From: ironjustice on
"Essential fatty acid supplements reduced antisocial behaviour "

"Lack of D2 receptors causes individuals to have a high risk for
multiple addictive, impulsive and compulsive behavioral propensities,
such as conduct disorder and antisocial behavior, severe alcoholism,
cocaine, heroin, marijuana and nicotine use, glucose bingeing,
pathological gambling, sex addiction, ADHD, Tourette's Syndrome,
autism, chronic violence, posttraumatic stress disorder and schizoid/
avoidant cluster."
--------------------------------------------------------------------

Prisoners given supplements in new trial
By Shane Starling

09-Sep-2008 - An Oxford University study being conducted in three UK
prisons is investigating the link between nutrition and behaviour.

It follows a 2002 UK trial that found consumption of food supplements
could reduce anti-social behaviour in teenagers as well as 30 years
inquiry into the subject by one of the lead researchers, professor
Alexander Schauss, PhD, FACN, senior director of natural and medicinal
products research at natural products consultancy, AIBMR Life
Sciences.


Schauss noted more than 20 controlled clinical trials carried out in
state and county juvenile and adult institutions confirmed that diet
could be used to reduce the incidence of antisocial behavior by up to
60 percent.


The new study, one of the largest ever conducted, is being funded by a
$2.6m (€1.83m) grant from the Wellcome Trust, the UK's largest medical
research charity.


Behaviour modification


The study aims to find out if nutrient levels required for optimum
brain function are also responsible for behaviour modification.


Similar studies carried out in the US and Europe have determined the
link between nutrition and behaviour.


"Seeing the level of research on diet and crime reach this level of
financial support by the medical community is heartening,” said
Schauss.


“But it took over 30 years, even though the evidence was there back in
the 1970s."


The director of the Wellcome Trust stated: "If this study shows
nutritional supplementation affects behaviour, it could have profound
significance for nutrition guidelines not only within the criminal
justice system, but in the wider community, in schools, for example.
We are all used to nutritional guidelines for our physical health, but
this study could lead to revisions taking into account our mental
health, as well."


The researchers will investigate the affect of different food
supplements on behaviour compared to groups on placebo.


"It is my hope that we see better nutrition education and start with
pre-conceptual care programs that focus on nutrition and other
lifestyle factors and behaviors that can decrease the risk of
antisocial behavior," Schauss said.


Schauss is the author of a book called Diet, Crime and Delinquency,
written in 1978 and which posited the idea that diet and behaviour
were closely linked.


The study is being conducted in conjunction with the Institute of
Psychiatry at Imperial College, University of London, the University
of Surrey, the University of Liverpool and the Medical Research
Council on Human Nutrition Research.


The 2002 study gave essential fatty acid supplements to 18-21-year-old
prisoners and found antisocial behaviour was reduced by 37 per cent
compared to placebo.

---------------------------------
---------------------------------

J Psychoactive Drugs 2000 Nov;32 Suppl:i-iv, 1-112

Reward deficiency syndrome: a biogenetic model for the diagnosis and
treatment of impulsive, addictive, and compulsive behaviors.


Blum K, Braverman ER, Holder JM, Lubar JF, Monastra VJ, Miller D,
Lubar JO, Chen TJ, Comings DE

Department of Biological Sciences, University of North Texas, Denton,
Texas, USA.


