Whether you’re suffering from fatigue due to COVID, vaccination, or another virus, non-invasive neurostimulation treatments can be rapidly relieving. We know this may sound unbelievable and I might think so too had I not witnessed it myself.

The fact is that near-infrared light (AKA photobiomodulation, PBM) has been shown to reduce inflammation in the brain and enhance tissue repair from COVID-19 damage. It may assist the immune system in the brain and the rest of the body to fully clear viral load. (see research citations below).

We have treated 7 such patients who were very disabled by long-COVID fatigue, post-vaccination fatigue or Epstein-Barr Virus. They all recovered completely within six 20-minute sessions with non-invasive stimulation modalities such as photobiomodulation, and low-current electrical stimulation.

Testimonial:

Our 17 year old son experienced extreme post viral fatigue. He is a senior in high school and although he was back at school following his illness, he was unable to focus or concentrate so he continued to fall further and further behind. He was failing his classes and was unable to complete his college applications. His brain fog was so severe, we believed he may be unable to complete his senior year of high school. After a series of four neural stimulation sessions (with Dr. Engwall’s office), our son completed his first school assignment in over five weeks. He cognition continued to improve and his brain fog has cleared. His focus and concentration have returned to normal. Our son is catching up in his classes and he is in the process of completing his college applications. I would highly recommend this treatment.

-Ana Tucker

Relevant Research:

Use of either transcranial or whole-body photobiomodulation treatments improves COVID-19 brain fog. Bowen R, Arany PR., J Biophotonics. 2023 Aug;16(8):e202200391. doi: 10.1002/jbio.202200391.

Photobiomodulation Reduces the Cytokine Storm Syndrome Associated with COVID-19 in the Zebrafish Model. Rosa IF, et al., Int J Mol Sci. 2023 Mar 24;24(7):6104. doi: 10.3390/ijms24076104. PMID: 37047078; PMCID: PMC10094635.

Serotonin reduction in post-acute sequelae of viral infection. Wong AC, et al., Cell. 2023 Oct 26;186(22):4851-4867.e20. doi: 10.1016/j.cell.2023.09.013. Epub 2023 Oct 16. PMID: 37848036.

long Covid/

Post-Viral Fatigue