Skip to content
Medical Health Aged Care

Brain training game offers new hope for drug-free pain management

UNSW Sydney 3 mins read

A trial of an interactive game that trains people to alter their brain waves has shown promise as a treatment for nerve pain – offering hope for a new generation of drug-free treatments.

The PainWaive technology, developed by UNSW Sydney researchers, teaches users how to regulate abnormal brain activity linked to chronic nerve pain, offering a potential in-home, non-invasive alternative to opioids.

A recent trial of the technology, led by Professor Sylvia Gustin and Dr Negin Hesam-Shariati from UNSW Sydney’s NeuroRecovery Research Hub, has delivered promising results, published in the Journal of Pain.

The study compared hundreds of measures across participants' pain and related issues like pain interference before, during and after four weeks of interactive game play. Their brain activity was tracked via EEG (electroencephalogram) headsets, with the app responding in real time to shifts in brainwave patterns.

Three out of the four participants showed significant reductions in pain, particularly nearing the end of the treatment. Overall, the pain relief achieved by the three was comparable to or greater than that offered by opioids.

“Restrictions in the study’s size, design and duration limit our ability to generalise the findings or rule out placebo effects,” Dr Hesam-Shariati says.

“But the results we’ve seen are exciting and give us confidence to move to the next stage and our larger trial."

The PainWaive project builds on UNSW Professor Sylvia Gustin’s seminal research into changes in the brain’s thalamus – a central relay hub in the brain – associated with nerve (neuropathic) pain.

“The brainwaves of people with neuropathic pain show a distinct pattern: more slow theta waves, fewer alpha waves, and more fast, high beta waves,” Prof. Gustin says.

“We believe these changes interfere with how the thalamus talks to other parts of the brain, especially the sensory motor cortex, which registers pain."

“I wondered, can we develop a treatment that directly targets and normalises these abnormal waves?"

The challenge was taken up by an interdisciplinary team at UNSW Science and Neuroscience Research Australia (NeuRA), led by Prof. Gustin and Dr Hesam-Shariati, and resulted in PainWaive.

The four participants in its initial trial received a kit with a headset and a tablet preloaded with the game app, which includes directions for its use. They were also given tips for different mental strategies, like relaxing or focusing on happy memories, to help bring their brain activity into a more “normal” state.

The user data, meanwhile, was uploaded to the research team for remote monitoring.

“After just a couple of Zoom sessions, participants were able to run the treatment entirely on their own,” says Dr Hesam-Shariati.

“Participants felt empowered to manage their pain in their own environment. That’s a huge part of what makes this special."

Initially, Dr Hesam-Shariati says, the team planned to use existing commercial EEG systems, but they were either too expensive or didn’t meet the quality needed to deliver the project. Instead, they developed their own.

“Everything except the open-source EEG board was built in-house,” says Dr Hesam-Shariati. “And soon, even that will be replaced by a custom-designed board.”

Thanks to 3D printing, Prof. Gustin says, the team has cut the cost of each headset to around $300 – a fraction of the $1,000 to $20,000 price tags of existing systems.

The headset uses a saline-based wet electrode system to improve signal quality and targets the sensorimotor cortex.

“We’ve worked closely with patients to ensure the headset is lightweight, comfortable, and user-friendly,” says Prof. Gustin.

“Owning the technology offers us the potential to one day offer PainWaive as a truly affordable, accessible solution for at-home pain management, especially for those with limited access to traditional treatments."

The researchers are now calling for participants to register their interest in two upcoming trials of the neuromodulation technology: the Spinal Pain Trial, investigating its potential to reduce chronic spinal pain, and the StoPain Trial, exploring its use in treating chronic neuropathic pain in people with a spinal cord injury.


Contact details:

Elva Darnell, News & Content Coordinator.

Email: [email protected].

Phone: +61 431 601 216.

Media

More from this category

  • Medical Health Aged Care
  • 13/06/2025
  • 15:49
The Australian College of Nursing

National Immunisation Strategy backs new ways of vaccine delivery

The Australian College of Nursing is calling for swift regulatory and funding reform to enable more nurses and midwives to provide vaccination independently in more settings for more Australians to increase Australia’s immunisation rates. Acting ACN CEO, Dr Zach Byfield, said the latest National Immunisation Strategy has prioritised ‘the delivery of vaccines in innovative ways’. “Nurses are leaders in innovation and can deliver vaccinations in innovative ways,” Dr Byfield said. “Nurses lead and run vaccination in school-based immunisation settings across the nation. Further, the nursing profession stepped up and led the way exceptionally throughout the Covid pandemic. “But childhood immunisation…

  • Contains:
  • Medical Health Aged Care
  • 13/06/2025
  • 09:30
Monash University

Giving Natural Killer cells the upper hand in the battle against cancer

All of us produce a growth factor – called IL-15 – which effectively protects us from cancers. It’s role is to boost the production of immune cells that can rapidly detect and kill cancer cells when they first appear. One of these cell-types is appropriately called Natural Killer Cells. The problem is that cancer cells evolve numerous strategies to suppress immune cells like NK cells, even when these cancer cell are producing the immune boosting factor IL-15, and too often the cancer cells win. An obvious solution is to supply cancer patients with drugs that trigger the IL-15 receptor on…

  • Education Training, Medical Health Aged Care
  • 13/06/2025
  • 06:01
Australian College of Nursing

Renewed nursing definitions reflect modern nursing to embolden the profession

The peak global body for nursing organisations has renewed the definitions of ‘nurse’ and ‘nursing’, for the first time in 23 years, marking a shift away from a professional identity based on tasks to one conceived as a sophisticated profession requiring scientific knowledge, ethical standards, and therapeutic relationships. The new definitions were unanimously approved at the International Council of Nurses (ICN) Council of National Nursing Association Representatives, held this week at the ICN 2025 Congress in Helsinki, Finland, where 7,000 nurses have gathered from more than 130 countries, including Australia. The ICN’s new definition of ‘a nurse’ represents a shift…

  • Contains:

Media Outreach made fast, easy, simple.

Feature your press release on Medianet's News Hub every time you distribute with Medianet. Pay per release or save with a subscription.