Pathway for synthesis and metabolism of serotonin. In similar studies in rats, life extension was produced by giving oxytocin alone. Low acetylcholine levels contribute to the forgetfulness and lack of ability to concentrate which often occurs in old age. The cholinergic nervous system also controls the sensory input; too little acetylcholine and you are easily […]
Read more The Decline of Your Brain’s Chemical Messengers IV
- acetylcholine, antioxidants, aphrodisiac, autoxidation, Bromocriptine, catecholamines, cholinergic nervous system, coordination, dopamine, dopaminergic deficiency disease, fine motor control, hydergine, hypothalamus, L-Dopa, LHRH, limbic, motivation, neurotransmitters, norepinephrine, oxytocin, Parkinsonism, Parlodel, peroxidation, polypeptide hormone, sandoz, sex, sleep, vitamin c
Catecholamines are responsible for a number of different effects in normal humans. They are involved in control of locomotor (moving about) behavior, aggressive behavior, sexual behavior, food intake, and behavior dependent upon positive (reward) and negative (punishment) reinforcement. Acetylcholine controls muscle tone and motor activity and has a role in memory, learning, and long-term planning, […]
Read more The Decline of Your Brain’s Chemical Messengers III
- acetylcholine, aggression, aging clocks, atherosclerotic plaque cells, blood pressure, catecholamines, Creutzfeldt-Jakob disease, depression, dopamine, dopaminergic system, elderly, growth hormone, immune system, kuru, locomotion, motor activity, muscle tone, neurotransmitters, norepinephrine, oxytocin, pituitary gland, senility, sex, tumor, vasopressin, viruses, white blood cells
Norepinephrine (NE) is another of the brain’s arsenal of neurotransmitters, important in primitive drives and emotions like sex and in memory and learning. When the level of NE in the brain is too low, people become depressed and their immune systems do not function normally. (That’s because NE can cause the brain to release growth […]
Read more The Decline of Your Brain’s Chemical Messengers II
- acetylcholine, alertness, amino acid, amnesia, antioxidants, apathy, caffeine, cancer, catechol, catecholamine neurotransmitters, catecholamines, cognitive functions, confusion, depression, Diapid, dizziness, dopamine, forgetfulness, hydergine, immune system, L-Dopa, locomotion, NE, nerve growth factor, neurites, neurotransmitters, NGF, norepinephrine, Parkinsonism, phenylalanine, sandoz, senility, sex, tissue growth, tissue repair, tremors, tyrosine, vasopressin
In senile degeneration the nerve-cells are surrounded by neuronophages which absorb their contents and bring about more or less complete atrophy. —Elie Metchnikoff, The Prolongation of Life (1908) Mind, mind alone, Is light, and hope, and life, and power! —Ebenezer Elliott (1833) Your brain works because your-nerves talk to each other with chemicals called neurotransmitters […]
Read more The Decline of Your Brain’s Chemical Messengers I
Deaner® is a prescription drug which is available in the United States. We have observed 300 milligrams per day of Deaner® remove all visible lipofuscin age pigment (liver spots) from the skin of a man in his mid-60s. After a few months, his age spots had faded appreciably and were completely gone in about two […]
Read more Accumulated Wastes: Those Telltale Brown Spots III
Lipofuscin pigment appears very early in life. It has been observed by some scientists in fetal nerve cells, though others have not found it in children under 10. In the cerebral cortex of rats, Dr. Kenneth R. Brizzee and his co-workers found a ten-fold increase in the amount of pigment in aged rats compared to […]
Read more Accumulated Wastes: Those Telltale Brown Spots II
- amyloid, autoimmune attack, centrophenoxine, cerebral cortex, ceroid, cytoplasmic flow, Deaner, Dr. G.H. Bourne, Dr. Kalidas Nandy, Dr. Kenneth R. Brizzee, fetal nerve cells, Lipofuscin pigment, liver disease, Lucidril, meclofenoxate, neurons, prescription drugs, proteins, vitamin E
With accurate experiment and observation to work upon, imagination becomes the architect of physical theory. —John Tyndall If you didn’t carry out the garbage, you would soon be buried in waste. If you were only able to dispose-of some of your garbage, it would take longer, but eventually you would suffer the same fate. Do […]
Read more Accumulated Wastes: Those Telltale Brown Spots I
- adrenal glands, age spots, aldehyde, cellular lysosomes, ceroid, cytoplasm, Dr. A. L. Tappel, Dr. D. M. A. Mann, Dr. P.O. Yates, fatty tissues, Lipofuscin aging pigment, lipopigments, liver, liver spots, lysomes, malonaldehyde, metabolism, neurons, peroxidized fats, prescription drugs, RNA, unsaturated fats
PIC HERE Because of the toxicity of high concentrations of oxygen (via free radical mechanisms), hyperbaric oxygen (higher than normal atmospheric pressure) should be used with great caution. In very short repeated exposures it is possible that free radical destroying enzymes, such as SOD, may be induced to higher levels, thus increasing the patient’s overall […]
Read more Our Subversive Free Radicals IX
Although the work was directed at amyloid formation, data was also cited that showed the pronounced beneficial effect on the mice’s mortality rate by adding Santoquin antioxidant to the diet. Without the antioxidant in the diet, 20% survived to 1814 months; on diets with 0.2% Santoquin, 20% survived for 23 months. This was not the […]
Read more Our Subversive Free Radicals VIII
- amino acid, amyloid formation, antioxidants, encephalomalacia, free radicals, lipids, Monsanto, nutrients, oxidation, oxygen, peroxides, Santoquin, unsaturated fats, unsaturated oils, vitamin E, vitamins
Santoquin antioxidant, more familar as a commonly-used feed ingredient by its generic nickname of ethoxyquin, is feed- grade: 6-ethoxy-1,2-dihydro-2,2,4-trimethylquinoline. The structural formula looks like this: H NW CH, CH, CH;CH,O a CH; One of the most familiar (and perhaps important) antioxidants that Mother Nature provides living bodies is Vitamin E. Its most potent isomer, -tocopherol […]
Read more Our Subversive Free Radicals VII
- aging, aging pigments, amyloid plaques, amyloidosis, antioxidants, Cross-linking, digestion, Dr. B. L. Strehler, Dr. Denham Harman, Dr. Johan Bjorksten, Dr. William A. Pryor, ethoxyquin, free radicals, metabolism, Monsanto, peroxides, Santoquin, senile plaques, vitamin E