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Serotonin

Comprehensive Psych Medication Strategies

by Dr Charles Parker on January 17, 2010 · 8 comments

Neurotransmitters & Chickens

We’re Way Beyond Labels at CorePsych
Psychiatric meds simply won’t work if we don’t understand the entire neurotransmitter process. In this new game of pure neurotransmission, numbers do matter. Without the numbers, meds simply don’t work.

Simply Put:
When I was a kid growing up in Angola, IN, my friends and I learned valuable lessons in an interesting context: Catching Chickens. One brief note will suffice to make my point here: You can have a number of big guys in a chicken coop with only a few chickens, and you will run around all night trying to round them up.

Big guys can bump into each other and create a toxic evening if you load the coop full of guys with nothing to do. But, if you place 100 chickens in that same coop, only a couple of guys can quickly get them all herded up at one end, without heavy breathing.

Deep Axiom: More chickens makes for better neurotransmission.

Chickens and Neurotransmitters
If we take a few moments to think about it, the same thing happens at the synapse. If you don’t have enough neurotransmitters already on board, it is only common sense that you can bring in the biggest SSRI, and SNRI guns, and you won’t make a sufficient connection to fire the neurons. You need more neurotransmitters to get the job done. The SSRI and SNRI big guys can’t herd what isn’t there, and often they simply can’t make an impact, thus twisting up all of the results – both in studies and in the office.

At the Virtual Holistic Health Conference coming up Jan 26 & 27 I will be covering the details of how I measure neurotransmitter levels, hormone levels and immune system challenges to facilitate modern psychiatric chicken catching.

Evidence works for targeted turnarounds.

Listen to This Brief Overview


Download MP3

Hope to see you there – slides in PowerPoint/pdf available upon sign up with all the details.
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—>Tweet this post below! For ADHD Medications: Download complimentary white paper Precise Solutions now, – and get ready for the complete version of ‘The Patient’s Guide’ details to follow. Get Neurotransmitter Details Here

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ADHD Medications: Neurotransmitters to the Rescue

by Dr Charles Parker on November 2, 2009 · 11 comments

Our Direction

ADHD Treatments Evolve Dramatically

Remember how that old Maine farmer told the lost city guy who stopped to ask for directions: “Come to think of it, you can’t get there from here…” Well, truth be known, the evolving neuroscience is taking us in new intervention directions.

ADHD medications, my friends, are evolving dramatically. Intuniv, the new ADHD medication, [not a stimulant, but rather an alpha 2A agonist] by Shire will be in your pharmacies soon, and the pharmacology, the indications, the new science is simply dramatic.

If you are a professional on any level, and can attend one of the launch dinners in your town, I strongly recommend that you take an evening to see evolved neurophysiology at work. That α2A receptor, that quite different medication, will help change the way we think about medications for ADHD in the future. More about that later, stay tuned to CorePsych Blog for the details, – and watch my YouTube Channel at DrChalresParker for a pithy report on our office findings with Intuniv – likely next weekend.

Neurotransmitter Measurements For ADHD

Neurotransmitter physiology takes us way beyond what we have been doing for years with only stimulant medications. Neurotransmitters will take us further down the line to that holy grail of ADHD treatments: The Natural Way. Do make sure you sign up for updates, because this evolving neurotransmitter information will be the main theme in coming reports – and for today one brief story that I am sure will get your attention:

More than ADHD

52 yo male flies in from California for SPECT functional brain scans and complete brain review after years of failed treatment for ADHD and depression. These basic findings will make your hair curl:

  1. Prozac 140 mg in the AM combined with Lexapro 80 mg in AM
  2. Adderall XR 80 mg in the AM
  3. Neurontin 800 mg 2X/day [given because he looked bipolar with the AMP and the Prozac - go figure]

Does serotonin syndrome come to mind? Are you now with me on my oft cited 2D6 interactions between Ampehtamines and Prozac? Lemme guess… do you think he was, dare I say it… toxic?

He suffered with profound ADHD – he couldn’t think, couldn’t complete sentences, drifted off with his wife – he looked like a flaming Thinking ADHD subset. His legs were twitching, not only at night, but through the day. He suffered from cognitive impairment/dementia and worried that he had early Alzheimer’s. He had significant metabolic issues with transit time slowing for years.

We got the interactions straight, confirmed with SPECT that he suffered from significant metabolic challenges with diffuse hypoperfusion across the surface of his brain.

The Neurotransmitter Watershed

Most important after these obvious issues, with no brain injury and no evidence of Alzheimer’s, were the neurotransmitter testing results [spend some time on this page and download the details]. His cognitive world was completely handicapped by low levels of Dopamine and Serotonin, with, as you might expect, elevated levels of Glutamate [more later, stay tuned].

Even with all the dopaminergic drugs his dopamine was below normal levels. The simple reason he didn’t suffer from serotonin syndrome: he had so little his serotonin tank was almost completely empty! Yes,  for years he has been a picky eater.

Neurotransmitter Lesson: Without the foundation of an appropriate supply of neurotransmitters in the first place no amount of psychiatric medications will turn the treatment tide. You can’t get there from here.

You will hear this next measurement phrase repeatedly here:
If you don’t look, you won’t see the specific problem – comprehensive evidence is that new direction.

With this executive he suffered from pervasive cognitive problems, the SPECT imaging provided a good safety check, and the neurotransmitter testing provided the most effective different medical intervention strategy. My humble opinion: neurotransmitter testing will provide significant different intervention strategies for many with complex presentations.

He is thrilled with his new cognition, is on target in his marriage and at work, and does not suffer crippling brain toxicity. He is on neurotransmitter precursors [natural amino acid combinations] specifically designed to meet his deficiencies. Prozac is long gone, he is on Pristiq and Vyvanse, only low doses of each, and time will tell if he even needs those medications down the road.

Stay tuned for more reports like this one, with more details on the specific process. Best to simply sign up for these blog posts as I will be sending out regular info on these new directions. Neuroscience evolves.

And do forward this post to your friends who are stuck with ADHD Medication challenges. – And BTW, yes, we can provide this testing long distance, as we don’t require a trip to Virginia, unless we write for medications.

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—>Tweet this post below! For ADHD Medications: Download complimentary white paper Precise Solutions now, – and get ready for the complete version of ‘The Patient’s Guide’ details to follow. Get Neurotransmitter Details Here

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Neurotransmitters & Healthy Brain: CorePsych Radio

June 1, 2009 Autism Spectrum

This Thursday at 4 PM EDT/1 PM PDT my program at CorePsych Radio will give you an oppotunity to follow along an interesting presentation with a PDF slide show entitled Neurotransmitters and Their Role in Health.

3 comments Read the full article here →

Metabolism Relevance: SSRIs and Depression

January 2, 2007 Brain/Body Evidence

Metabolic irregularities frequently interfere with the effectiveness of SSRIs, indeed any psych meds or supplements.
Two points bear attention:

Eat right: If you don’t bring in the right nutritional components, you simply will not get better. SSRIs are “serotonin reuptake inhibitors.” They rearrange neurotransmitters that are already in your body. If your steam engine is chugging up [...]

8 comments Read the full article here →

Kids and Antidepressants: Why they don’t mix.

December 4, 2006 Beyond ADHD

Depression and children, antidepressants for children: a frequently misunderstood topic, and Time says it’s one of the most important issues of the medical year [from Depression on that page]
Researchers still don’t understand why severely depressed teenagers are more likely than adults to commit suicide while taking antidepressant drugs like Paxil, but a major study out [...]

4 comments Read the full article here →