Brain
364 sourcesRay Peat emphasized that the brain is the most metabolically active organ and therefore the most vulnerable to metabolic insufficiency. He challenged several dogmas: that brain cells don't regenerate (they do), that the brain runs only on glucose (it benefits from ketones and fructose too, but glucose is primary), and that serotonin is a 'feel-good' neurotransmitter (he considered it primarily a stress and inflammation mediator in the brain).
Peat's approach to brain health centered on maintaining high cerebral metabolic rate through adequate thyroid function, glucose supply, progesterone (which is neuroprotective), and avoiding excitotoxins, PUFAs, and excessive serotonin. He viewed Alzheimer's, Parkinson's, and other neurodegenerative diseases as manifestations of the same metabolic failure that causes aging and cancer.
Key Positions
- Brain cells can regenerate — this was demonstrated in the 1930s-40s by Polezhaev and others
- Serotonin is not a 'happiness molecule' but primarily an inflammation and stress mediator in the brain
- Progesterone and pregnenolone are potent neuroprotective hormones synthesized in the brain
- PUFA-derived lipid peroxidation products are implicated in Alzheimer's and other neurodegenerative diseases
- Adequate glucose and thyroid hormone are essential for brain energy metabolism
- GABA and neurosteroids promote calm, focused brain function; serotonin and nitric oxide promote excitotoxicity
- Carbon dioxide improves cerebral blood flow and oxygen delivery to the brain
Sources
364 items-
The dark side of stress (learned helplesness)
-
Thyroid, insomnia, and the insanities: Commonalities in disease
-
Thyroid: Therapies, Confusion, and Fraud.
-
Tissue-bound estrogen in aging
-
Tryptophan, serotonin, and aging.
-
Unsaturated Vegetable Oils: Toxic.
-
Unsaturated fatty acids: Nutritionally essential, or toxic?
-
Using Sunlight to Sustain Life
-
VV Fitness Blog - Vahdaneh Vahid
-
Vashinvetala (formerly Pranarupa)
-
Vitamin E: Estrogen antagonist, energy promoter, and anti-inflammatory
-
Water: swelling, tension, pain, fatigue, aging
-
When energy fails: Edema, heart failure, hypertension, sarcopenia, etc.
-
William Blake as biological visionary. Can art instruct science?