
NeuroCes
INSOMNIA TREATMENT



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NeuroCes™ is a therapeutic medical device.
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NeuroCes™ treatment results are cumulative and lasting.
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Most of the users experience improvement immediately in the course of treatment.
If you have a complaint of difficulty initiating or maintaining sleep or of non-restorative sleep that lasts for at least one month and causes clinically significant distress or impairment in social, occupational, or other important areas of functioning, the NeuroCes™ Cranial Electrotherapy Stimulator reduces these insomnia symptoms in a spectacular way with no significant side effects. The NeuroCes™ technology that provides an effective drug-free way to treat depression is proven, safe and effective.

So far we have more than 18 sleep studies in the scientific literature, with treated patients reporting an average of 62% improvement in sleep. The improvement found among the various studies has ranged from 37% to 93% (Smith, 2007).
INSOMNIA
improvement range
37% - 93%

NeuroCes
One purchases a CES device only once, while antidepressant medications often have to be purchased for months or years, or even for the lifetime of the patient.
Does not have the often very negative side effects of medication.
Gets as good or better results as do the typical antidepressant medications.
Insomnia Disorder
The essential feature of insomnia disorder is dissatisfaction with sleep quantity or quality with complaints of difficulty initiating or maintaining sleep. The sleep complaints are accompanied by clinically significant distress or impairment in social, occupational, or other important areas of functioning. The sleep disturbance may occur during the course of another mental disorder or medical condition, or it may occur independently (DSM-5).
(Smith, 2007). Ray B. Smith, Ph. D. Cranial Electrotherapy Stimulation: It’s First Fifty Years, Plus Three: A Monograph. ISBN: 978-1-60247-589-2 & Cranial Electrotherapy Stimulation Lecture.
(DSM-5). American Psychiatric Association. Diagnostic and statistical manual of mental disorders: DSM-5. - 5th ed.