| The Dopamine Hypothesis Examining the Bio-Chemical Explanation of Schizophrenia & Other Dysfunctional Behaviors The Shepherd Behavioral & Medical Research Center Thomas M. Shepherd, Director and Publisher Tom Blaise Shepherd Publications |
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| This is a Tom Shepherd Humanist Publication | ||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
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| schizophrenia - bipolar disorder - PTSD - veteran affairs "People who develop schizophrenia are people who have been robbed, by significant others, of their identity as a worthwhile individual and deprived of a functional education that reinforces self worth and self control." -- Thomas M. Shepherd, Founder & Chancellor Shepherd-Montessori Institute |
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| Psychotherapy of Schizophrenia | ||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
| The Dopamine Hypothesis* by Tom Shepherd * A hypothesis is a provisional theory or an assumption. It is not a fact. It has been hypothesized that individuals who have excessively high levels of the neurotransmitter [brain chemical] known as "dopamine" in the brain will experience the feelings of persecution, fear and anger of (Type I) paranoid schizophrenia in times of stress. Thus, it has been hypothesized that paranoid schizohrenics have an overactivity of dopamine in the brain's limbic system. While excessive doses of amhetamines, which greatly increase brain dopamine levels, can result in behavior indistinguishable from paranoid schizophrenia in normal people, relatively small doses of amphetamines can trigger a wide range of symptoms or worsening of existing symptoms in paranoid schizophrenics, suggesting that paranoid schizophrenics have either an overactivity of dopamine in the brain's limbic system or a higher level of brain dopamine in the brain than do other people. Although genetics are hypothesized to perhaps play a role, stress alone, according to evidence, plays a major role in activating brain dopamine and in the development of schizophrenic symptoms. Thus, it is hypothesized that schizophrenia is induced by prolonged and intense environmental stress. The stress of military regimentation can indeed induce schizophrenic or bipolar reactions in predisposed individuals. Deprivation of sleep often coincides with a schizophrenic or bipolar episode. Biochemical changes thus take place in which catecholamines (adrenaline, noradrenaline and dopamine) are produced in superabundance causing a hyperaroused state of waking dreams or inaccurate perceptions: illusions, delusions or hallucinations. The problem in using neuroleptic drugs in the treatment of schizophrenia is that the neuroleptic drugs used to lower the amounts of dopamine may adversely affect other neurotransmitters and are most likely to produce tardive dyskinesia, side-effects mimicing Parkinson's disease: tremors, pin-rolling of the fingers, shuffling gait and a masklike facial expressions. [Individuals suffering from Parkinson's disease have abnormally low levels of dopamine.] Neuroleptic drugs can also lower one's white blood cell count and cause restlessness, double vision, and weight gain. According to Bertram P. Karon, Ph.D. (Michigan State University), most, if not all, neuroleptic medications are neurotoxic. MRI studies show intercellular damage from neuroleptic medication.. Schizophrenics who stop taking their medication are more likely to recover than those who don't. Patients on maintenance medication for bipolar disorder are more likely to relapse than those who are not on medication. Another study reports that SSRIs increase the likelihood of suicide and/or homicide. Still another study reveals that patients who are on psychiatric medication for schizophrenia.do not form new relationships. The above findings are documented in a paper by Dr. Karon, The Effects of Medicating or Not Medicating on the Treatment Proces (2003). Highlight and click the above to view Dr. Karon's paper. Dr. Karon has also written a foreword for John Modrow's book, How to Become a Schizophrenic: The Case Against Biological Psychiatry. The use of antidepressants in the treatment of schizophrenia and bipolar disorder can induce a psychotic manic episode. Drugs commonly prescribed to treat ADD (attention deficit disorder) are basically amphetamines, which can also induce psychotic behavior. Milieu therapy is a holistic approach to psychiatric treatment, in which the goal of therapy is to restore sleep cycles naturally by enhancing the client's self esteem, encouraging the client to exercise regularly and to practice sound nutrition (consuming albacore tuna, salmon, sardines, fresh fruits, vegies and soy on a daily basis, plus avoiding caffeine and alcoholic beverages). Note: Regular physical exercise releases endorphins (the body's natural opiate) or activates enkephalin, a neurotransmiter which is believed to produce a calming effect. Interestingly, when individuals ingest pharmaceuticals containing external opium or derivatives or use cocaine or other recreational drugs, the brain ceases to produce its natural internal opiates. Meditation therapy: Meditation is a useful tool for reducing stres, developing intuition and unlocking creativity. To learn methods of meditation, click/view The Worldwide Online Meditation Center. |
