🌿 MENTAL - HEALTH
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- 🌿 MIRACLE of NIACIN
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- Niacin / Mental Illness
- Niacin / Vitamin B3
- Niacin Deficency
- Schizophrenia
- Real Story of Niacin
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- Lithium Orotate
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- Anxiety
- Anxiety / 2
- Can Autism Be Cured
- Gut and Mental Illness
- Heal Depression
- Help for Mental Illness
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- Dr. Abram Hoffer
- Dr. Hoffer's Vitamins
- Dr. Andrew Saul Videos
- Shocking Effects
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- Mental Health & Gluten
- Mental Health & Wheat
- Medication Withdrawal
- List of SSRI Medication
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Mental Health Re-Evaluated | |
File Size: | 1544 kb |
File Type: |
“ For schizophrenics, the natural recovery rate is 50%.
With orthomolecular medicine, the recovery rate is 90%.
With drugs, it is 0%.
If you use just drugs, you won’t get well.
This is because mental illness is usually biochemical illness.
Mental illness is a disorder of brain dysfunction.
Schizophrenia is vitamin B3 (niacin) dependency.
Not a deficiency, a dependency.
If schizophrenia strikes someone at age 25, he’s finished.
That is, if he’s only given drugs.
Patients are given drugs and released.
The new mental hospital today is the streets.”
Dr. Abram Hoffer
With orthomolecular medicine, the recovery rate is 90%.
With drugs, it is 0%.
If you use just drugs, you won’t get well.
This is because mental illness is usually biochemical illness.
Mental illness is a disorder of brain dysfunction.
Schizophrenia is vitamin B3 (niacin) dependency.
Not a deficiency, a dependency.
If schizophrenia strikes someone at age 25, he’s finished.
That is, if he’s only given drugs.
Patients are given drugs and released.
The new mental hospital today is the streets.”
Dr. Abram Hoffer
Use Only Niacin or Inositol Hexaniacinate
Do not use Niacinamide
The starting dose of niacin for adults is
1,000 mg 3 times daily...
The daily dose should be slowly increased
to 4,500-18,000 mg to achieve the best possible outcome for Mental Illness.
Patients must be educated about the flushing, heat, itchiness, pruritis, redness, and tingling that they will transiently experience.
These benign cutaneous reactions usually begin 15 minutes after taking niacin for the first time, and are first noticed around the forehead, then descend to the thorax, and sometimes to the feet. These reactions typically abate 1-2 hours following the ingestion of niacin. Niacin causes such cutaneous reactions by inducing the production of prostaglandin D2 in the skin, leading to vasodilation and a marked increase of its metabolite (9α, 11β-PGF2) in the plasma.
Do not use Niacinamide
The starting dose of niacin for adults is
1,000 mg 3 times daily...
The daily dose should be slowly increased
to 4,500-18,000 mg to achieve the best possible outcome for Mental Illness.
Patients must be educated about the flushing, heat, itchiness, pruritis, redness, and tingling that they will transiently experience.
These benign cutaneous reactions usually begin 15 minutes after taking niacin for the first time, and are first noticed around the forehead, then descend to the thorax, and sometimes to the feet. These reactions typically abate 1-2 hours following the ingestion of niacin. Niacin causes such cutaneous reactions by inducing the production of prostaglandin D2 in the skin, leading to vasodilation and a marked increase of its metabolite (9α, 11β-PGF2) in the plasma.
Niacin is its own anti-flushing agent because taking it regularly depletes the skin of prostaglandin D2 and prevents subsequent cutaneous reactions.
At 3,000 mg daily,
the flush and other symptoms will cease to be an issue following the first 2-3 days of treatment, and will practically disappear thereafter. If patients are not consistently taking these optimal doses throughout the day, they will continually re-experience cutaneous reactions and possibly discontinue treatment.
At 3,000 mg daily,
the flush and other symptoms will cease to be an issue following the first 2-3 days of treatment, and will practically disappear thereafter. If patients are not consistently taking these optimal doses throughout the day, they will continually re-experience cutaneous reactions and possibly discontinue treatment.
Niaciamide / Not Recommended / Can Cause Liver Toxicity
The concern over liver toxicity is very minor if immediate-release niacin preparations are used.
Timed - release preparations can cause liver toxicity and are not recommended for schizophrenic patients unless under very close supervision.
In Prousky’s clinical experience, niacin is more effective and better tolerated than niacinamide for schizophrenia.
Some patients prefer niacinamide since it does not cause flushing or other cutaneous reactions. Nausea and dry mouth are much more common with the use of niacinamide than with niacin.
The concern over liver toxicity is very minor if immediate-release niacin preparations are used.
Timed - release preparations can cause liver toxicity and are not recommended for schizophrenic patients unless under very close supervision.
