From: rpautrey2 on
The eating cure

Forget drugs - diet is the way forward in treating mental illness,
says Lucy Mayhew

Of all the unsolved mysteries of the human body, it is the brain that
most rigidly resists our efforts at understanding it; and that lack of
understanding is costing us increasingly dear. Mental illness is
reaching epidemic levels. The World Health Organisation claims that
mental health problems "are fast becoming the number-one health issue
of the 21st century". Clinical depression is the biggest international
health threat after heart disease. At the same time, there is a
growing dissatisfaction with the drug treatments available. In the UK,
the number of prescriptions for antidepressants has more than doubled
in 10 years, with 80% of GPs admitting they overprescribe drugs such
as Prozac and Seroxat because of the lack of alternative forms of
treatment. But though they might not be available on the NHS just yet,
alternatives are starting to emerge - and with some promising
results.

Later this month Dr David Servan-Schreiber, a clinical professor of
psychiatry and founding member of Medecins Sans Frontières in the US,
will visit Britain to launch his book, Healing Without Freud or
Prozac, which has already received an enthusiastic response in
Belgium, Switzerland and Canada, where it has sold half a million
copies. After a career in conventional medicine, Servan-Schreiber's
theory is that exercise can be as effective in treating depression and
stress as antidepressants. "It is not that I am against
antidepressants," he says. "But there are some natural methods of
treatment that have been demonstrated to work for milder forms of
depression. It doesn't make any sense to ignore them any longer."

In this country, meanwhile, there is a growing interest in an
orthomolecular, or nutritional approach to mental health problems.
Food as medicine is not a revelatory proposition - it was the
hobbyhorse of Hippocrates, the father of western medicine.

But there is a lot more to the science of nutritional therapy than
adding the odd grilled fish and dollop of spinach to your shopping
list. Differences from those affected by manic depression,
schizophrenia, autism or attention deficit and hyperactivity disorder
(ADHD) are only achieved by giving patients large amounts of precise
nutrients to alter their brain biochemistry.

All psychiatric drugs work to rebalance out-of-kilter brain chemistry.
But the success rates achieved by providing the brain with the same
molecules it uses to build brain cells and neurotransmitters are eye-
opening - hence the well-publicised success of the essential fatty
acid omega 3.

Twenty per cent of the brain is made up of essential fats. These fats
are missing from the modern diet, and the body can't manufacture them
itself. Each of our 100 billion brain cells links up to 20,000 others,
and when essential fats are in short supply, the link-ups become
difficult. The potential consequences are manifold: our mood,
concentration, memory and intelligence can all suffer. So it is
unsurprising that essential fats have been proven to help with
numerous brain-based afflictions.

While 40% of patients who walk into doctor's surgeries are suffering
from a mental health problem, an astonishing two-thirds of GPs have
had no mental health training. As a result, most GPs do not even
consider their patients' nutritional status. Professor André Tylee is
chairman of the National Institute for Mental Health and is
responsible for educating all British GPs in the treatment of mental
health. He is passionate about the benefits of nutritional therapy and
describes it as "the breakthrough we've been waiting for". He is
hoping to ensure that nutritional approaches will become the first
step that doctors use to defeat mental illness.

Tylee is working with Patrick Holford, founder of the Institute of
Optimum Nutrition and author of the bestseller Optimum Nutrition for
the Mind. Holford's latest enterprise is The Brain Bio Centre, which
is dedicated to helping patients recover from all forms of brain-
centred illness, from depression to Alzheimer's, using nutritional
therapy. Tylee is anxious to introduce the clinic's approaches to the
NHS and to conduct a clinical study that confirms their anecdotal
success rate of 80%. The clinic defines success as freedom from
symptoms, the ability to socialise with friends and family, and the
paying of income tax.

According to Holford, a nutritionist and psychologist, nine out 10
people eat less than the recommended daily amounts of our 39 essential
nutrients. "They're not called essential for nothing," he says. When
this is combined with other factors such as high homocysteine levels,
which leave one twice as likely to succumb to depression, blood-sugar
and neurotransmitter imbalances, it is hardly startling that people's
brain chemistry goes awry.

James Maclean, 21, is a typical Brain Bio Centre success story. James
developed manic depression in his second year at university. He was
given antipsychotics and antidepressants and received guidance from an
NHS psychiatric nurse who "normally just spoke about his own family".

"I had to leave university," says James. "I hated taking so much
medication - it made me put on five stone." When he started to believe
that the radio was speaking to him, he knew he needed further help.
"Within a space of 10 days I was sectioned, then released, then
detained again three times." He was eventually hospitalised for two
months. He calls the mental hospital the most soulless place on
earth.

On his release, his sister-in-law suggested he see a nutritionist.
After an internet search which yielded only a quack who wanted $10,000
for the first consultation, James eventually tracked down the Brain
Bio Centre. After tests he was found to be very low in minerals and to
be yeast- and gluten-intolerant; he was also suffering from blood-
sugar problems. He changed his diet and took a comprehensive range of
supplements, including high doses of niacin and essential fats. "The
difference was startling," he says. "I feel sharper than before and
I'm now supermotivated. I have lost three stone in the last two months
and I feel whole again." James has reapplied to read sports science at
university and hopes to play rugby professionally.

Holford may be regarded as being outside the mainstream, but
increasingly his approach is being fostered in conventional medicine.
Many respected scientists and physicians are reporting unprecedented
success with the orthomolecular approach, so named by the American
chemist Linus Pauling, who died in 1994. In the UK, Malcolm Peet, an
NHS psychiatric consultant, recently led separate studies with
schizophrenics and depressives who were failing to respond to drugs.
Both studies concluded that the essential fat, EPA, is effective.
Earlier this year, Dr Basant Puri, a consultant psychiatrist at
Imperial College School of Medicine, published an entire book
dedicated to explaining why EPA is so good at treating depression.

In the US, Dr Mary Megson, a fellow of the American Academy of
Paediatrics, has treated over 2,000 children for autism and uses under
a teaspoon of cod liver oil every day. The majority of subjects come
out of the autistic spectrum within six months - some within weeks,
she says. She has seen children making eye contact for the first time
in their lives after just three days of treatment.

Similarly, Dr Alex Richardson, a senior research fellow at Oxford
University, recently published a study showing remarkable turnarounds
in concentration, attention and disruptive behaviour after combining
the fish oil EPA with omega 6 to treat dyslexics and ADHD sufferers.

"We're not talking about easily labelled disease entities," says
Richardson. "We are simply saying there is a frightening epidemic of
children falling into categories where extra help and special
education is needed. One in four children are now affected by
underlying problems that stop them achieving their potential."
Richardson, director of a new charity, Food and Behaviour Research, is
anxious to emphasise that a single nutrient cannot work in isolation.
"You can't carry a single nutritional supplement around as a talisman
for superhealth, because usually specific vitamins, minerals or
enzymes are necessary to ensure the key nutrient is absorbed."



Moodfoods

http://moodfoods.com/foodmood/index.html