TMS for OCD

FDA-cleared. Targeting the circuits that drive the cycle, not just the symptoms.

What’s happening in the brain with OCD

OCD isn’t about being overly tidy or detail-oriented. It’s a dysfunction in the cortico-striato-thalamo-cortical (CSTC) loop… a circuit that in people with OCD, generates intrusive thoughts and then fails to properly signal that the resulting compulsive behavior has resolved the threat. The loop keeps firing. The relief never quite comes. Medication like SSRIs at higher doses can dampen this loop, but response rates are modest and many patients hit a ceiling. TMS offers a different approach: directly targeting the brain regions involved (the medial prefrontal cortex and anterior cingulate cortex) with deep magnetic stimulation to interrupt the pattern at its source. In 2018, the FDA cleared deep TMS (dTMS) specifically for OCD, a separate clearance from the depression indication, based on its own clinical trial data.
Who TMS is right for with OCD
TMS is a strong option if you: – Are on medication for OCD but haven’t achieved adequate relief – Have tried two or more SSRIs without sufficient response – Want to add a non-medication intervention to your current treatment plan – Are in ERP (exposure and response prevention) therapy and want to enhance its effectiveness TMS is probably not the right fit if you: – Have metal implants in or near your head – Have a seizure history – Are not currently engaged in any form of behavioral therapy (TMS is most effective when paired with ERP)

Who TMS isn’t right for with OCD

TMS for OCD doesn’t always produce instant results. Response follows a gradual trajectory and most patients begin noticing meaningful change between weeks 3 and 4 following treatment. The mechanism is neuroplasticity, not pharmacology: the brain is rewiring, and that takes time.

 

TMS for OCD is most effective when combined with active ERP therapy. The neuroplasticity window TMS creates is an opportunity, behavioral work during and after treatment takes advantage of the brain’s increased capacity for change

ACCELERATED PROTOCOLS

Treatment that fits your life... not the other way around.

Most TMS clinics offer one option: six weeks of daily visits. We offer something different.

One-Day Treatment

$2,995 · Cash-pay · In-house Payment Plans Available
A complete TMS course in a single clinic visit. This comprehensive single day treatment includes 20 brief TMS sessions over approximately 9.5 hours, enhanced with D-cycloserine to amplify Neuroplasticity throughout the day. Published data reports an 87.5% response rate and 71.9% remission at six weeks.
One day. One visit. Done.

Five-Day Treatment

$9,995 · Cash-pay · In-house Payment Plans Available

Ten iTBS sessions per day across five consecutive days. This is the protocol behind some of the most compelling remission data in TMS research. Published results show a 78.6% remission rate at day five, with a mean time to remission of 2.6 days. Incredible for those who have sought treatment for years.

Disclaimer: Unlike the original SAINT study, which used functional MRI (fMRI) to guide coil placement, this clinic uses standardized clinical measurements and landmarks to determine the treatment site. This is a common and effective method used in most clinical TMS settings. Optimal TMS is not affiliated with Stanford University and does not claim to offer the trademarked SAINT TMS protocol

Six-Week Standard TMS

The established, FDA-cleared protocol covered by most insurance plans. 36 sessions over six weeks. A good fit for patients whose schedule and coverage align with this pathway.

Note: A “covered” TMS course at a typical $60 specialist copay = $2,160 out of pocket minimum, potentially more, if deductibles aren’t met. Our accelerated options are often more affordable in total, and dramatically faster for long term resutls.

Is TMS for OCD the same as TMS for depression?
Not exactly. While both use magnetic stimulation, OCD treatment targets different brain regions, specifically the medial prefrontal cortex and anterior cingulate cortex rather than the left dorsolateral prefrontal cortex primarily used for depression. The FDA clearance for OCD is separate from the depression clearance.
In most cases, no. Most patients continue their current medication regimen during TMS. If medication adjustments are appropriate, our PMHNP can assist with that.
It may. The FDA clearance for deep TMS in OCD came from trials that included patients who hadn’t responded adequately to medication. We won’t promise outcomes we can’t guarantee but TMS represents a meaningfully different mechanism than anything else currently available for OCD.

