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Biofeedback for Addiction

Gain Control Over Your Body's Stress Response

Your Body Knows Before Your Mind Does

That racing heart rate when you pass by the liquor store. The muscle tension that builds before you even realize you’re craving. The sweating palms when stress hits and all you can think about is using. All these things happen because your body reacts to your triggers before your conscious mind ever realizes they are happening. Substance use has been your way of dealing with those involuntary reactions for years.

At Agape Treatment Center, biofeedback for addiction teaches you to recognize and control these physical reactions and give you power over your cravings before they take control of you.

Biofeedback is an evidence-based therapy that helps you gain awareness of and control over involuntary physiological processes like heart rate, blood pressure, muscle tension, and skin temperature.[1] It works by using advanced electrodes attached to your body that provide visual and auditory feedback about your physiological responses in real-time, so you can see what’s happening in your body as it happens.

In addiction treatment, biofeedback therapy teaches you self-regulation—the conscious ability to influence your body’s stress response. For someone with a substance use disorder, trigger points activate your involuntary stress responses, which may cause cravings or compulsive drug use.

Biofeedback sessions are typically 30-60 minutes long and are conducted by certified biofeedback specialists in a quiet, relaxed room or area where the client feels comfortable. At Agape, we incorporate biofeedback with counseling as part of an integrated approach, recognizing that genuine recovery requires addressing both the mind and body.

Addiction to drugs or alcohol destroys your body’s ability to self-regulate.[2] Chronic substance use alters the brain, disrupting the neurological functioning of the body’s natural stress response and creating a constant state of physiological dysregulation. In this state, your body is in a constant state of heightened stress response, causing dysfunctional brain activity and leaving you unable to control your body’s response to stress without utilizing chemicals or substances.[3]

The Science of Biofeedback and Self-Regulation

Biofeedback works by helping people see their physiological responses. A biofeedback therapist will use sensors to measure multiple physiological markers and provide this feedback to the client in real-time via a screen. The link between the visible and invisible creates the basis for learning: you will experiment with various mental techniques while observing how your body responds to them, enabling you to figure out which strategies are effective at calming your nervous system.

Common types of biofeedback include:

  • Heart Rate Variability (HRV) Biofeedback: Measures nervous system balance via heartbeat variability.
  • Electromyographic (EMG) Biofeedback: Measures the muscle tension and can help reduce it.
  • Thermal Biofeedback: Measures the amount of blood flow through your skin and the level of stress you’re experiencing.
  • EEG Biofeedback (Neurofeedback): Helps retrain the brain identifying dysfunctional brainwave patterns.

For someone in recovery, biofeedback provides objective evidence of self-regulation; you can see your heart rate decrease as you practice deep breathing techniques, and you can see your tense muscles relax as you practice guided imagery, which increases your self-confidence to self-regulate. This confidence is critical to maintaining your abstinence and preventing relapse.

Addressing the Mind-Body Connection in Recovery

Biofeedback is an effective intervention in treating co-occurring disorders like anxiety disorder, post traumatic stress disorder (PTSD), attention deficit hyperactivity disorder (ADHD), and chronic pain.[4] According to a randomized controlled trial, people who participated in biofeedback therapy while undergoing treatment for substance use disorder experienced significant reductions in cravings, withdrawal symptoms, and relapse rates.[5]

Biofeedback enhances meditative techniques by providing you with visual confirmation of the changes occurring in your body through meditation. The combination of biofeedback with cognitive-behavioral therapy (CBT) enables clients to work on both the thoughts and the physical symptoms related to those thoughts. 

At Agape, we recognize addiction lives in both the mind and body. That is why we use biofeedback to restore normal brain function and body-focused techniques to manage stress and cravings.

Healing together

Efficacy of Biofeedback Therapy

Research increasingly supports biofeedback as an effective component of addiction treatment programs:

Improves stress management

Many individuals with addictions also experience a dysregulated stress response during their recovery process.[6]

Enhances treatment outcomes

Biofeedback can be employed alongside standard addiction treatment to facilitate other desired outcomes, including improved completion rates and long-term abstinence from alcohol and drug use.[7]

Addresses co-occurring disorders

Studies suggest that biofeedback is effective for the treatment of co-occurring disorders, such as anxiety disorders, post-traumatic stress disorder, and chronic pain; therefore, biofeedback may facilitate a smoother recovery process for a person who has an addiction and one or more co-occurring disorders.[8]

The evidence is clear: biofeedback therapy provides measurable, lasting benefits for people in addiction recovery by restoring the body’s natural ability to self-regulate without chemical substances.

