| Literature DB >> 22371656 |
Marty Hinz1, Alvin Stein, Thomas Uncini.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: The monoamine hypothesis has been recognized for over half a century as a reference point to understanding electrical dysfunction associated with disease states, and/or regulatory dysfunction related to synaptic, centrally acting monoamine concentrations (serotonin, dopamine, norepinephrine, and epinephrine).Entities:
Keywords: bundle damage theory; dopamine; monoamine hypothesis; monoamine theory; neuronal dysfunction; serotonin
Year: 2012 PMID: 22371656 PMCID: PMC3282597 DOI: 10.2147/IJGM.S27824
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Int J Gen Med ISSN: 1178-7074
Figure 1If dopamine precursors (L-tyrosine and/or L-dopa) are not in proper balance with serotonin precursors (5-HTP and/or L-tryptophan), depletion of serotonin or dopamine will occur. All components of the system need to be in proper balance.
Figure 2The centrally acting monoamines with their amino acid precursors.
A comparison of the monoamine hypothesis and the bundle damage theory
| Monoamine hypothesis | Bundle damage theory | |
|---|---|---|
| Synaptic monoamine levels when electrical dysfunction exits | Low | Normal |
| Neuronal system status | Normal | Postsynaptic structural damage leading to compromised electrical flow |
| Monoamine levels required to restore electrical flow | Normal (endogenous state) | Higher than normal (competitive inhibition state) |
| Etiology | Nutritional deficiency | Recurrent damage due to neurotoxins, trauma, biologics and/or genetic predisposition |
| Conclusion on the basis of the etiology | Absolute nutritional deficiency, dietary modification (no supplements) will correct the problem | Relative nutritional deficiency, properly balanced supplementation needed to establish monoamine levels higher than normal |
| Laboratory observations | From a laboratory standpoint, in the endogenous state, unable to distinguish those with and without disease contrary to predictions of the monoamine hypothesis | OCT assay determination in the competitive inhibition state allows for predictable outcomes to nutritionally driven monoamine changes |
| Undermining the concept | Literature has never described dietary modification that simply returns synaptic monoamine levels to normal as a valid approach in management of monoamine-related electrical dysfunction | None |
| Support for the concept | Empirical observations that increasing synaptic monoamine levels leads to clinical improvement without proof that simply returning monoamine levels to normal is what is happening | Published literature on difficult to treat cases of Parkinson’s disease, chronic depression, Crohn’s disease, attention deficit hyperactivity disorder, where synaptic levels are initially normal then intentionally increased to higher than normal to compensate for chronic electrical damage |
Abbreviation: OCT, organic cation transporter.