In Prousky’s clinical experience, niacin is more effective and better tolerated than niacinamide for schizophrenia.
Some patients prefer niacinamide since it does not cause flushing or other cutaneous reactions. Nausea and dry mouth are much more common with the use of niacinamide than with niacin.
Successful Treatment of Schizophrenia
Requires Optimal Daily Doses of Vitamin B3
Alternative Medicine Review Volume 13, Number 4 2008
For over 50 years Dr. Abram Hoffer has been educating clinicians about the need to correctly (optimally) dose schizophrenics with vitamin B3 (niacin; niacinamide). For the past 10 years I have, likewise, educated numerous naturopathic and medical doctors about the very same thing.
For some reason, both types of clinicians routinely treat schizophrenic patients with plenty of vitamins, minerals, and other natural health products, but they never provide enough vitamin B3. In these authors opinions, schizophrenic patients cannot get well if not provided with optimal doses of vitamin B3. This prevents the real acceptance of nutritional treatment since clinicians will not observe favorable results when inadequate treatment is provided; their schizophrenic patients will continue to suffer needlessly.
To understand the importance of vitamin B3 treatment, some background information
is needed. Schizophrenia is characterized by a combination of perceptual changes (e.g., hallucinations) and thought disorders (e.g., delusions).1 These aberrant mental states, which can lead to psychotic behavior, cause a tremendous amount of emotional and psychological suffering. The cause of schizophrenia, the subject of much debate, is considered a biochemical imbalance, although certain genetic factors most certainly play a role.
The majority of scientists and psychiatrists subscribe to the dopamine excess theory of schizophrenia; i.e., that too much dopamine is largely responsible for the symptoms of psychosis. However, since 1952, Hoffer, the founding father of orthomolecular medicine, has researched, published, and expanded on the adrenochrome theory of schizophrenia.1,2 He and his colleagues, Drs. Osmond and Smythies, arrived at this theory by studying and researching the effects of substances such as mescaline, lysergic acid diethylamide (LSD), and amphetamines – all of which can cause a clinical syndrome in normal individuals that would be clinically indistinguishable from schizophrenia.
Osmond and Smythies noted that mescaline had a similar chemical structure to that of adrenaline. Hoffer, Osmond, and Smythies concluded that since both can be converted to indoles in the body, the potential schizophrenic toxin might be an indole derivative of adrenaline with similar neurochemical properties to that of mescaline or LSD. They eventually deduced that the schizophrenic toxin was an oxidized derivative of adrenaline known as adrenochrome. Since the early 1950s, the adrenochrome theory has been validated by the following findings:
Because vitamin B3 was known to function as a methyl acceptor, Hoffer’s team theorized that an optimum dose of niacin might decrease the amount of noradrenaline that would be converted to adrenaline. Since adrenochrome was thought to be an oxidized derivative of adrenaline, vitamin B3 could help reduce the quantity of adrenochrome by simply limiting the production of adrenaline.
Hoffer and his team also discovered an additional biochemical property of vitamin B3 that would help to explain its therapeutic efficacy. Vitamin B3 is a precursor to nicotinamide adenine dinucleotide, which is present in both oxidized (NAD) and reduced (NADH) forms in the body. In the brain, adrenaline loses one electron to become oxidized adrenaline. If enough NAD and NADH are available then the oxidized adrenaline is reconverted to adrenaline.
These back and forth processes continue to occur in the presence of sufficient vitamin B3 coenzymes. However, in the absence of sufficient NAD and NADH, the oxidized adrenaline loses an additional electron and becomes adrenochrome. This last reaction is irreversible, and presumably occurs in much greater concentrations in the schizophrenic brain.
That being said, where is the proof? Can vitamin B3 help in the treatment of acute
and chronic schizophrenia? The first report on the therapeutic use of vitamin B3 for schizophrenia was presented in 1952 at the Saskatchewan Committee on Schizophrenia. At this meeting, eight cases were presented, each demonstrating favorable effects from giving 1-10 g vitamin B3, and, in the majority of cases, equal amounts of vitamin C.1 After a more involved pilot study demonstrated excellent therapeutic responses to vitamin B3,1 the first North American double-blind, placebo-controlled experiment was undertaken to assess whether or not this vitamin was effective for schizophrenia.
