Exomind device promises to zap depression, raise mental fog

What if, along with a small ultrap for a sharp neck and some zaps of clear laser + excellent for strange sun spots, you can increase the mood and fog of the brain at the same visit to the office? The courtesy of a new magnetic field treatment called Exomind, patients of Manhattan Dermatologist Dr. Paul Jarrod Frank can do exactly that.

And no one sounds more excited about Exomind than Frank himself.

“I actually went to medical school to become a psychiatrist, and I think I use my skills and backgrounds in psychology every day,” Frank says. “With great demand and advances in functional medicine and longevity, beauties, health and health no longer sit on the opposite ends of the cafe. They are all woven integrated to help people achieve their best version.”

That level of self-actualization does not come free; In Frank’s practice, the recommended course of six sessions at $ 4,800. And while the skin dock ensures that sustainable effects begin after the third session, most participants can expect the maintenance case visits to stay on the right track.


The procedure is a non-invasive treatment of brain stimulation, which is approved by the FDA for the treatment of depression. The courtesy of Dr. Paul Jarrod Frank

Created by BTL-based medical cleaners, Exomind is a non-invasive treatment of brain stimulation created to improve mental and emotional well-being and is approved by FDA for the treatment of depression. In Canada, it also gets the green light to help treat anxiety, OCD and issues with mandatory eating.

According to Frank, which places numerous devices created by BTL in its practice, including EMSCulpt for body contour and EMSELLLA for postpartum incontinence treatment, Exomind is based on well -established technology called TMS (transcranial magnetic stimulation). To pierce science, magnetic fields are used to increase the activity of neurons in the dorsal side paraphontal cortex, the part of the brain that regulates the mood and emotional processing.

“The problem with the oldest versions of TMS technology is that they were a long time, looking for numerous days in a row for hours at one time,” Frank says. “It was not realistic for patients if they had no serious emotional and mental state of the disease.”

Although Frank is not expecting his population of patients to seek an eczema to treat major mental illness, they may seek help to treat digital distraction and the stress and anxiety of city life. And for many people, the hope of subtracting recipe medications through soothing, 30-minute sessions is enough for a lure to give them a move.


Dr. Paul Jarrod Frank speaking at the start of the MDNA skin collection in New York City.
Dermatologist of Manhattan Dr. Paul Jarrod Frank is offering a new treatment for mood growth in his East Side upper office. Getty Images

New York City -based media buyer Olivia Kessler, who completed her sixth Exomind session at Pfrankmd Eperion Side’s office in February, found so cold treatments that even fell asleep during one of them.

Trying EMSCULPT already, Kessler was familiar with technology and entrusted Frank’s suggestion that Exomind could be another tool in her bag to help in the mood swings created by her long PCOS (polycistic ovary syndrome).

An “stressed city resident” who says she feels the need to be hypervigilant at any time, Kessler was also looking for an alternative to the generic version of Prozac, her doctor prescribed for the treatment of her pre-menstrual emotional rotation.

Not only has Exomind helped adjust the mood, but it has also been inhibited any tendency that Kessler had for crawling. “I feel like I have a pepper in my step,” she says, “a little extra energy I didn’t have before.”

For Kessler, parking itself on the Frank office bed with an electro-magnetic skull for half an hour in a pop is worth time and money.

“I stan Ekomind,” Kessler says. “And I definitely stan trying not to be with medication forever.”

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Image Source : nypost.com

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