Pain Reprocessing Therapy
Pain Reprocessing Therapy is a therapy strategy that seeks to restructure neural connections in the brain in order to deactivate pain. We employ the most effective Pain Reprocessing Therapy, which is a set of psychological approaches that retrains the brain to properly respond to body signals and, as a result, breaks the cycle of chronic pain.
Somatic tracking is one of the most important approaches in Pain Reprocessing Therapy. Mindfulness, safety reappraisal, and positive affect induction are all used in somatic monitoring. Somatic tracking is intended to assist patients in attending to painful sensations through a distinct lens of safety, thereby deactivating the pain signal.
Chronic pain patients frequently acquire conditioned responses, which occur when the brain establishes a link between particular physical activity and the start of pain (i.e. walking leads to back pain, typing leads to wrist pain, etc.) Another aspect of Pain Reprocessing Therapy is assisting patients in breaking these associations so that they can engage in physical activities without experiencing pain.