Dr. Lars Landers, DC, DIBCN, DIBE
Precision Neurorehabilitation. Led by a functional neurologist in Wellesley, MA.
Measurement-guided neurological care for post-concussion syndrome, brain fog, vestibular disorders, and complex symptoms your prior workup couldn’t explain. Every plan starts with a brain map.
We treat what your labs cannot see.
Precision Neurorehabilitation for Complex Neurological Conditions.
When the MRI is normal but the symptoms aren’t.
THE FIRST STEP IN EVERY PLAN
Every plan starts with a brain map.
- We don’t guess. We image, we test, we treat, we re-image.
Our Approach
A phased protocol, not a sequence of appointments.
Comprehensive Neurological Assessment
A full intake, neurological examination, and qEEG brain map. We review your history, your prior imaging, and your symptom timeline against what the brain map shows. You leave with a plan — not a referral.
Targeted Treatment & Progress Re-evaluation
A phased course of treatment selected from our modality stack — neurofeedback, neuromodulation, photobiomodulation, vestibular and cognitive-motor rehab — built around your specific findings. Progress is re-measured against your baseline at defined intervals.
Final Review & Home Program
A closing re-evaluation, a written summary for you and your referring clinicians, and a home program calibrated to keep gains stable. If maintenance care fits, we structure it. If you got all of the improvement you we looking for, we discharge you.
CONDITIONS WE TREAT
Built for complex, chronic, and post-discharge cases.
Most patients arrive after the hospital workup ran out, or after years of symptoms that never matched a single diagnosis. Below are the three areas we treat most often. If you don’t see your condition listed, the underlying patterns are usually the same — start with a brain map.
Post-Concussion Syndrome
Persistent symptoms after concussion or TBI — months or years out — when standard care said you had plateaued.
Brain Fog & Cognitive Decline
Word-finding, working memory, mental fatigue, and slowed processing that bloodwork can’t explain.
Mood Dysregulation
Anxiety, depression, low endurance for stress, chronic worry and persistent thought loops.
Subscription Tiers
Subscription recommendations are made individually, based on your assessment findings and treatment goals. We’ll discuss the right fit for you during your care transition conversation.
Brain Health Maintenance
2 sessions/month
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Keep your brain tuned, not just treated
Active Optimization
4 sessions/month
Ideal for:
Patients with ongoing symptoms, active recovery from TBI/trauma, or those managing anxiety, ADHD, or neurodegenerative conditions who benefit from regular intervention
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Weekly cadence — the clinical sweet spot for neuroplastic maintenance
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Consistent input drives consistent progress
Intensive Maintenance
8 sessions/month
Ideal for:
Moderate-to-severe history of injury, ongoing health challenges, or high-performing patients actively optimizing brain function
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Twice-weekly cadence for patients who need frequent neuromodulation or are in active, complex recovery
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Maximum frequency, maximum neuroplastic potential
Transparent Pricing
Practice is cash-pay only. Located at 60 Walnut St., Wellesley, MA, co-housed with Bespoke Primary Care
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$300 new patient exam
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$750 qEEG
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$250/single session
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$2,250 10-session intensive programs (10% off single rate if paid upfront)
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$4,375 20-session intensive programs (10% off single rate for first 10, 15% off single rate for second group of 10, if paid upfront)
TECHNOLOGY STACK
Eight modalities under one roof.
Selected and sequenced from your brain map. Re-measured against your baseline.
qEEG Brain Mapping
Quantitative EEG that images the electrical patterns of brain function. The baseline every plan is built on.
Neurofeedback
Real-time EEG feedback that trains specific brain networks to regulate themselves. Drug-free, non-invasive, measurable.
Neuromodulation
Photobiomodulation
Cognitive & Motor Rehab (VR)
Sensory-Motor Integration
Neuro-rehab protocols that retrain how the brain integrates vision, balance, and proprioception when one system is compensating for another.
Vestibular Rehabilitation
Computerized balance, fall-risk, and posturography assessment paired with customized vestibular rehab — for the dizziness no one has been able to name.
Neuro-Optometric Rehabilitation
Oculomotor, gaze-stability, and binocular-vision retraining — often the missing piece in persistent post-concussion symptoms.
