HEALTHTECH
REPORTER ESSENTIALS:
Clear Review of the Scrambler Therapy
Dr. Jason Cooney describes Scrambler Therapy as a non-invasive neuromodulation technology designed to treat chronic neuropathic pain by interrupting and retraining abnormal pain signaling pathways in the nervous system. Rather than masking pain with medications or targeting inflammation directly, the therapy delivers controlled electrical signals through the skin to replace pain messages with non-pain information, effectively “rebooting” how the brain perceives pain.
What
distinguishes Scrambler Therapy from conventional electrical stimulation
devices is the proprietary algorithm behind its signal delivery. The system
generates a constantly vacillating and dynamically changing electrical
waveform, rather than a fixed or repetitive frequency. Traditional stimulation
devices allow clinicians to adjust frequency or intensity, but once set, those
signals remain constant. In contrast, Scrambler Therapy continuously varies its
signal pattern. According to Dr. Cooney, this prevents the brain from adapting
or compensating for the stimulus. Because the signal is always changing, the
nervous system remains responsive and “listens” to the incoming information
rather than habituating to it. This adaptive signaling is central to the
therapy’s ability to disrupt entrenched pain patterns.
From
a neurophysiological standpoint, Scrambler Therapy primarily targets C fibers,
the unmyelinated sensory nerve fibers that transmit chronic pain signals from
the skin to the central nervous system. The therapy delivers non-pain
electrical information to these fibers, which then travel along the
spinothalamic tract to the cerebral cortex. By repeatedly replacing pain
messages with non-pain signals, the brain is gradually retrained to reinterpret
sensory input from the affected region. Over time, this process can reduce or
eliminate the perception of chronic pain. Dr. Cooney characterizes this process
as a form of neural “rebooting,” in which maladaptive pain signaling is
overwritten by new, non-painful input.
Clinically, Scrambler Therapy has been most extensively studied and applied in patients with Complex Regional Pain Syndrome (CRPS) and chemotherapy-induced peripheral neuropathy (CIPN). Dr. Cooney notes that the majority of patients treated in clinical practice fall into these two categories, with CRPS representing the primary indication and CIPN comprising a significant secondary group. In patients with chemotherapy-induced neuropathy, Scrambler Therapy often produces meaningful reductions in pain. However, Dr. Cooney observes that numbness and tingling may be less responsive in some individuals, particularly when nerve damage or demyelination is severe or irreversible. While pain can be significantly improved, sensory deficits may persist in certain cases due to underlying structural nerve injury.
Dr.
Cooney emphasizes that Scrambler Therapy is most effective for neuropathic pain
that is not caused by ongoing mechanical compression or structural pathology.
For example, patients with degenerative spinal conditions involving active
nerve compression may experience temporary pain relief during treatment, but
symptoms are likely to return if the underlying mechanical cause is not
addressed. In contrast, neuropathic pain resulting from stroke, infection,
surgery, chemotherapy, or chronic neurological injury may respond more
favorably when the original insult is no longer actively damaging the nerve
tissue. In these cases, Scrambler Therapy can help interrupt persistent pain
signaling that remains long after the initial injury has healed.
One
of the defining advantages of Scrambler Therapy, according to Dr. Cooney, is
its non-invasive nature and favorable safety profile. The treatment does not
involve injections, surgery, implanted devices, or pharmaceuticals. He
highlights that the therapy is well tolerated and associated with minimal risk,
making it suitable even for pediatric populations. In his clinical experience,
children and adolescents with CRPS—who represent a
notable portion of CRPS cases—have shown dramatic functional improvements
following treatment. Dr. Cooney recounts cases in which young patients arrived
dependent on crutches and unable to attend school, only to regain mobility and
return to daily activities within weeks. He underscores that the absence of
medication-related side effects is particularly important in younger patients,
where long-term pharmaceutical management carries significant risks.
Dr.
Cooney also places Scrambler Therapy within a growing body of clinical research
and international adoption. The technology has been in clinical use for more
than a decade and is now available in multiple countries, including the
Despite
its demonstrated benefits, Dr. Cooney is careful to acknowledge current
limitations in objective outcome measurement. Clinical improvements are
typically assessed using patient-reported pain scales, which, while meaningful
to patients, remain subjective measures. He recognizes the need for more
objective validation methods and welcomes efforts to pair clinical outcomes
with measurable physiological or imaging-based biomarkers. Establishing
quantifiable evidence of neurological or tissue-level change, he notes, would
further strengthen the medical community’s confidence in neuromodulation-based
pain therapies such as Scrambler.
In
summary, Dr. Cooney presents Scrambler Therapy as a clinically validated,
non-invasive neuromodulation approach that addresses chronic neuropathic pain
by retraining how the brain processes sensory information. Through dynamically
changing electrical signals delivered to peripheral nerve fibers, the therapy
disrupts maladaptive pain messaging and replaces it with non-pain input,
enabling meaningful functional recovery in conditions such as CRPS and
chemotherapy-induced neuropathy.