Techniques Used in Biofeedback Sessions

Many types of therapeutic techniques are applied during biofeedback sessions.For example:

Deep breathing exercises

Can facilitate the activation of the parasympathetic nervous system and reduce heart rate.

Guided imagery

Assists with diverting one’s attention away from stressful stimuli.

Mindfulness meditation

Enhances cardiovascular and body awareness.

Progressive muscle relaxation

Promotes systematic relaxation throughout the body.

All of these techniques will be performed and observed to support the premise that achieving an altered state of mind will affect a change to your physiological response.

Agape Wide Range of Treatment

Biofeedback Therapy at Agape Treatment Center

At Agape Treatment Center, biofeedback therapy is an essential component of our whole-person approach to treating addiction and providing mental health care. Trained biofeedback specialists use up-to-date and evidence-based methods, and they are aware of the unique physical challenges of those in recovery from substance abuse.

Our biofeedback clinic is located in the quiet “Island City” of Wilton Manors, a peaceful and comfortable environment where you can learn self-regulation methods through biofeedback. We combine biofeedback for addiction with other evidence-based methods to create a comprehensive treatment plan that addresses all areas surrounding your recovery.

Our Approach to Biofeedback Therapy

Biofeedback therapy recognizes that addiction creates a significant disruption to the body’s natural ability to regulate stress. While biofeedback alone can be helpful, we view it as a complementary treatment that enhances the effectiveness of other approaches such as cognitive behavioral therapy (CBT), dialectical behavioral therapy (DBT), and trauma processing.

Our approach includes:

01

Integration of biofeedback sessions

Integration of biofeedback sessions into the client’s individual and group therapy and medical treatments for optimal coordination of care.

02

Evidence-based methods

Evidence-based methods that are proven through research, such as heart rate variability training, neurofeedback therapy to treat brain activity dysregulation, and muscle tension monitoring for treating stress and chronic pain.

03

Real-life practice

Real-life practice that teaches you how to engage these techniques in your daily life when cravings or stressors arise and apply this knowledge towards developing strategies to avoid relapse.

04

Co-occurring disorders

Addressing co-occurring disorders of clients who may also be suffering from another illness or disorder, such as anxiety disorders, post-traumatic stress disorder (PTSD), attention deficit hyperactivity disorder (ADHD), or chronic pain.

Healing Power

Taking Control of Your Recovery

At Agape, we believe that successful addiction recovery involves more than just willpower; it also involves retraining your body’s reaction to stress and restoring your natural ability to self-regulate. Biofeedback therapy enables you to become aware of when you are about to crave or relapse by teaching you how to intervene in that chain reaction before finding comfort in a substance.

Recovery isn’t just about feeling better; it’s about measurable changes in how your body responds to stress, cravings, and life’s challenges.

Create Your Way to Freedom

You’ve spent enough time keeping your pain locked inside. It’s time to express it, release it, and transform it into something beautiful.

FAQ

Is biofeedback therapy scientifically proven to help with addiction?

Does biofeedback hurt or involve any invasive procedures?

How is biofeedback different from regular meditation or relaxation exercises?

Can biofeedback help with co-occurring mental health issues like anxiety or PTSD?

How many biofeedback sessions will I need to see results?

Sources

[1] Mayo Clinic. (2023). Biofeedback: Using your mind to improve your health. https://www.mayoclinic.org/tests-procedures/biofeedback/about/pac-20384664

[2] National Institute on Drug Abuse. (2020). Drugs, brains, and behavior: The science of addiction. National Institutes of Health. https://nida.nih.gov/publications/drugs-brains-behavior-science-addiction/drugs-brain

[3][6] Koob, G. F., & Volkow, N. D. (2016). Neurobiology of addiction: A neurocircuitry analysis. The Lancet Psychiatry, 3(8), 760–773. https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC6135092/

[4] Schoenberg, P. L., & David, A. S. (2014). Biofeedback for psychiatric disorders: A systematic review. Applied Psychophysiology and Biofeedback, 39(2), 71–135. https://doi.org/10.1007/s10484-014-9246-9

[5] [7] Scott, W. C., Kaiser, D., Othmer, S., & Sideroff, S. I. (2005). Effects of an EEG biofeedback protocol on a mixed substance abusing population. The American Journal of Drug and Alcohol Abuse, 31(3), 455–469. https://pubmed.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/16161729/

[8] Frank, D. L., Khorshid, L., Kiffer, J. F., Moravec, C. S., & McKee, M. G. (2010). Biofeedback in medicine: who, when, why and how? Mental Health in Family Medicine, 7(2), 85–96. https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC2939454/