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Journal of Pharmaceutical Research and Integrated Medical Sciences

Raman Srivastava Srivastava

Author Profile
KP Singh Memorial Institute of Pharmacy, Sitapur, Lucknow, Uttar Pradesh, India
2
Publications
1
Years Active
8
Collaborators
66
Citations

Publications by Raman Srivastava Srivastava

2 publications found • Active 2026-2026

2026

2 publications

Large Language Models (LLMs) in Hypnosis, Leveraging Machine Learning to Map and Induce Hypnotic Trance States via Real-Time EEG, DORAs, VRH, HRV: Human-Led Hypnosis vs Algorithmically Hypnotherapy for Pain Management

with Yash Srivastav Srivastav, Stuti Verma Verma, Anup Kumar Sirbaiya Sirbaiya, Shivani Singh Singh, Kamini Prajapati Prajapati, Vasu Tiwari Tiwari
2026

The investigation assessed the potential applications of LLMs, EEG neurofeedback, HRV analysis, DORAS systems, and VRH in the development of AI-powered hypnotherapy solutions for pain therapy. The results proved that AI-based hypnotherapy platforms had higher levels of customization, ability to monitor the states of trance, maintain consistency of sessions, and promote physiological adaptations compared to conventional hypnotherapy approaches based on human hypnotherapists. The quantitative analysis revealed that hypnotherapy sessions assisted by VRH delivered the most effective pain relief outcomes, whereas the EEG and HRV assessments revealed enhanced levels of autonomic relaxation and emotional control in the context of hypnotherapy. The researchers found that despite obvious strengths in terms of scalability, incorporation of neurofeedback, and responsiveness to individual conditions of patients, AI systems lack some qualities inherent to humans such as emotional empathy and rapport building. Overall, it can be concluded that future hypnotherapy systems are more likely to become hybrid human-AI solutions.

Eye spasm/Eye twitching: Mg Supplementation and Stress-Reduction in Treating Eyelid Myokymia, Psychosomatic of Anxiety:  of Eye Twitching Among High-Stress, Hemifacial Spasm,Blepharospasm

with Yash Srivastav Srivastav, Stuti Verma Verma, Tanya Tanya, Shivani Singh Singh, Anup Kumar Sirbaiya Sirbaiya, Deepshi Srivastava Srivastava
2026

Eyelid twitching and involuntary facial muscle spasms have become common neuromuscular disorders due to stress, anxiety, sleeplessness, prolonged computer usage, exhaustion, and other external factors. The purpose of this review is to discuss various neurophysiological, psychosomatic, environmental, and medical aspects of eye twitching disorders such as eyelid myokymia, hemifacial spasm, and blepharospasm in highly stressed people. Human research demonstrates that chronic stress along with dysfunction in the autonomic nervous system plays an important role in neuromuscular hyperactivity and ocular muscle spasms. Magnesium is discussed in this review as an important nutrient for nerve signaling, muscle relaxation, and neurotransmitter function. Therefore, magnesium intake in combination with stress management methods like meditation, yoga, and sleep may help alleviate the symptoms of eyelid twitches. Neurological complications like hemifacial spasm and blepharospasm generally require the intervention of drugs, neurological procedures like botulinum toxin injection therapy, anticonvulsants, and microvascular decompression surgery. The review also touches upon the effects of prolonged muscular spasm within the eye muscles on emotions, occupation, and quality of life from a psychosocial perspective. While previous human-based studies have shed light on various clinical aspects of the subject, there remain certain issues like small sample size, variation in therapeutic protocols, and absence of longitudinal studies that underscore the need for further clinical research.