We publish our results
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Average symptom reduction across our post-concussion patients, measured on PCSS from pre-treatment baseline to final re-evaluation.
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Patients who completed our standard PCS protocol and reported meaningful return-to-function at six-month follow-up.
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Non-responder rate. Patients in this group received their assessment, the data, and a discharge plan that points them to the next right step — without continuing to bill for treatment that wasn’t working.
Testimonials
Outcomes in patients’ own words.
FOR REFERRING PROVIDERS
Refer with confidence. Every patient returns with a written evaluation summary.
We work alongside primary care, neurology, neuropsychology, and rehabilitation medicine — not in place of them. Every referred patient receives a complete neurological workup, a qEEG report, and a written summary sent back to the referring clinician.
Who we treat — and who we don’t.
This practice is built for chronic, complex, and post-discharge cases. Patients with persistent post-concussion symptoms past the standard recovery window. Patients with brain fog or cognitive symptoms that don’t match their lab work. Patients with vestibular and balance disorders that have cycled through ENT, neurology, and physical therapy without resolution. Patients with non-medication ADHD goals, Long COVID neuro symptoms, or early neurodegenerative changes seeking measurement-guided intervention.
This practice is not the right setting for acute medical emergencies. Acute stroke, an active seizure disorder requiring medication titration, an unstable cardiovascular event — those belong in a hospital. We are also not a substitute for primary psychiatric care, though we work alongside psychiatry when network dysregulation is contributing to mood or anxiety symptoms.
If you’re unsure whether your case fits, the assessment is designed to answer that question. If we can’t help, we will tell you in the first visit.
COMMON QUESTIONS
Questions patients ask before their first visit.
What if my MRI is normal but my symptoms aren’t?
A normal MRI rules out structural disease — a tumor, a bleed, a stroke. It does not rule out the kind of network dysregulation we treat. qEEG brain mapping is designed to surface the functional patterns that structural imaging can’t show. If your imaging is normal and your symptoms persist, that is the patient profile we are built for.
How is a functional neurologist different from a regular neurologist?
A traditional neurologist is trained to diagnose and medically manage structural and disease-based neurological conditions — stroke, multiple sclerosis, epilepsy, Parkinson’s disease. A functional neurologist focuses on network-level dysfunction and uses targeted, non-pharmacological neurorehabilitation to retrain those networks. The two roles are complementary. Many of our patients are co-managed with their primary neurologist.
Why is my brain still foggy a year after my concussion?
Standard concussion guidance assumes most patients recover inside the first three months. A meaningful minority don’t. When symptoms persist past the one-year mark, the underlying issue is usually network dysregulation — vestibular, autonomic, oculomotor, or cognitive — that wasn’t fully addressed in acute care. It is measurable, and in most cases it is treatable.
Is qEEG brain mapping covered by insurance?
qEEG is not consistently covered by health insurance in the United States, and we are a cash-pay clinic. Transparent pricing is published before you book. Many patients use HSA or FSA funds; we provide superbills on request for out-of-network reimbursement where applicable.
Do you take insurance?
No. We are a cash-pay practice. The trade is direct: we can deliver the time, the measurement, and the integrated modality stack that insurance does not authorize. We publish our pricing — there are no surprise charges and no upsells mid-treatment.
How long is a typical course of treatment?
Most protocols run between ten and twenty in-clinic sessions across four to eight weeks, with a re-evaluation built into the plan. The exact length is set after your assessment, not before. We do not pre-sell open-ended care.
What if I’m not local to Wellesley?
A subset of patients travel for intensive blocks — typically two- or four-week concentrated programs with daily sessions. Initial assessment and program design happen on-site; selected portions of follow-up care can be coordinated remotely with your local clinician. Reach out before booking travel — we will tell you in advance whether an intensive format is the right fit.
Do I need a referral?
No referral is required. Many patients arrive self-referred after their own research. If you have a referring clinician, we will send your evaluation summary back to them at the end of care.
What conditions don’t you treat?
We don’t treat acute medical emergencies — acute stroke, active seizure, or unstable cardiovascular events belong in a hospital setting. We don’t replace psychiatric care for primary mood or psychotic disorders, though we frequently co-manage patients alongside psychiatry when network dysregulation is a contributor. If your case falls outside what we treat, we will tell you in the first visit and point you to the next right step.