Health: A New Handheld Device Aims to Calm Panic Attacks Quickly, Without Drugs
Brian Blum-Israel21c : Mar 10, 2021
Amazing Health Advances
"But CalmiGo provides immediate relief, which is harder to do ... CalmiGo takes just a few minutes and you don't need a specific environment or a quiet room. You can use it on a subway or on an airplane." -Adi Wallach
[Amazing Health Advances] Adi Wallach started experiencing panic attacks while pursuing her undergraduate degree at the Technion—Israel Institute of Technology. (Screengrab image)
"I was at the movies with friends the first time it happened," Wallach tells ISRAEL21c. "I felt my heart starting to race. Then I didn't feel my legs."
Wallach headed home and climbed into bed, hoping she'd feel better in the morning. But she woke with the same symptoms.
At this point, she says, "I was afraid I was going to lose my sanity." She actually drove to her mother's house "to say goodbye."
Her mother, Dr. Orna Levin, a physician, however, recognized what was going on and explained to Wallach that she was having a panic attack.
The episodes didn't go away with this new knowledge, unfortunately. "Sometimes I had six to seven panic attacks a day," Wallach says.
Wallach tried every solution short of medication—therapy, yoga, biofeedback.
"I changed my diet, started taking supplements, tried acupuncture. They were somewhat effective, but I was not able to use them fast enough to stop the attacks. I started avoiding places that might trigger an attack. I didn't go to the movies for years. I stopped swimming. I was afraid of flying."
Wallach's degree from the Technion is in biomedical engineering. Could she engineer her way out of her panic attacks, she wondered, and build a medical device that could provide calming relief?
Together with her mother, Wallach founded Dendro Technologies. Today, for $179, you can purchase their solution to panic attacks: CalmiGo, a handheld device that looks like an asthma inhaler and that engages vision, touch and smell to reduce stress.
Especially these days with Covid-19 showing no signs of slowing down, CalmiGo comes at a particularly apt moment of collective anxiety.
Launched in 2019, CalmiGo has sold 20,000 units on Amazon.com, on the CalmiGo website and via third parties such as the FSA Store. The US Veteran's Administration is buying CalmiGo devices to distribute for free to veterans, and the IRS has approved CalmiGo as a health-related expense, making it tax deductible in the United States.
CalmiGo first and foremost helps regulate breathing, although not in a way that requires cognitive effort.
That's important because popular breathing techniques require concentration while counting. The problem is that counting "activates the sympathetic nervous system at a time when you want to quiet it," Wallach tells ISRAEL21c.
The sympathetic nervous system stimulates the body's flight-or-fight response. In contrast, "we activate the parasympathetic nervous system in the brain, which is responsible for the relaxation response in the body," Wallach explains.
A series of three blinking lights on the CalmiGo device guides your exhalations. When the third light comes on, you breathe in again. You don't have to think or count –just breathe.
The device has a learning mechanism, Wallach says, that tracks your breathing patterns and adjusts itself to gradually slow your exhalations over the three-minute recommended period of use. (Three minutes three times a day works best, Wallach adds.)
CalmiGo has an optional function that vibrates the device when you've finished exhaling. That addresses another sense—touch—in much the same way that the flashing lights engage vision. (The vibration, it should be noted, may not be quiet enough to use before bed with a partner.)
The third sense is smell. Every CalmiGo unit is shipped with lavender, peppermint or bergamot "scent panels" which snap onto the front of the device.
"We embed aromatherapy oil onto a solid element, so there are no liquids to worry about," Wallach says. Each panel lasts three to six weeks.
Wallach insisted that CalmiGo be small enough to fit into a purse or pocket and super easy to use.
"Even a high-tech person can't use a sophisticated tool during a panic attack," Wallach says. "We needed it to be simple and effective in just a few minutes."
Activating the parasympathetic system for relaxation is not unique to CalmiGo, of course—yoga and meditation do much the same.
"But CalmiGo provides immediate relief, which is harder to do," Wallach says. "Yoga is great for the long term. But most people are not able to integrate something like that into their daily routine. CalmiGo takes just a few minutes and you don't need a specific environment or a quiet room. You can use it on a subway or on an airplane."
Speaking of airplanes, can CalmiGo help with mental stress beyond panic attacks—for example insomnia or fear of flying?
Wallach stresses that CalmiGo is "not a medical device. But, yes, it can help people who have a hard time sleeping." And Wallach has used CalmiGo to help with her own flying fears.
The device's components are sourced from China and assembled in the United States, where most of the company's sales have been so far.
Dendro Technologies has raised $3 million from angels and several smaller VCs, including Israeli Alon Matas, whose Silicon Valley-based online therapy startup Better Help has also seen a boost in interest as a result of Covid-19-fueled anxiety... Subscribe for free to Breaking Christian News here
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