The study, which began in 1952 but was not published until 1957, involved 30 acute schizophrenic patients who were each randomized to placebo, niacinamide, or niacin. They were given 1 g three times daily for 30 days, and then followed for one year. After one year, the patients given vitamin B3 with the standard treatments at that time had more than double the recovery rate (80%) compared to patients in the placebo group (33%).7
Hoffer followed patients from 1953 to 1960, publishing a total of six double-blind, randomized controlled clinical trials. All trials confirmed the positive effects that vitamin B3 had on the recovery of acute schizophrenic patients, and that the use of this vitamin substantially reduced patients’ reliance on the health care system. 2
In a more recent analysis of 27 chronic schizophrenic patients who had been under treatment for at least 10 years, consistent treatment with vitamin B3 produced the following results: 11 patients were able to work; two patients were able to marry and look after their families and homes; two patients were single mothers able to care for their children; and three patients were able to manage their own businesses.9 These results are remarkable when one considers the state of these patients prior to receiving optimal doses of vitamin B3. The average age of these patients was 40, the majority of them were ill for seven years before they sought treatment from Hoffer, and all had been unresponsive to previous treatments.
The starting dose of niacin for adults is 1,000 mg three times daily. In our opinion, the daily dose should be slowly increased to 4,500-18,000 mg to achieve the best possible outcome. Patients must be educated about the flushing, heat, itchiness, pruritis, redness, and tingling that they will transiently experience.
These benign cutaneous reactions usually begin 15 minutes after taking niacin for the first time, and are first noticed around the forehead, then descend to the thorax, and sometimes to the feet. These reactions typically abate 1-2 hours following the ingestion of niacin. Niacin causes such cutaneous reactions by inducing the production of prostaglandin D2 in the skin, leading to vasodilation and a marked increase of its metabolite (9α, 11β-PGF2) in the plasma.10
Niacin is its own anti-flushing agent because taking it regularly depletes the skin of prostaglandin D2 and prevents subsequent cutaneous reactions. At 3,000 mg daily, the flush and other symptoms will cease to be an issue following the first 2-3 days of treatment, and will practically disappear thereafter. If patients are not consistently taking these optimal doses throughout the day, they will continually re-experience cutaneous reactions and possibly discontinue treatment.
The concern over liver toxicity is very minor if immediate-release niacin preparations are used.11,12 Timed-release preparations can cause liver toxicity and are not recommended for schizophrenic patients unless under very close supervision.13 In Prousky’s clinical experience, niacin is more effective and better tolerated than niacinamide for schizophrenia.
Some patients prefer niacinamide since it does not cause flushing or other cutaneous reactions. Nausea and dry mouth are much more common with the use of niacinamide than with niacin. The daily dosages of niacinamide should not exceed 6,000 mg since the likelihood of nausea accompanied with vomiting is much greater.14
As clinicians we need to offer restorative care to patients who suffer with schizophrenia,
a severe and usually chronic mental illness. The only reasonable conclusion to be made from this data is that all schizophrenic patients, including both acute and chronic patients, need to be treated with vitamin B3 as quickly as possible and for the duration of their lives.
Vitamin B3 treatment offers significant hope of a reasonable quality of life among patients who would otherwise remain incapacitated and in and out of hospitals for the remainder of their lives. Some might improve so much that they achieve clinical remission. Since not enough clinicians utilize optimal doses of vitamin B3 with their schizophrenic patients, we hope that the information presented here persuades other clinicians to adopt this very effective and safe treatment.
Respectfully,
Abram Hoffer, MD (retired), PhD Jonathan Prousky, ND
Abram Hoffer, PhD, MD, FRCP(C), ROHP – President, Orthomolecular Vitamins Information Centre; professor psychiatry, 1955-1967; Director Psychiatric Research, Department Health, Saskatchewan, 1950-1967; President Emeritus, International Schizophrenia Foundation; Editor, Journal Orthomolecular Medicine; 2007 winner of Dr Rogers Prize; pain in the neck to orthodox psychiatry. Correspondence address: 2727 Quadra Street, Suite 3A, Victoria BC, V8T 4E5
Jonathan E. Prousky, BPHE, BSc, MSc, ND – Chief Naturopathic Medical Officer and professor of clinical nutrition, Canadian College of Naturopathic Medicine.
References
Requires Optimal Daily Doses of Vitamin B3
Alternative Medicine Review Volume 13, Number 4 2008
For over 50 years Dr. Abram Hoffer has been educating clinicians about the need to correctly (optimally) dose schizophrenics with vitamin B3 (niacin; niacinamide). For the past 10 years I have, likewise, educated numerous naturopathic and medical doctors about the very same thing.
For some reason, both types of clinicians routinely treat schizophrenic patients with plenty of vitamins, minerals, and other natural health products, but they never provide enough vitamin B3. In these authors opinions, schizophrenic patients cannot get well if not provided with optimal doses of vitamin B3. This prevents the real acceptance of nutritional treatment since clinicians will not observe favorable results when inadequate treatment is provided; their schizophrenic patients will continue to suffer needlessly.