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| Psychotherapy of Schizophrenia: The Treatment of Choice 2004 edition Bertram Karon & Gary R. VandenBos The conventional wisdom is that schizophrenia is an illness with a biological, probably inherited, cause and that psychological approaches have not proved effective in its treatment. . . . But Karon and VandenBos have a decidedly different view. It is their belief that in the hands of a skilled, experienced, and motivated therapist, psychotherapy can be dramatically helpful to schizophrenic people, more helpful and even less expensive than alternative tretments stressing mediction management . . . . view of book cover &excerpt Amazon.com/books |
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| reprint ~ 1997 article The Myths & Realities of Mental Illness reprint ~ 1997 article By Tom Shepherd |
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| The Myths & Realities of Schizophrenia by Tom Shepherd Schizophrenia is an umbrella label given to a group of behaviors in which deterioration of functioning is marked by severe distortion of thought, perception, and mood, by bizarre behavior, and by social withdrawal. No two individuals exhibit the same symptoms. The label schizophrenia is commonly used to stigmatize and disenfranchise a relatively normal individual who is simply unable to conform or comply with the demands of unreasonable parents or other authority figures. While a chemical imbalance involving the brain's neurotransmitters (especially dopamine and serotonin) is believed to exist in anyone diagnosed with shizophrenia or any other so-called mental illness, the building blocks of neurotransmitters (vitamins, minerals and amino acids) are found in food, not in pharmaceutical drugs. In fact, according to Peter Breggin, M.D. and other leading scientists, pharmaceutical drugs (including phenothiazines, anti-depressants and mood stabilizers) are more likely to cause long lasting or permanent brain damage, as well as to EXACERBATE symptoms of schizophrenia or bipolar disorder, than to stabilize the nervous system. Individuals who have been traumatized as a result of bad parenting (neglect and/or abuse) typically exhibit symptoms of schizophrenia, although such individuals may be labeled or diagnosed with one of the more avant garde psychiatric terms, such as post traumatic stress or traumatized identity syndrome. While ideas of reference, unusual perceptions, anxiety, paranoid fears and social isolation typify the behavior of those diagnosed with schizophrenia, PTSD or even bipolar disorder to the point that they are unable to form satisfactory personal and work relationships, they do not necessarily experience hallucinations. As far as delusions go, anyone who believes in God, a Supernatural Power, is suffering from a delusion, which would include probably 99% of those practicing psychiatry, clinical psychology or social work. An agnostic is as superstitious as a true believer. The only individual who is least likely to be suffering from delusions would be the conscientious, sober athiest, who in all probability is the only truly sane, intelligent human being. The study of schizophrenia has resulted in the arbitrary division of schizophrenia into two types or categories of symptoms: Type I is characterized by positive symptoms: hallucinations, delusions, and bizarre or disorganized behavior. Type II is characterized by negative symptoms: poverty of speech, flight of ideation, and withdrawal and apathy. Type I positive symptom patients are believed to have an overactivity of the neurotransmitter [neurochemical] known as dopamine in the brain's limbic system, which lies beneath the cerebral cortex. Type II negative symptom patients are believed to have an underactivity of dopamine in the frontal lobes of the cerebral cortex. However, research indicates that other neurotransmitters may be involved in schizophrenia, including norepinephrine (a chemical relative of adrenaline) and serotonin. The more obvious positive symptoms of one diagnosed with schizophrenia may only surface during those times when the individual is experiencing environmental trauma or stress. There is no objective test for determining if an individual is actually experiencing auditory hallucinations [imaginary voices] or if he or she is merely pretending to be experiencing auditory hallucinations. |
