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Health, Longevity & Biohacking

Emergency room director reveals vagal nerve stimulators used in clinical stress situations

Thomas DeLauer · This Ancestral Trick Drops Cortisol on Command (stops stress, sleep deeper) · July 13, 2026
Emergency room director reveals vagal nerve stimulators used in clinical stress situations
Thomas DeLauer
Thomas DeLauer
This Ancestral Trick Drops Cortisol on Command (stops stress, sleep deeper)
"I literally know that they're used in like emergency stress situations when someone is so stressed out. So, you're essentially hijacking that vagal nerve and that vagal tone. So, by doing that, you are changing stimulating this vagal nerve in the same way that you'd be humming, but a lot more powerfully, right?"
The speaker reveals that vagal nerve stimulators, traditionally associated with biohacking communities, are actually deployed in emergency room settings to manage acute stress responses. An emergency room director shared this clinical application, validating the technology beyond wellness marketing. The speaker personally uses the Pulsed II device and reports measurable improvements in heart rate variability within a single session.

About this episode

In this episode, the host presents five evidence-based interventions to lower cortisol and improve sleep quality without supplements, challenging common assumptions about what disrupts rest. The most striking revelation comes from an emergency room director who disclosed that vagal nerve stimulators, often dismissed as fringe biohacking tools, are actively used in clinical emergency settings to manage acute stress. The host personally endorses the Pulsed II device, reporting measurable improvements in heart rate variability. A second major finding draws from the Journal of Clinical Endocrinology Metabolism: standard room lighting suppresses melatonin in 99% of individuals, shortening the body's internal night by 90 minutes—a more significant factor than phone screens. The host explains that cortisol follows a precise 24-hour rhythm governed by the suprachiasmatic nucleus, with a healthy morning peak and evening trough. Modern life flattens this curve, blunting morning cortisol while keeping evening levels elevated. The five interventions target this imbalance: the mammalian dive reflex using cold water on the face, vagal nerve stimulation through humming or devices, strategic sauna use timed two to three hours before bed, grounding through direct skin contact with conductive surfaces, and eliminating bright artificial light after sunset. The host emphasizes that morning cortisol patterns at 7 a.m. shape sleep quality at 11 p.m., and each technique either sharpens the morning peak or lowers the evening trough. He provides specific implementation details, including targeting the forehead and eye sockets with ice water, aiming for lights below 10 lux and 3,000 Kelvin in the evening, and using sauna sessions of 15-20 minutes at 80-100 degrees Celsius. The host is transparent about mixed evidence on grounding but cites a pilot study showing significant nighttime cortisol reduction and symptom elimination.

Key takeaways

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