Vibroacoustic Therapy

What Is Vibroacoustic Therapy? Your Complete Guide to Sound Bed Healing

Person relaxing on vibroacoustic healing bed with red light waves

Imagine lying on a bed that doesn't just play music—it becomes the music. Every cell in your body resonates with healing frequencies. Stress melts away. Pain softens. Your mind quiets. This is vibroacoustic therapy.

At Ohmazing Art of Healing in San Diego, our custom vibroacoustic bed is the centerpiece of our healing sanctuary. Built by founder Nader Razi, it represents years of research into the science of sound, vibration, and cellular healing.

This guide explains what vibroacoustic therapy is, how it works, and what you can expect during a session.

What Is Vibroacoustic Therapy?

Vibroacoustic therapy (VAT) is a wellness modality that combines low-frequency sound vibrations with music or therapeutic tones. Unlike traditional sound baths where you hear sound, vibroacoustic therapy lets you feel sound through your entire body.

During a session, you lie on a specialized bed embedded with speakers and transducers that convert sound into physical vibrations. These vibrations travel through your bones, tissues, and cells—creating what's called "cellular massage."

How It's Different from Sound Baths

This dual approach makes vibroacoustic therapy more immersive and, for many people, more effective for deep relaxation and pain relief.

The Science: How Vibroacoustic Therapy Works

Your body is approximately 70% water, making it an excellent conductor of sound vibrations. When low-frequency sound waves (20-120 Hz) pass through your body:

1. Cellular Resonance

Every cell in your body has a natural resonant frequency. When exposed to therapeutic frequencies, cells begin to vibrate in harmony—a process called entrainment. This can help "reset" cells that are vibrating at unhealthy frequencies due to stress or disease.

2. Nervous System Regulation

Low-frequency vibrations activate the vagus nerve, your body's primary relaxation pathway. This shifts you from "fight or flight" (sympathetic) to "rest and digest" (parasympathetic) mode.

3. Brainwave Synchronization

Specific frequencies guide your brain into delta (deep sleep), theta (meditation), or alpha (relaxed alertness) states—allowing for profound rest and healing.

4. Nitric Oxide Release

Vibrations stimulate the release of nitric oxide, a molecule that improves blood flow, reduces inflammation, and supports cardiovascular health.

Proven Benefits of Vibroacoustic Therapy

Research on vibroacoustic therapy shows measurable benefits for:

Physical Health

Mental & Emotional Wellness

Spiritual Growth

What Happens During a Vibroacoustic Session?

Here's what to expect when you book a session at Ohmazing Art of Healing:

Before Your Session (10 minutes)

During Your Session (60-90 minutes)

After Your Session (15 minutes)

Common Experiences & Sensations

Everyone's experience is unique, but common sensations include:

It's also completely normal to fall asleep! Deep sleep during vibroacoustic therapy is highly healing.

Who Can Benefit from Vibroacoustic Therapy?

Vibroacoustic therapy is safe and beneficial for:

Contraindications: Vibroacoustic therapy is not recommended for people with pacemakers, pregnant women in the first trimester, or individuals with active thrombosis. Always consult your healthcare provider if you have concerns.

How Often Should You Have Sessions?

Frequency depends on your goals:

Benefits are cumulative—each session builds on the last.

Experience Our Custom Vibroacoustic Bed

The vibroacoustic bed at Ohmazing Art of Healing was designed and built by founder Nader Razi—an aerospace engineer turned sound healer whose own cancer journey led him to this work.

Our bed features:

Located in San Diego's Grantville neighborhood, our sanctuary is designed to hold you in safety, stillness, and deep healing.

Book Your Vibroacoustic Session

About Ohmazing Art of Healing: Founded by Nader Razi, our San Diego sanctuary offers vibroacoustic therapy, sound baths, and creative healing experiences. Rated Top 3 in Grantville for healing arts (2026).

Research References:
• Skille O. (1989). VibroAcoustic Therapy. Music Therapy.
• Boyd-Brewer C. (2003). Vibroacoustic Therapy. Music Therapy Perspectives.
• Patrick G. (1999). The Effects of Vibroacoustic Music on Symptom Reduction. IEEE Engineering in Medicine and Biology.