• Skip to primary navigation
  • Skip to main content
  • Skip to primary sidebar
  • Skip to footer
UT Shield
Mulva Clinic for the Neurosciences
  • About
    • Team
    • Departments
      • Neurology
        • 5th Anniversary Report
      • Neurosurgery
      • Psychiatry & Behavioral Sciences
        • Annual Report
    • Advisory Boards
      • Neurology & Neurosurgery Advisory Board
      • Psychiatry & Behavioral Sciences Advisory Board
  • Research Areas
    • Aging & Neurodegenerative Diseases
    • Neuroinflamation & Neuroimmunology
    • Brain & Nervous System Injury
    • Development & Neuroplasticity
    • Addiction
    • PTSD
    • Mood Disorders
    • Neural Engineering & Data Sciences
  • Research Labs & Centers
  • Clinical Trials
  • Clinical Services
    • UT Health Austin Adult
    • UT Health Austin Pediatric Neurosciences
    • UT Health Austin Pediatric Psychiatry
  • Publications
  • News

Research Focus

May 12, 2025, Filed Under: News

Sound Waves That Heal: A Breakthrough for Depression and Anxiety

Brain-Ultrasound-Diagnostic-Neurosonography
Focused ultrasound is now being used to safely calm hyperactive brain regions linked to depression and anxiety — and it’s delivering rapid relief in just weeks.

A pioneering sound wave therapy that targets the brain’s emotional control center has shown powerful results in reducing symptoms of depression, anxiety, and PTSD — all without surgery or medication.

In a recent clinical trial at UT Austin, patients underwent daily, non-invasive ultrasound treatments for three weeks and experienced significant mental health improvements, signaling a bold new frontier for psychiatric care.

Breakthrough Sound Wave Therapy for Mood Disorders

People living with depression, anxiety, and trauma-related disorders found significant relief after receiving a new, non-invasive brain treatment that uses sound waves to gently stimulate deep areas of the brain. The research, conducted by Dell Medical School at The University of Texas at Austin, highlights a promising alternative to traditional psychiatric interventions.

Published in Molecular Psychiatry, the study shows that low-intensity focused ultrasound can safely and precisely target the amygdala, a brain structure often overactive in mood and anxiety disorders, without the need for surgery or medication.

Revolutionary Non-Invasive Brain Modulation

“Participants showed marked improvements across a range of symptoms after just three weeks of daily treatments,” said Gregory Fonzo, Ph.D., senior author of the study and assistant professor in the Department of Psychiatry & Behavioral Sciences at Dell Med. “What makes this approach revolutionary is that it’s the first time we’ve been able to directly modulate deep brain activity without invasive procedures or medications.”

In the double-blind trial, 29 individuals with mood and anxiety disorders underwent MRI-guided ultrasound treatments directed at the left amygdala. The therapy led to immediate reductions in amygdala activity. After three weeks of treatment, patients reported clinically meaningful improvements in depression, anxiety, PTSD symptoms, and overall emotional distress.

Unlocking New Avenues for Psychiatric Treatment

“For decades, the amygdala has been a target of interest, but access has required either brain surgery or indirect approaches through cortical stimulation,” said Fonzo. “This technology opens a new frontier in psychiatric treatment, potentially offering relief to patients who haven’t responded to traditional therapies.”

The treatment was well tolerated with no serious adverse events, suggesting a promising safety profile as researchers move toward larger clinical trials.

Reference: “Low-intensity transcranial focused ultrasound amygdala neuromodulation: a double-blind sham-controlled target engagement study and unblinded single-arm clinical trial” by Bryan R. Barksdale, Lauren Enten, Annamarie DeMarco, Rachel Kline, Manoj K. Doss, Charles B. Nemeroff and Gregory A. Fonzo, 24 April 2025, Molecular Psychiatry.

News Courtesy of SciTechDaily

Primary Sidebar

Latest News

  • Kevin Kumar, MD, PhD, lead author in a recent Frontiers in Surgery article on DBS August 10, 2025
  • Clarke Elected Chair of ILAE-North America July 20, 2025
  • A Jolt of Innovation for Brain-Computer Interfaces June 16, 2025
  • Sound Waves That Heal: A Breakthrough for Depression and Anxiety May 12, 2025
  • Celebrating our Mulva Faculty Members Promotions March 24, 2025

Latest Publications

Do We All Do the Same Things? Applicability of Daily Activities at the Intersection of Demographics. Neuropsychology.

Prefrontal Cortical Dynorphin Peptidergic Transmission Constrains Threat-driven Behavioral and Network States. Neuron.

Knockdown of Tlr3 in Dorsal Striatum Reduces Ethanol Consumption and Acute Functional Tolerance in Male Mice. Brain Behav Immun.

Longitudinal Associations of Physical and Emotional Distress Tolerance with Pain Intensity and Pain-Related Disability in United States Veterans. The Journal of Pain.

Combining Detrended Cross-Correlation Analysis with Riemannian Geometry-based Classification for Improved Brain-computer Interface Performance. Front Neurosci.

The Role of Occipital Condyle and Atlas Anomalies on Occipital Cervical Fusion Outcomes in Chiari Malformation Type I with Syringomyelia: a Study from the Park-Reeves Syringomyelia Research Consortium. J Neurosurg Pediatr.

For a complete list of publications go to our Publications page!

Footer

Contact us

UT Home | Emergency Information | Site Policies | Web Accessibility | Web Privacy | Adobe Reader

© The University of Texas at Austin 2025