The dopaminergic system, and in particular the dopamine D2 receptor,
has been implicated in reward mechanisms. The net effect of
neurotransmitter interaction at the mesolimbic brain region induces
"reward" when dopamine (DA) is released from the neuron at the nucleus
accumbens and interacts with a dopamine D2 receptor. "The reward
cascade" involves the release of serotonin, which in turn at the
hypothalmus stimulates enkephalin, which in turn inhibits GABA at the
substania nigra, which in turn fine tunes the amount of DA released at
the nucleus accumbens or "reward site." It is well known that under
normal conditions in the reward site DA works to maintain our normal
drives. In fact, DA has become to be known as the "pleasure molecule"
and/or the "antistress molecule." When DA is released into the
synapse, it stimulates a number a DA receptors (D1-D5) which results
in increased feelings of well-being and stress reduction. A consensus
of the literature suggests that when there is a dysfunction in the
brain reward cascade, which could be caused by certain genetic
variants (polygenic), especially in the DA system causing a
hypodopaminergic trait, the brain of that person requires a DA fix to
feel good. This trait leads to multiple drug-seeking behavior. This is
so because alcohol, cocaine, heroin, marijuana, nicotine, and glucose
all cause activation and neuronal release of brain DA, which could
heal the abnormal cravings. Certainly after ten years of study we
could say with confidence that carriers of the DAD2 receptor A1 allele
have compromised D2 receptors.
Therefore lack of D2 receptors causes individuals to have a high risk
for multiple addictive, impulsive and compulsive behavioral
propensities, such as severe alcoholism, cocaine, heroin, marijuana
and nicotine use, glucose bingeing, pathological gambling, sex
addiction, ADHD, Tourette's Syndrome, autism, chronic violence,
posttraumatic stress disorder, schizoid/avoidant cluster, conduct
disorder and antisocial behavior.
In order to explain the breakdown of the reward cascade due to both
multiple genes and environmental stimuli (pleiotropism) and resultant
aberrant behaviors, Blum united this hypodopaminergic trait under the
rubric of a reward deficiency syndrome.


Publication Types:
* Review
* Review, academic


PMID: 11280926, UI: 21177392

Who loves ya.
Tom


Jesus Was A Vegetarian!
http://tinyurl.com/634q5a


Man Is A Herbivore!
http://tinyurl.com/4rq595


DEAD PEOPLE WALKING
http://tinyurl.com/zk9fk




From: ironjustice on
On Sep 9, 10:56 am, ironjustice <ironjust...(a)cashette.com>
wrote:"Essential fatty acid supplements reduced antisocial behaviour "
"Lack
of D2 receptors causes individuals to have a high risk for multiple
addictive, impulsive and compulsive behavioral propensities,such as
conduct disorder and antisocial behavior, severe alcoholism,cocaine,
heroin, marijuana and nicotine use, glucose bingeing,pathological
gambling, sex addiction, ADHD, Tourette's Syndrome,
autism, chronic violence, posttraumatic stress disorder and schizoid/
avoidant cluster." <<

Could it be these fatty acids found in lecithin .. ?


They show a 70% opium cure with lecithin and glucose ?


Chopra, R. N. & Chopra, G. S. 1927
The Treatment of Opium Habit with Lecithin and Glucose.
Ind. Med. Gaz., LXXII, No. 5.
Chopra, R. N. & Ganguli, S. C. 1939
Abstinence Symptoms of Opium Addiction and the Role of Glucose in
Their Treatment.
Ind. Jour. Med. Res., XXVI, No. 3, Jan.
Chopra, R. N. & Chopra, G. S. 1940
Withdrawal Syndrome in Opium Addicts and the Rationale of Treatment
with Lecithin and Glucose.
Ind. Jour. Med. Res., XXVIII, No. 1, July, pp. 225-233.
Chopra, R. N. & Chopra, G. S. 1940
Treatment of Opium Addiction with Lecithin and Glucose and Its
Effects
on Abstinence Symptoms.
Ind. Med. Gaz., LXXV, No. 7, July.
Chopra, R. N. & Roy, A. C. 1941 Urinary Excretion of Morphine in
Opium
Addicts with and without Lecithin Glucose Treatment. Ind. Jour. Med.
Res., XXIX, No. 1, January, pp. 192-201
----------------


Treatment of addiction using simple .. lecithin and in extreme
cases .. sugar ..


Sooo .. would honey and lecithin mixed together .. ?


http://tinyurl.com/2y3pfn


"That the addicts who have any will-power left will probably be
completely and permanently cured of the habit through its agency.
That those who have no will-power left, although they may be
temporarily benefited, will probably relapse as soon as they have the
opportunity."


