Biofeedback Training in Inpatient Mental Health Facilities: A Scoping Review
Abstract
:1. Introduction
Objectives
2. Methods
2.1. Literature Search
2.2. Study Selection
2.3. Data Charting
3. Results
3.1. Overview
3.2. Classification
3.2.1. EEG Biofeedback
Structural Features of EEG BFB
Effectiveness of EEG BFB
Participants of EEG BFB
3.2.2. HRV Biofeedback
Structural Features of HRV BFB
Effectiveness of HRV BFB
Participants of HRV BFB
3.2.3. EMG Biofeedback
Structural Features of EMG BFB
Effectiveness of EMG BFB
Participants of EMG BFB
3.3. Subgroup Analyses
3.4. Reported Limitations
3.5. Future Directions
4. Discussion
Limitations
5. Conclusions
Supplementary Materials
Author Contributions
Funding
Institutional Review Board Statement
Informed Consent Statement
Data Availability Statement
Conflicts of Interest
Abbreviations
BFB | Biofeedback |
HRV | Heart rate variability |
EEG | Electroencephalography |
SCP | Slow cortical potentials |
SMR | Sensory motor rhythm |
PTSD | Post-traumatic stress disorder |
BED | Binge eating disorder |
References
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Author (Year) | Patient Condition | Number of Subjects | Control Group | BFB Type | Type of Intervention | Manualized Training | Results | Limitations |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
Winkeler et al. (2022) [28] | Eating disorder and post-traumatic stress disorder | n = 18 | n = 18 | Infra-low frequency EEG | 12 sessions 30–40 min 2×/week | No | EG significantly improved in restrained eating, more weight gain, reduced avoidance behavior, and less complications in course of treatment. | Lack of homogeneity in diagnoses; small sample size |
Bhat (2010) [18] | Anxiety and depression | n = 50 | n = 50 | Alpha EEG | 40 sessions 5×/week | No | Improvement of anxiety symptoms: medication showed higher improvement than BF; in EG, women showed higher improvement with BF than men; | Lack of a follow-up to assess continued benefit |
Scott et al. (2005) [23] | Substance use disorder | n = 60 | n = 61 | Beta EEG and SMR | 40–50 sessions 45 min 4–5×/week 2×/day | No | significantly more dropout in CG, EG significantly longer abstinent, and significant improvement in TOVA Questionnaire and in 5/10 MMPI Scales. | Relied on self-report for abstinence check |
Cheon et al. (2016) [19] | Depression | n = 20 | n = 0 | Beta and alpha/theta EEG | 16–24 sessions 60 min 2–3×/week | No | Significant improvement in depressive symptoms, anxiety, and clinical illness; increased remission and response rates. | Small sample size, lack of control group, non-blinding subjects; patients received medication |
Ko & Park (2018) [29] | Alcohol use disorder | n = 17 | n = 19 | Alpha EEG and high-beta training | 10 sessions 40 min 2–3×/week | No | Significant increase in basic psychological need satisfaction, alcohol abstinence self-efficacy, and self-regulation in EG, with no significant increase in alpha waves and decrease in high-beta waves; significant increase in high beta of CG. | Lack of comparability; difficult to extrapolate the results to patients with alcohol use disorder |
Kopřivová et al. (2013) [25] | Obsessive–compulsive disorder | n = 10 | n = 10 | EEG and sham feedback | 18 sessions 25–30 min 3×/week | No | NFB group showed significantly higher percentage-based reduction in compulsions. | Limited spatial specificity; results limited to specific phenotype |
Schneider et al. (1992a) [30] | Depression | n = 8 | n = 8 | SCP | 20 sessions 5×/week | No | SCP self-regulation impairment specific for schizophrenic patients, with no comparable deficits found for patients with depression. | No significant self-regulation of SCP in the control group, contradicting other study findings; small sample size |
Schneider et al. (1992b) [31] | Schizophrenia | n = 12 | n = 12 | SCP | 20 sessions on 20 consecutive days | No | After direct feedback, schizophrenic patients were able to regulate SCP systematically compared to patients with alcohol dependence. The schizophrenia EG was unable to achieve a transfer performance of self-regulation for SCP; a correlation was found between the inability to regulate SCP and the duration of the illness. | Observed group effect may be more related to the use of medication than to schizophrenia |
Schneider et al. (1993) [32] | Alcohol use disorder | n = 10 | n = 0 | SCP | 4 sessions on 4 consecutive days | No | The greatest increase in SCP differentiation is expected in the transfer condition with increasing abstinence; learning self-regulation of SCP with feedback takes more time compared to the four sessions on four consecutive days. | The information processing of the feedback stimulus may have prevented the modification of the SCP |
Author (Year) | Patient Condition | Number of Subjects | Control Group | BFB Type | Type of Intervention | Manualized Training | Results | Limitations |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
Beckham et al. (2013) [16] | Depression and anxiety | n = 15 | n = 0 | HRV | 8 sessions 30–60 min 2×/week | No | STAI, WEMWBS, and LASA showed significant improvements at time points A and B compared to baseline. | Lack of control group; results only on short-term effects; small sample size; follow-up survey after discharge: social desirability bias |
