MEDICAL ADVISOR
Dr. Eugene Lipov
His discovery and innovation, the Dual Sympathetic Reset (DSR), was endorsed by President Obama in 2010. His research proven treatment has an 85-90% success rate in reducing the effects of trauma. Dr. Lipov grew up in the Ukraine, in poverty in the former Soviet Union.
The Pentagon approved funding for a study of Lipov’s procedure at three Army medical facilities in 2016, citing its potential for significant improvements for those suffering from PTSD. In 2017, the U.S. Army commissioned a large-scale randomized trial of the procedure.
Lipov’s groundbreaking discovery that post traumatic stress is a physical injury to the sympathetic nervous system–––which he found a way to reset to the pre-trauma state –––has been featured in national media outlets including TheWallstreet Journal, 60 Minutes, CNN, Forbes, CBS News, FOX News, CBS This Morning, Psychology Today, Military Times, Joe Rogan, Science Daily, Wired, Men’s Health, The Doctors Show, Stars and Stripes, Yahoo! Finance, and many more.
Two to three thousand of these procedures are being done each year among Special Forces and the military at Fort Bragg alone. He has done grand rounds on his revelatory relief at Walter Reed in Washington, D.C. and Womack Military Hospital on Fort Bragg. As more comprehensive studies are achieved, Lipov’s work may be found to be the greatest medical innovation of the 21st century for human well-being, and maybe the most important since the Polio vaccine.
Previous to his innovation and reconfiguration of the century-established stellate ganglion block (SGB) injection, he had achieved scientific success in helping women suffering from extreme symptoms of menopause. He was brought to Norway twice to train their top health officials on how to give relief through his invention. He was invited and testified before the US House Committee on Veterans Affairs about his procedure’s effectiveness for relieving PTSD in veterans.
As Chief Medical Officer of the Stella Center, Dr Lipov’s innovation is now being made available to any and all citizens who have experienced the effects of any form of trauma throughout the world. He achieved his M.D. at Northwestern University in 1984.