Guest guest Posted April 16, 2010 Report Share Posted April 16, 2010 Years ago, Mt Sinai in NY did PEC scans to determine the brain lesions that mold victims get. I'm not sure if that research is ongoing. Barth www.presenting.net/sbs/sbs.html SUBMIT YOUR DOCTOR: www.presenting.net/sbs/molddoctors.html --- s> HI, Dr. Gray referred us to Dr. Crago in Tuscan AZ to do s> a brain mapping, EEG, it was totally painless, not needles,but sticky s> patches, the only thing my sick family member complained about was that s> the cap that held the sticky patches tightly in place was " tight " but he s> got used to that, the whole process took about an hour. The brain s> mapping identifies areas in the brain that aren't working well, and also s> can guide treatment. I am waiting to get neuropsych referrals in our s> area who could do the " brain retraining " recommended by Dr. Crago, who s> has mapped many of Dr. Gray's mold patients I think. s> One thing I have learned is that not all neuropsychs are created equal, s> some understand that toxic exposures, including mold, affect the brain s> and specialize in treating these patients, while most are clueless. s> Sue V. >>I didn't realize that an EEG would hurt. Was it because needles were >>used instead of a sticky patch? >>I hope this is okay to add as the topic reminded me of something I'd >>listened to recently and had forgotten to share with the group. I heard >>an teleseminar Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Recommended Posts
Join the conversation
You are posting as a guest. If you have an account, sign in now to post with your account.
Note: Your post will require moderator approval before it will be visible.