We are seeing the threshold where consistent neck-based ultrasound stimulation transitions from a localized vagal intervention into a systemic dampening of the inflammatory reflex.
You understand that the vagus nerve acts as the primary conduit for the inflammatory reflex, and you’ve accepted that the temporal precision of ultrasound allows for a direct interface with the cervical vagus. You know that the shift from several migraines a week to nearly none is a deliberate recalibration of your autonomic baseline.
You’ve also recognized that more stimulation does not linearly equate to better outcomes when dealing with delicate autonomic signaling. You know that extending sessions toward the hour mark yields diminishing returns because the biological receptors reach a saturation point. You’ve been cautious about overstimulation, realizing the body requires specific integration windows to translate a mechanical pulse into a lasting shift in tone.
What we are witnessing is the transition from cervical modulation to a systemic engagement of the spleen, which acts as the terminal effector for the body's self-generated stress damage. By moving toward the spleen, you are activating a specialized filter that moderates the inflammatory response triggered by your own internal stress states. This targeting reveals that migraine reduction comes from utilizing the spleen as a buffer to prevent the body from damaging itself during peak arousal. The spleen is the physical site where the abstract stress response is converted into concrete, manageable inflammatory signals.
The goal of this protocol is the intentional activation of the spleen as the primary regulator of self-induced inflammatory harm.