Eddie et al. (2014) [24] | Substance use disorder | n = 21 | n = 20 | HRV | 3 sessions 60–75 min 1×/week | No | Treatment + BFB: greater effect on craving reduction than CG but not significant; negative correlation of HRV and stress interaction: HRV at beginning of treatment only predicts change in craving in CG; high HRV is connected to higher reduction in craving between begin and end of treatment. | Lack of a significant overall effect of HRV BFB despite a mean effect size reduction in abstinence due to the short duration of the training |
Penzlin et al. (2015) [21] | Alcohol use disorder | n = 24 | n = 24 | HRV | 6 sessions 20 min 3×/weeks | No | BFB group: perceived reduction in craving sooner than control; decrease in anxiety (vs. control); improved cardiac autonomic function; improved vasomotor function after completion. | Late-stage ethyl-toxic damage to cardiac autonomic fibers may have reduced HRV BFB responsivity; small sample size; Laser Doppler flowmetry insensitive to individual vasomotor dysfunction |
Scolnick et al. (2014) [33] | Eating disorder | n = 24 | n = 0 | HRV | 12 sessions 10 min 5–7×/week | No | HRV BFB training is safe in this population; can be used alongside yoga and meditation. | Lack of control group |
Tatschl et al. (2020) [17] | Depression | n = 34 | n = 34 | HRV | 5 sessions 35 min 1×/week | No | Larger recovery in depressive symptoms than CG (but decreased in follow-up), as well as increases in resting low-frequency HRV and cardiorespiratory coherence. | No assessment of symptoms between post-assessment and follow-up (12 months); no assessment of slow breathing training between post-intervention and follow-up; potential placebo effect; CG did not get additional control intervention |
Teeravisutkul et al. (2019) [22] | Alcohol use disorder | n = 17 | n = 18 | HRV | 16 sessions 30 min 4×/week | No | EG: decreased stress and craving after training and 1-month follow-up, CG only immediately after training; higher difference in craving and stress scores at baseline and post-intervention than CG. | Follow-up performed on outpatients, so no proper control for factors that could affect follow-up results |
Cheng et al. (2017) [27] | Schizophrenia | n = 30 | n = 30 | HRV, EMG, GSR, and RR | 6 sessions 2×/week | No | Significant improvement in anxiety (EG); significant decrease in HR and RR (EG); HADS score and anxiety subscores decreased significantly as number of interventions increased. | Highly functioning chronic schizophrenic patients only |
Author (Year) | Patient Condition | Number of Subjects | Control Group | BFB Type | Type of Intervention | Manualized Training | Results | Limitations |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
Blue & Blue (1979) [34] | Depression | n = 30 | n = 10 | EMG | 14 sessions 30–40 min on 14 consecutive days | No | (In individual sessions 6, 7, and12) muscle tension lower in manic and agitated group (vs. depressed and comparative group). | No limitations mentioned |
Pharr & Coursey (1989) [26] | Schizophrenia | n = 10 | n = 20 | EMG | 7 sessions 30 min 3×/week | No | Significant lower muscle tension in EG; no increase in psychopathy in EG patient. | Possible practice effect in Finger-Tapping Test; no balancing of negative symptoms of chronic schizophrenia |
Denney et al. (1991) [20] | Alcohol use disorder | n = 20 | n = 0 | EMG and thermal BFB | 0–8 sessions | No | 0–5 group: no significant difference to no training; 6–7 group and 8+: significantly better than no training and 0–5 group; strongest effect in 8+ group at 3-month mark; abstinence decreases after 6 months post-discharge but slower in the BFB group. | Retrospective pilot study: not all variables that should be considered in a formal research format were examined |
Ford et al. (1982) [35] | Psychophysio-logical disorders | n = 37 | n = 0 | EMG and thermal BFB | 8 sessions 60 min 1×/week | No | Lower MMPI scores = the lower the initial burden of mental illness of the inpatients; younger patients (17–24 years of age) were unsuccessful in therapy (due to lack of adherence); patients older than 30 years achieved no effect in only 21% of subjects with lower levels of distress. | Patients learn and implement BFB at different speeds; the familiar, quiet environment and the support provided by the clinic staff in the inpatient setting was not guaranteed during the homework exercise |
EEG BFB (N) | HRV BFB (N) | EMG BFB (N) | |
---|---|---|---|
Depression and anxiety | 3 (33.3%) | 2 (28.6%) | 1 (25%) |
Substance use disorder | 3 (33.3%) | 3 (42.9%) | 1 (25%) |
Eating disorder | 1 (11.1%) | 1 (14.3%) | 0 (0%) |
Schizophrenia | 1 (11.1%) | 1 (14.3%) | 1 (25%) |
Obsessive–compulsive disorder | 1 (11.1%) | 0 (0%) | 0 (0%) |
Other | 0 (0%) | 0 (0%) | 1 (25%) |
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Schmidt, K.; Schlicht, M.; Deutschendorf, L.; Smets, L.; Bäuerle, A.; Teufel, M. Biofeedback Training in Inpatient Mental Health Facilities: A Scoping Review. J. Clin. Med. 2025, 14, 3491. https://doi.org/10.3390/jcm14103491
Schmidt K, Schlicht M, Deutschendorf L, Smets L, Bäuerle A, Teufel M. Biofeedback Training in Inpatient Mental Health Facilities: A Scoping Review. Journal of Clinical Medicine. 2025; 14(10):3491. https://doi.org/10.3390/jcm14103491
Chicago/Turabian StyleSchmidt, Kira, Maike Schlicht, Lina Deutschendorf, Lena Smets, Alexander Bäuerle, and Martin Teufel. 2025. "Biofeedback Training in Inpatient Mental Health Facilities: A Scoping Review" Journal of Clinical Medicine 14, no. 10: 3491. https://doi.org/10.3390/jcm14103491
APA StyleSchmidt, K., Schlicht, M., Deutschendorf, L., Smets, L., Bäuerle, A., & Teufel, M. (2025). Biofeedback Training in Inpatient Mental Health Facilities: A Scoping Review. Journal of Clinical Medicine, 14(10), 3491. https://doi.org/10.3390/jcm14103491