/Beta ratios (they go down from EO/EC to Task) which puts him in the category of Processing problems (ADD inattentive type). Am I correct that this is a determination for Processing problems? This is consistent with my subjective assessment with Processing issues being #1. However my wife's subjective assessment rated Filtering issues #1 with Processing as #3, but there was not so much of a point spread between them. By the way - C4 SMR EO is 10.3% and was 9.6 from the first assessment I did. I assume this tells me that SMR is generally OK since Pete said the target was 10. Pete indicated he would look at Jake's assessment and help me out with a training plan, but I know he is pretty busy right now and I want to hear the opinions of what some of you might have to say. I figured I could benefit from what others have to say on this issue, and maybe someone out there is in the same boat as I and can benefit from this too. Other important information: A) Jake does not respond very well to any of the stimulants including Stratera, but does show some improvement in his classroom performance when on Concerta. My ranking of Jake's main issues are: 1) behavioral problems at home, 2) very easily bored and unable to play on his own, 3) fine/gross motor delays and muscle tone issues, 4) LD's including difficulty in reading and very poor handwriting, 5) difficulty in getting along with friends. So why do I consider him a tough case? We have tried various diet and food elimination methods, vitamin/mineral balance with Pfeiffer Treatment Center, vision therapy, OT for sensory integration issues, various tutoring and reading/writing programs for the LD issues, Interactive Metronome, various seminars and professional help for the behavioral problems (for tactics used by mom and dad), EEG biofeedback, and a few other things I am sure I missed. Also of interest is a recent QEEG we had done on Jake indicated he may be " beta subtype " AD(H)D among other things that were suggested including LD's. I have yet to get my hands on some good information about the subject of beta subtype ADHD. We also had a SPECT done the same day as the Q but they only did the inactive state and I do feel we really got a very good interpretation of it. I have yet to really figure out yet what category of Dr. Amen's Jake fits into but it has been quite a while since I studied his material. Dr. Amen's work uses the active state SPECT so the one I got of Jake is of no use for comparison. In closing, my goal is to get Jake back on a training program of EEG biofeedback. I would like to try HEG but right now I am still waiting to come up with the funds and since I have all of the equipment for EEG, I would like to see if I can make some progress with it first. Sorry for the long post. I appreciate any input. Tim Fishel Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
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