Treatment of drug addiction. Experience in India
Sections
General considerations
Treatment of drug addiction under Indian conditions: Different forms
of treatment
Results of treatment with lecithin and glucose: Mass scale trials
Summary and conclusion


Details
Author: Sir Ram Nath Chopra , I. C. Chopra
Pages: 21 to 33
Creation Date: 1957/01/01


Treatment of drug addiction. Experience in India


Who loves ya.
Tom


Jesus Was A Vegetarian!
http://tinyurl.com/634q5a


Man Is A Herbivore!
http://tinyurl.com/4rq595


DEAD PEOPLE WALKING
http://tinyurl.com/zk9fk


> "Essential fatty acid supplements reduced antisocial behaviour "
>
> "Lack of D2 receptors causes individuals to have a high risk for
> multiple addictive, impulsive and compulsive behavioral propensities,
> such as conduct disorder and antisocial behavior, severe alcoholism,
> cocaine, heroin, marijuana and nicotine use, glucose bingeing,
> pathological gambling, sex addiction, ADHD, Tourette's Syndrome,
> autism, chronic violence, posttraumatic stress disorder and schizoid/
> avoidant cluster."
> --------------------------------------------------------------------
>
> Prisoners given supplements in new trial
> By Shane Starling
>
> 09-Sep-2008 - An Oxford University study being conducted in three UK
> prisons is investigating the link between nutrition and behaviour.
>
> It follows a 2002 UK trial that found consumption of food supplements
> could reduce anti-social behaviour in teenagers as well as 30 years
> inquiry into the subject by one of the lead researchers, professor
> Alexander Schauss, PhD, FACN, senior director of natural and medicinal
> products research at natural products consultancy, AIBMR Life
> Sciences.
>
> Schauss noted more than 20 controlled clinical trials carried out in
> state and county juvenile and adult institutions confirmed that diet
> could be used to reduce the incidence of antisocial behavior by up to
> 60 percent.
>
> The new study, one of the largest ever conducted, is being funded by a
> $2.6m (€1.83m) grant from the Wellcome Trust, the UK's largest medical
> research charity.
>
> Behaviour modification
>
> The study aims to find out if nutrient levels required for optimum
> brain function are also responsible for behaviour modification.
>
> Similar studies carried out in the US and Europe have determined the
> link between nutrition and behaviour.
>
> "Seeing the level of research on diet and crime reach this level of
> financial support by the medical community is heartening,” said
> Schauss.
>
> “But it took over 30 years, even though the evidence was there back in
> the 1970s."
>
> The director of the Wellcome Trust stated: "If this study shows
> nutritional supplementation affects behaviour, it could have profound
> significance for nutrition guidelines not only within the criminal
> justice system, but in the wider community, in schools, for example.
> We are all used to nutritional guidelines for our physical health, but
> this study could lead to revisions taking into account our mental
> health, as well."
>
> The researchers will investigate the affect of different food
> supplements on behaviour compared to groups on placebo.
>
> "It is my hope that we see better nutrition education and start with
> pre-conceptual care programs that focus on nutrition and other
> lifestyle factors and behaviors that can decrease the risk of
> antisocial behavior," Schauss said.
>
> Schauss is the author of a book called Diet, Crime and Delinquency,