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| Since neurotransmitters tend to increase or decrease naturally as an individual reacts to varying degrees of environmental stress, some scientists believe that schizophrenia can best be treated with milieu (environmental stabilization) therapy and by educational therapy (educating the patient to practice habits of sound nutrition) rather than with neuroleptic drug therapy. The dangers of psychiatric drug therapy (so-called "side effects") are commonly minimized and the benefits are commonly exaggerated by psychiatrists and by the multi-billion dollar pharmaceutical industry. Thus, psychiatric drug therapy could be considered a highly dangerous game of Russian roulette between the therapist and the patient. Patients treated with drug therapy are more likely to engage in homicidal or suicidal behavior than are patients who are NOT treated with drug therapy, according to latest scientific studies. It must be kept in mind that diagnosis and treatment methods used by professionals to treat schizophrenia are based on mere theory and that there is no conclusive evidence to support the claimed causes of schizophrenia (or bipolar disorder, for that matter) or to justify the treatment methods used to treat these behaviors. Since the building blocks of neurotransmitters are the amino acids found in protein foods, not in drugs, it would seem that best preventive and healing medicine for schizophrenia or any other emotional disorder is (1) proper nutrition, (2) regular exercise and (3) quiet meditation in the privacy of your own home, for the purpose of relaxing one's mind and body. Meditation Site A serving a day of salmon, mackerel, sardines, tuna or herring, all high in omega 3 fatty acids, calcium, niacin and B-12; and fresh fruits and vegetables, which contain vitamin B-12 and folate; soy foods (shelled soy beans, milk, tofu, miso)will not only build healthy neurotransmitters and maximize sound mental health, but reduce the risk of arthritis, heart disease, cancer and diabetis. Add to that regular exercise, aerobics and light jogging, and daily meditation for relaxation, while in the privacy of your own home, and you have perhaps the best prescription for reducing anxiety, depression and psychosis -- all symptoms of behavior commonly characterized as schizophrenia. Victims of severe psychological trauma, of head injuries, of brain tumors and individuals who have undergone brain tumor surgery will often exhibit behavior symptoms identical to those of schizophrenia or schizoaffective disorder. Brain surgery itself can cause permanent brain damage to the patient. |
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| 1997 reprint Post Traumatic Stress Disorder 1997 reprint a reaction to trauma by Tom Blaise Shepherd |
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The Biogenics of Military Desensitization and Resulting Psychosis/Suicide One of the purposes of boot training is to arouse the trainee's level of anger and fear towards the drill instructors to a level sufficient for vasoconstriction, the narrowing of the blood vessels, to take place. The process of vasoconstriction thus closes down the forebrain, the adaptive and monitoring region of the brain that normally inhibit a socialized individual from engaging in violence against another human being. When those forebrain neurons close down, the midbrain takes over and the individual's thought processes are indistinguishable from those of a pit bull. The psychology of military training is to condition the cadet to repress the fear and anger he feels for the drill instructors, and to transfer the repressed anger to the designated enemy on the battlefield and release it. However, once a trainee's brain neurons have been rewired through boot training there is no guarantee that the repressed anger will not result in suicide or be transferred at a later place and time to a non-designated inanimate object or another superordinate, a subordinate or a civilian. Even in a non-military environment, individuals who have experienced psychological abuse with frequency and great emotional intensity, especially when confined with their tormentors for long periods of time, undergo neurological rewiring of the brain, which can result in long-term or permanent brain damage, resulting in increased susceptibility to psychotic reactions in times of stress. The abuse can also result in self-loathing and in self-destructive acts, including suicide! "Neurochemistry should not be pushed at the expense of those psychological factors, interpersonal relationships, and environmental contingencies that often play a major role in the development and exacerbation of mental disorders. . . Exposure to stressful situations can produce long-lasting brain neurochemical changes. It has been suggested that this long-lasting sensitization of certain neurons may be the cause of post-traumatic stress disorder." --Eliot S. Valenstein, Ph.D. Blaming the Brain: The Truth About Drugs & Mental Health |
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| Tommy Separdi | ||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
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