The Hemp Connection:
nervous system

  • Omega-3's are great for mental health--and >80% of women with PCOS are struggling with mental health issues

    Omega-3's are great for mental health--and >80% of women with PCOS are struggling with mental health issues

    From inCYSTER Karen Siegel…contact information for her Houston clinic is listed below.

    "Yes. Another reason to keep encouraging the fish oil supplementation."

    Public release date: 16-Dec-2009

    Contact: Public Affairs Office
    public.affairs@apa.org
    202-336-5700 202-336-5700
    American Psychological Association

    New study links DHA type of omega-3 to better nervous-system function
    Deficiencies may factor into mental illnesses
    WASHINGTON — The omega-3 essential fatty acids commonly found in fatty fish and algae help animals avoid sensory overload, according to research published by the American Psychological Association. The finding connects low omega-3s to the information-processing problems found in people with schizophrenia; bipolar, obsessive-compulsive, and attention-deficit hyperactivity disorders; Huntington's disease; and other afflictions of the nervous system.

    The study, reported in the journal Behavioral Neuroscience, provides more evidence that fish is brain food. The key finding was that two omega-3 fatty acids – docosahexaenoic acid (DHA) and eicosapentaenoic acid (EPA) – appear to be most useful in the nervous system, maybe by maintaining nerve-cell membranes.

    "It is an uphill battle now to reverse the message that 'fats are bad,' and to increase omega-3 fats in our diet," said Norman Salem Jr., PhD, who led this study at the Laboratory of Membrane Biochemistry and Biophysics at the National Institute on Alcohol Abuse and Alcoholism.

    The body cannot make these essential nutrients from scratch. It gets them by metabolizing their precursor, α-linolenic acid (LNA), or from foods or dietary supplements with DHA and EPA in a readily usable form."Humans can convert less than one percent of the precursor into DHA, making DHA an essential nutrient in the human diet," added Irina Fedorova, PhD, one of the paper's co-authors. EPA is already known for its anti-inflammatory and cardiovascular effects, but DHA makes up more than 90 percent of the omega-3s in the brain (which has no EPA), retina and nervous system in general.

    In the study, the researchers fed four different diets with no or varying types and amounts of omega-3s to four groups of pregnant mice and then their offspring. They measured how the offspring, once grown, responded to a classic test of nervous-system function in which healthy animals are exposed to a sudden loud noise. Normally, animals flinch. However, when they hear a softer tone in advance, they flinch much less. It appears that normal nervous systems use that gentle warning to prepare instinctively for future stimuli, an adaptive process called sensorimotor gating.

    Only the mice raised on DHA and EPA, but not their precursor of LNA, showed normal, adaptive sensorimotor gating by responding in a significantly calmer way to the loud noises that followed soft tones. The mice in all other groups, when warned, were startled nearly as much by the loud sound. When DHA was deficient, the nervous system most obviously did not downshift. That resulted in an abnormal state that could leave animals perpetually startled and easily overwhelmed by sensory stimuli.

    The authors concluded that not enough DHA in the diet may reduce the ability to handle sensory input."It only takes a small decrement in brain DHA to produce losses in brain function," said Salem.

    In humans, weak sensorimotor gating is a hallmark of many nervous-system disorders such as schizophrenia or ADHD. Given mounting evidence of the role omega-3s play in the nervous system, there is intense interest in their therapeutic potential, perhaps as a supplement to medicines. For example, people with schizophrenia have lower levels of essential fatty acids, possibly from a genetic variation that results in poor metabolism of these nutrients.

    More broadly, the typical American diet is much lower in all types of omega-3 than in omega-6 essential fatty acids, according to Salem. High intake of omega-6, or linoleic acid, reduces the body's ability to incorporate omega-3s. As a result,"we have the double whammy of low omega-3 intake and high omega-6 intake," he said.

    ###
    Article:"Deficit in Prepulse Inhibition in Mice Caused by Dietary n-3 Fatty Acid Deficiency"; Irina Fedorova, PhD, Laboratory of Membrane Biochemistry and Biophysics, National Institute on Alcohol Abuse and Alcoholism, National Institutes of Health; Anita R. Alvheim, PhD candidate, Laboratory of Membrane Biochemistry and Biophysics, National Institute on Alcohol Abuse and Alcoholism, National Institutes of Health, and National Institute of Nutrition and Seafood Research, Bergen, Norway; and Nahed Hussein, PhD and Norman Salem Jr., PhD, Laboratory of Membrane Biochemistry and Biophysics, National Institute on Alcohol Abuse and Alcoholism, National Institutes of Health; Behavioral Neuroscience, Vol. 123, No. 6.

    (Full text of the article is available from the APA Public Affairs Office)

    Norman Salem Jr. can be reached at nsalem@martek.com or at (443) 542-2370 (443) 542-2370. He was with the National Institutes of Health until 2008, when he became the chief scientific officer and vice president of Martek Biosciences Corp. in Columbia, Md., an ingredient supplier of DHA. He states that he and his co-authors conducted this research while with the NIH.

