From Movement to Methode
The Female Athlete Brain Platform
We don’t just raise awareness, we deliver practical tools for real impact.
Sustain The Brain (STB) is our proprietary 19 channel neurotechnology platform, developed trough more than a decade of hands on experience in high performance recovery, brain optimization and women’s welness.
This platform is built on the journey of co-founder Rianne SChorel whose 10-year recovery from repeated head injuries inspired a new approach to female brain health and led to the creation of Move The Brain, the center she and her twin sister Nanja ran for 7 years.
After working with over 500 individuals, including elite athletes, they launched STB to expand acces to their method giving other centers the tools to train the brain in their own settings.
This not a headset or a trend. It’s real technology, built for real-worl use in resilience, focus, and brain performance programs.
Now available to select partners who want to lead in the future of female brain health.
SUSTAIN THE BRAIN OFFERS:
QEEG-based brain assessments. Personalized neurofeedback with the option to integrate our structured programs, consulting to help apply the method in your own context. Licensing full access to the platform, tools, and onboarding.
What is 19-channel neurofeedback?
Most wellness tools use just 1–4 sensors. STB uses 19, enabling a full-spectrum view of brain activity and faster, more personalized brain training.
More visibility. More precision. More effective sessions. More impact.
WHY ITS MATTER
Why Female Brain Health Matters
Female athletes are 1.5 to 2 times more likely to experience concussions
Growing participation
The demand for gender-specific brain tools and prevention strategies is growing rapidly
The journey of recovery is not just about regaining what was lost—it’s about redefining who you are and becoming even stronger than before. As female athletes, our strength is not only in our physical performance, but in our ability to rise, to learn, and to reinvent ourselves through adversity.”
Longer recovery time
Recovery is more than just physical. It’s emotional and mental. As women, we heal differently, and that needs to be understood and respected.”
Lack of research
Only 30% of concussion studies include women, resulting in critical gaps in effective solutions.