OCD is not always visible. It does not always involve visible rituals or hand-washing. For many patients it presents as:

– Repetitive intrusive thoughts that are impossible to dismiss

– Mental loops that run on repeat regardless of logic

– Compulsive behaviors or mental rituals performed to reduce anxiety

– A constant need for reassurance that never fully resolves the discomfort

– Difficulty focusing on anything else when a thought takes hold

– Hours lost to rituals, checking, or mental reviewing

– Overanalyzing conversations, actions, or decisions long after they have passed

– A persistent sense of being controlled by your own mind

These symptoms are not signs of irrationality or weakness. They reflect how the brain’s error-detection and threat-response systems have become dysregulated. And they can be addressed at that level directly. We break down exactly how below.

Most OCD treatment relies on a combination of SSRIs and Exposure and Response Prevention (ERP) therapy. Both can be effective and both have real limitations, particularly for patients with treatment-resistant OCD.

TMS offers a different mechanism of action that targets the neural circuits driving OCD rather than just managing the symptoms from the outside.

– FDA-cleared for OCD, not experimental, not off-label

– Targets the anterior cingulate cortex and related circuits involved in the OCD loop

– Non-pharmacologic, no systemic side effects, no new medications required

– Works as an adjunct to existing therapy, designed to make ERP and CBT more effective

– Accelerated single-day protocol available

– Telehealth intake for patients anywhere in Nevada

– Psych NP on the clinical team

– Evidence-based protocols backed by published clinical research

TMS for OCD is not about stopping thoughts through willpower. It is about reducing the neurological signal that makes those thoughts so powerful so that the work of therapy can actually land.

OCD is associated with hyperactivity in a specific brain circuit: the cortico-striato-thalamo-cortical (CSTC) loop, which connects the prefrontal cortex to deeper structures involved in habit formation and threat detection. When this circuit is overactive, it generates the repetitive, intrusive patterns that define OCD.

 

TMS delivers focused magnetic pulses to regions of the prefrontal cortex involved in this circuit with the goal of reducing that hyperactivity and restoring more balanced communication between brain networks.

 

Published studies suggest this approach can meaningfully reduce the severity of intrusive thoughts, compulsive behaviors, and the anxiety that drives the OCD cycle. For many patients, this creates the neurological conditions where therapy becomes more effective and the loop becomes easier to break.

 

TMS is FDA-cleared for OCD as an adjunct therapy in adults. Individual results vary. A clinician determines eligibility.

TMS for OCD may be appropriate if you:

– Have been diagnosed with Obsessive-Compulsive Disorder

– Are currently in therapy but not experiencing sufficient relief

– Have tried SSRIs with limited or unsatisfactory results

– Want a non-pharmacologic approach alongside your existing care

– Are in Las Vegas or anywhere in Nevada and able to attend in-person sessions

TMS is not appropriate for everyone. Eligibility is always determined by a licensed clinician. Very rare risks include seizure. Common side effects may include mild scalp discomfort or headache. A full risk and benefit discussion takes place during your consultation.

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LOCATIONS

Growing to serve patients nationally.

Find an Optimal TMS Near You
Our Las Vegas, Nevada and Springville, Utah clinics are open now. Additional locations are in development. As we expand, our clinical model travels with us… the same protocols, the same education-first philosophy, the same commitment to honest answers. We’re not building a chain of TMS machines. We’re building a care model to reach the people that need it most.

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Las Vegas, NV

8981 W Sahara Ave, Suite 270 Las Vegas, NV 89117 (702) 623-1140

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Springville, UT
382 E 400 S, Suite B Springville, UT 84663 (725) 344-3322

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Conroe, TX & Casper, WY

Additional locations in development. Accelerated protocols available to traveling patients now.

Note for traveling patients: Our 1-day and 5-day protocols make it practical to travel for treatment. Visit your preferred location page for nearby hotel recommendations and travel tips.