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Kenneth G Walton

Department of Physiology and Health, Maharishi International University, Fairfield, IA 52557, USA.

2 papers in the library · 7 citations · publishing 2024-2025

Papers

Effectiveness of Meditation Techniques in Treating Post-Traumatic Stress Disorder: A Systematic Review and Meta-Analysis.

Medicina (Kaunas, Lithuania) December 12, 2024 David W Orme-Johnson, Vernon A Barnes, Brian Rees et al. 5 citations

All categories of meditation helped reduce PTSD symptoms, with Transcendental Meditation (TM) producing significantly larger reductions than other types. A meta-analysis of 61 studies with 3,440 subjects compared four meditation approaches: Mindfulness-Based Stress Reduction, other mindfulness techniques, Transcendental Meditation, and other non-mindfulness, non-TM methods. TM's effect size (Hedges's g = -1.13) was significantly larger than the others, which ranged from -0.52 to -0.66 and did not differ from each other. Trauma populations included war veterans, refugees, earthquake and tsunami victims, survivors of interpersonal violence, nurses, and prison inmates. No serious side effects were reported. A Phase 3 clinical trial testing TM against standard treatment was recommended.

Possible Anti-Aging and Anti-Stress Effects of Long-Term Transcendental Meditation Practice: Differences in Gene Expression, EEG Correlates of Cognitive Function, and Hair Steroids.

Biomolecules February 20, 2025 Supaya Wenuganen, Kenneth G Walton, Frederick T Travis et al. 2 citations

Long-term Transcendental Meditation practice is associated with reduced biomarkers of chronic stress and biological aging. In a comparison of older long-term meditators (average 40 years of practice) with age-matched non-meditators, 7 of 13 genes that were more highly expressed in older controls showed lower expression in the older meditators. Older meditators also scored higher on a brain integration scale and had shorter event-related potential latencies—indicating faster cognitive processing—than age-matched controls, with latencies no longer than those of young non-meditators. Hair cortisol levels were lower in meditators than in matched controls, suggesting lower cumulative stress exposure.