> written in 1978 and which posited the idea that diet and behaviour
> were closely linked.
>
> The study is being conducted in conjunction with the Institute of
> Psychiatry at Imperial College, University of London, the University
> of Surrey, the University of Liverpool and the Medical Research
> Council on Human Nutrition Research.
>
> The 2002 study gave essential fatty acid supplements to 18-21-year-old
> prisoners and found antisocial behaviour was reduced by 37 per cent
> compared to placebo.
>
> ---------------------------------
> ---------------------------------
>
> J Psychoactive Drugs 2000 Nov;32 Suppl:i-iv, 1-112
>
> Reward deficiency syndrome: a biogenetic model for the diagnosis and
> treatment of impulsive, addictive, and compulsive behaviors.
>
> Blum K, Braverman ER, Holder JM, Lubar JF, Monastra VJ, Miller D,
> Lubar JO,  Chen TJ, Comings DE
>
> Department of Biological Sciences, University of North Texas, Denton,
> Texas, USA.
>
> The dopaminergic system, and in particular the dopamine D2 receptor,
> has been implicated in reward mechanisms. The net effect of
> neurotransmitter interaction at the mesolimbic brain region induces
> "reward" when dopamine (DA) is released from the neuron at the nucleus
> accumbens and interacts with a dopamine D2 receptor. "The reward
> cascade" involves the release of serotonin, which in turn at the
> hypothalmus stimulates enkephalin, which in turn inhibits GABA at the
> substania nigra, which in turn fine tunes the amount of DA released at
> the nucleus accumbens or "reward site." It is well known that under
> normal conditions in the reward site DA works to maintain our normal
> drives. In fact, DA has become to be known as the "pleasure molecule"
> and/or the "antistress molecule." When DA is released into the
> synapse, it stimulates a number a DA receptors (D1-D5) which results
> in increased feelings of well-being and stress reduction. A consensus
> of the literature suggests that when there is a dysfunction in the
> brain reward cascade, which could be caused by certain genetic
> variants (polygenic), especially in the DA system causing a
> hypodopaminergic trait, the brain of that person requires a DA fix to
> feel good. This trait leads to multiple drug-seeking behavior. This is
> so because alcohol, cocaine, heroin, marijuana, nicotine, and glucose
> all cause activation and neuronal release of brain DA, which could
> heal the abnormal cravings. Certainly after ten years of study we
> could say with confidence that carriers of the DAD2 receptor A1 allele
> have compromised D2 receptors.
> Therefore lack of D2 receptors causes individuals to have a high risk
> for multiple addictive, impulsive and compulsive behavioral
> propensities, such as severe alcoholism, cocaine, heroin, marijuana
> and nicotine use, glucose bingeing, pathological gambling, sex
> addiction, ADHD, Tourette's Syndrome, autism, chronic violence,
> posttraumatic stress disorder, schizoid/avoidant cluster, conduct
> disorder and antisocial behavior.
> In order to explain the breakdown of the reward cascade due to both
> multiple genes and environmental stimuli (pleiotropism) and resultant
> aberrant behaviors, Blum united this hypodopaminergic trait under the
> rubric of a reward deficiency syndrome.
>
>    Publication Types:
>      * Review
>      * Review, academic
>
>    PMID: 11280926, UI: 21177392
>
> Who loves ya.
> Tom
>
> Jesus Was A Vegetarian!http://tinyurl.com/634q5a
>
> Man Is A Herbivore!http://tinyurl.com/4rq595
>
> DEAD PEOPLE WALKINGhttp://tinyurl.com/zk9fk