    The American Psychological Association, in Washington, D.C., is the largest scientific and professional organization representing psychology in the United States and is the world's largest association of psychologists. APA's membership includes more than 150,000 researchers, educators, clinicians, consultants and students. Through its divisions in 54 subfields of psychology and affiliations with 60 state, territorial and Canadian provincial associations, APA works to advance psychology as a science, as a profession and as a means of promoting health, education and human welfare.
    --
    Karen Siegel, MPH, MS, RD, LD, LAc
    Acupuncture & Nutrition Clinic
    9660 Hillcroft, Suite 202
    Houston, TX 77096
    713/721-7755 713/721-7755
    www.AcupunctureandNutritionClinic.com
    or
    www.Karensclinic.com

  • Food of the Week: Brown Rice

    Food of the Week: Brown Rice

    Last Saturday an inCYST student from California was in Phoenix and we spent the morning together. We ended our visit at Costco, and it turned out to be the day they were passing out the free annual Costco cookbook. Was that ever a lucky moment! (I made a note on my calendar to send out the 2009 alert in advance so all of you can get yours, too. I did check and saw tons of them on eBay if you can't wait another year.)

    Costco cookbooks are some the most awesome cookbooks available. The recipes aren't hard, and the food photography is so beautiful it makes you want to make and eat every recipe…right now!

    I distracted myself from the disappointing outcome of the Bears/Vikings game on Sunday (sorry, Vikings fans!) with my annual ritual of going through the cookbook page by page, and listing all the recipes to try in the coming year. I'll be sharing some of them with you, since they are so tasty.

    Today it's Breakfast Risotto made with brown rice. I recently said I would be highlighting foods high in magnesium, and my progesterone series got me side tracked. Brown rice brings me back! In addition to being a good source of magnesium, brown rice is a decent source of tryptophan (which is needed to make serotonin).

    It is also a good source of manganese, which is important for healthy nervous system function, the production of sex hormones, and antioxidant activity.

    The Phoenix inCYST students all decided it was a breakfast they'd definitely eat, which is perfect, since people tend to complain about not liking breakfast. This one fits with what I always say, you don't have to eat breakfast food at breakfast time! Plus, brown rice is a carbohydrate that can be perfectly fine in your diet if eaten in moderation. Can you see by the photo what I mean about wanting to make things right away?

    Breakfast Risotto
    1 1/2 cups water
    1 cup instant brown rice
    1 8 ounce can unsweetened pineapple tidbits, drained and liquid reserved
    1 12 ounce can undiluted evaporated skim milk
    1/2 cup raisins
    1/2 cup sweetened shredded coconut
    1/4 cup sliced roasted almonds
    1 medium banana, peeled and diced

    Combine water, rice and pineapple liquid in a 2 quart saucepan. Bring to a boil over high heat, reduce heat to medium and simmer, uncovered, sirring occasionally, until most of the liquid is absorbed, 7-8 minutes.

    Stir in milk and increase heat to high. When the mixture boils, reduce heat to medium and cook, stirring occasionally, until most of the milk has been absorbed and the mixture is soft and creamy, 10-12 minutes.

    Stir in pineapple, raisins, coconut, almonds, and banana.

    Makes 6 servings.

    Source: Cooking in Style the Costco Way

    Enjoy!

  • Now hear this! If you're pregnant, you absolutely, positively, need to be fish-friendly

    Now hear this! If you're pregnant, you absolutely, positively, need to be fish-friendly

    Something I am committed to with this work is making sure that every mother out there who plans to get pregnant or who is pregnant understands, is that they need marine oils in their diet. I don't care if you get them from algae, I don't care if you get them from fish…I care that you get them.

    We've gone so overboard in steering women away from fish that we're creating more problems than we're solving.

    Our brains and nervous systems are in large part made of marine oils. When pregnant, especially in the final trimester, a significant percentage of those oils are given to our developing babies. That is the time during pregnancy when the brain and nervous system develop. In one study, between the 28th week and delivery, blood DHA levels were measured and found to decrease. It didn't matter if the baby was born prematurely, to term, or late, the trend persisted. It happened even in women who were eating what they considered to be a lot of fish.

    It bothers me greatly that a population that may actually need to be supplemented with fish…is encouraged to stay away from the very nutrient they need larger quantities of. And then we wonder why problems such as autism are epidemic.

    I am hoping that the pregnant and future pregnant readers of this blog use this information to their benefit, and share it with anyone who could use it. We just aren't making sense with our recommendations when it comes to this crucial nutrient.

    Bonham MP, Duffy EM, Wallace JM, Robson PJ, Myers GJ, Davidson PW, Clarkson TW, Shamlaye CF, Strain JJ. Habitual fish consumption does not prevent a decrease in LCPUFA status in pregnant women (the Seychelles Child Development Nutrition Study). Prostaglandins Leukot Essent Fatty Acids. 2008 Jun;78(6):343-350. Epub 2008 Jun 26.

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