Relaxation therapy/Related Articles
Jump to navigation
Jump to search
- See also changes related to Relaxation therapy, or pages that link to Relaxation therapy or to this page or whose text contains "Relaxation therapy".
Parent topics
Subtopics
Bot-suggested topics
Auto-populated based on Special:WhatLinksHere/Relaxation therapy. Needs checking by a human.
- Guided imagery [r]: A process in which a facilitator or therapist, usually through spoken words and sometimes music or natural sounds, assists a person in imagining scenes or objects. The goal may be to induce a state of relaxation, or to reduce the distress of physical pain by transforming it to images that are then diminished. [e]
- Imagery (disambiguation) [r]: Add brief definition or description
- Pain [r]: Unpleasant feeling or hurtful sensation that is conveyed to the brain by stimulation of sensory neurons. [e]
- Physiological stress [r]: Biological consequences of the failure of an organism to respond appropriately to emotional or physical threats to its being, whether actual or imagined. [e]
- Psychological stress [r]: Biological reactions to any adverse stimulus, mental or emotional, that tends to disturb the organisms homeostasis, and may lead to disorders. [e]
- Major depressive disorder [r]: Clinical syndrome that includes a persistent sad mood or loss of interest in activities that persists for at least 2 weeks in the absence of external precipitants. [e]
- Lumbalgia [r]: Common musculoskeletal disorder caused by a variety of diseases and trauma that affect the lumbar spine. [e]
- Cognitive-behavioral therapy [r]: Add brief definition or description
- Cognitive behavioural therapy [r]: Add brief definition or description
- Meditation (physiology) [r]: A variety of techniques that help isolate one's thinking from external stimuli, to induce a state of rest, or a state in which spiritual issues may be contemplated [e]
- Imagery (psychotherapy) [r]: The use of mental images produced by the imagination as a form of therapy for emotional disorders, or to help cope with the emotional impact of disease or discomfort. [e]