From: slokarjanko on
interesting article, the placebo group info did not prove anything,
but other thank that this is good stuff.

happy monday,

j.s.
>>> http://www.ljubljanato.com <<<
From: ironjustice on
On Sep 13, 9:33 am, "ironjust...(a)aol.com" <ironjust...(a)aol.com> wrote:
The latest studies show the conversion of plant fatty acids TO the
fatty acids found in fish seem to be sufficient . "Amounts of ALA
required are easily achieved" <<

Flaxseed Oil Pills vs. Fish Oil Pills
Study: Taking Flaxseed Oil Supplements May Equal Fish Oil Supplements
for Certain Omega-3 Fatty Acids
By Miranda Hitti
WebMD Health NewsReviewed by Elizabeth Klodas, MD, FACCSept. 12, 2008
-- Flaxseed oil pills, taken at the right dose, may equal fish oil
pills in terms of their net effect from certain heart-healthy omega-3
fatty acids.

That's according to a new study published in The American Journal of
Clinical Nutrition.

Flaxseed and other plant-based foods including walnuts, almonds,
canola oil, and soybeans are rich in an omega-3 fatty acid called ALA.

But flaxseed lacks the omega-3 fatty acids EPA and DHA, which have
shown cardiovascular benefits in past studies. EPA and DHA are found
in fatty fish such as salmon and mackerel, fish oil supplements, and
some fortified foods.

Does ALA deliver the same benefits as EPA and DHA? The jury's still
out on that, note the researchers, who included James Friel, PhD, of
Canada's University of Manitoba. The optimal dose of ALA is also not
known.

Flaxseed and Firefighters
Friel's team studied 62 male firefighters in the Canadian city of
Winnipeg.

Why firefighters? The researchers explain that firefighters tend to
have risk factors for coronary heart disease, including high stress
levels, high-fat diets, little exercise while in the fire hall, and
being older than 40.

The researchers gave the firefighters flaxseed oil supplements in
various doses, fish oil supplements, or a placebo to take daily for 12
weeks.

As expected, blood levels of EPA and DHA rose in the fish oil group,
and ALA rose in the flaxseed oil group. EPA levels also rose in the
flaxseed oil group, but only at the higher doses (2.4 to 3.6 grams per
day). The researchers write that it's "quite attainable" to get that
much ALA from foods without taking supplements.

Since flaxseed oil doesn't contain EPA, the firefighters' bodies must
have converted some of the ALA into EPA. That didn't seem to happen at
the lower doses of flaxseed oil.

DHA was a different story. The flaxseed oil group didn't get any
increase in DHA levels; DHA only rose in the fish oil group.

None of the groups gained any advantage in terms of lowering total or
LDL ("bad") cholesterol, raising HDL ("good") cholesterol, or reducing
blood levels of inflammatory chemicals. The experiment was too short
to track long-term health benefits.

The study was funded, in part, by the Canadian Flax Council and Flax
Canada.

© 2008 WebMD, LLC. All rights reserved.

Who loves ya.
Tom


Jesus Was A Vegetarian!
http://tinyurl.com/634q5a


Man Is A Herbivore!
http://tinyurl.com/4rq595


DEAD PEOPLE WALKING
http://tinyurl.com/zk9fk

From: ironjustice on
On Sep 15, 6:35 am, "ironjust...(a)aol.com" <ironjust...(a)aol.com> wrote:
Flaxseed Oil Pills vs. Fish Oil Pills <<

"Dietary n-3 FA decreases the severity of autoimmune disorders"

Effects of n-3 fatty acids on autoimmunity and osteoporosis.
Fernandes G, Bhattacharya A, Rahman M, Zaman K, Banu J
Front Biosci 2008.:4015-20.

Decreased consumption of n-3 fatty acids (FA) and diets rich in
animal
proteins, saturated fats and n-6 vegetable oils are associated with a
higher incidence of cardiovascular disease (CVD), certain
malignancies
and autoimmune disorders such as rheumatoid arthritis and Systemic
Lupus Erythromatous (SLE), and renal disease.
Recent studies show that reduced calorie intake and supplementation
of
diet with n-3 FA delays the onset of autoimmune renal disease,
primarily, due to increased antioxidant enzyme activities, decreased
NF-kappaB activation and decreased IL-1, IL-6 and TNF-alpha mRNA
expression in the kidney tissue.
Studies in rodents show that addition of n-3 FA and soy protein to
diet affords protection against bone loss induced by ovariectomy in
mice due to NF-kappaB expression and decreased activation of
osteoclasts.
Together, the availale evidence show that increased daily intake of
dietary n-3 FA decreases the severity of autoimmune disorders,
lessens
the chance of developing CVD, and protects against bone loss during
post-menopause.
Frontiers in bioscience : a journal and virtual library [Front
Biosci]
---------------------------------------------------------------------------­-----


Who loves ya.
Tom


Jesus Was A Vegetarian!
http://tinyurl.com/634q5a


Man Is A Herbivore!
http://tinyurl.com/4rq595


DEAD PEOPLE WALKING
http://tinyurl.com/zk9fk


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