To understand the importance of vitamin B3 treatment, some background information
is needed. Schizophrenia is characterized by a combination of perceptual changes (e.g., hallucinations) and thought disorders (e.g., delusions).1 These aberrant mental states, which can lead to psychotic behavior, cause a tremendous amount of emotional and psychological suffering. The cause of schizophrenia, the subject of much debate, is considered a biochemical imbalance, although certain genetic factors most certainly play a role.
The majority of scientists and psychiatrists subscribe to the dopamine excess theory of schizophrenia; i.e., that too much dopamine is largely responsible for the symptoms of psychosis. However, since 1952, Hoffer, the founding father of orthomolecular medicine, has researched, published, and expanded on the adrenochrome theory of schizophrenia.1,2 He and his colleagues, Drs. Osmond and Smythies, arrived at this theory by studying and researching the effects of substances such as mescaline, lysergic acid diethylamide (LSD), and amphetamines – all of which can cause a clinical syndrome in normal individuals that would be clinically indistinguishable from schizophrenia.
Osmond and Smythies noted that mescaline had a similar chemical structure to that of adrenaline. Hoffer, Osmond, and Smythies concluded that since both can be converted to indoles in the body, the potential schizophrenic toxin might be an indole derivative of adrenaline with similar neurochemical properties to that of mescaline or LSD. They eventually deduced that the schizophrenic toxin was an oxidized derivative of adrenaline known as adrenochrome. Since the early 1950s, the adrenochrome theory has been validated by the following findings:
- Adrenochrome and its close relatives – dopaminochrome (from dopamine) and noradrenochrome (from noradrenaline) – are present in the human brain.3-5
- These compounds probably induce a combination of neurotoxic and mind- mood-altering effects.3-5
- Reducing adrenochrome, dopaminochrome, and noradrenochrome is therapeutic for the treatment of schizophrenia.6
Because vitamin B3 was known to function as a methyl acceptor, Hoffer’s team theorized that an optimum dose of niacin might decrease the amount of noradrenaline that would be converted to adrenaline. Since adrenochrome was thought to be an oxidized derivative of adrenaline, vitamin B3 could help reduce the quantity of adrenochrome by simply limiting the production of adrenaline.
Hoffer and his team also discovered an additional biochemical property of vitamin B3 that would help to explain its therapeutic efficacy. Vitamin B3 is a precursor to nicotinamide adenine dinucleotide, which is present in both oxidized (NAD) and reduced (NADH) forms in the body. In the brain, adrenaline loses one electron to become oxidized adrenaline. If enough NAD and NADH are available then the oxidized adrenaline is reconverted to adrenaline.
These back and forth processes continue to occur in the presence of sufficient vitamin B3 coenzymes. However, in the absence of sufficient NAD and NADH, the oxidized adrenaline loses an additional electron and becomes adrenochrome. This last reaction is irreversible, and presumably occurs in much greater concentrations in the schizophrenic brain.
That being said, where is the proof? Can vitamin B3 help in the treatment of acute
and chronic schizophrenia? The first report on the therapeutic use of vitamin B3 for schizophrenia was presented in 1952 at the Saskatchewan Committee on Schizophrenia. At this meeting, eight cases were presented, each demonstrating favorable effects from giving 1-10 g vitamin B3, and, in the majority of cases, equal amounts of vitamin C.1 After a more involved pilot study demonstrated excellent therapeutic responses to vitamin B3,1 the first North American double-blind, placebo-controlled experiment was undertaken to assess whether or not this vitamin was effective for schizophrenia.
The study, which began in 1952 but was not published until 1957, involved 30 acute schizophrenic patients who were each randomized to placebo, niacinamide, or niacin. They were given 1 g three times daily for 30 days, and then followed for one year. After one year, the patients given vitamin B3 with the standard treatments at that time had more than double the recovery rate (80%) compared to patients in the placebo group (33%).7
Hoffer followed patients from 1953 to 1960, publishing a total of six double-blind, randomized controlled clinical trials. All trials confirmed the positive effects that vitamin B3 had on the recovery of acute schizophrenic patients, and that the use of this vitamin substantially reduced patients’ reliance on the health care system. 2
In a more recent analysis of 27 chronic schizophrenic patients who had been under treatment for at least 10 years, consistent treatment with vitamin B3 produced the following results: 11 patients were able to work; two patients were able to marry and look after their families and homes; two patients were single mothers able to care for their children; and three patients were able to manage their own businesses.9 These results are remarkable when one considers the state of these patients prior to receiving optimal doses of vitamin B3. The average age of these patients was 40, the majority of them were ill for seven years before they sought treatment from Hoffer, and all had been unresponsive to previous treatments.
The starting dose of niacin for adults is 1,000 mg three times daily. In our opinion, the daily dose should be slowly increased to 4,500-18,000 mg to achieve the best possible outcome. Patients must be educated about the flushing, heat, itchiness, pruritis, redness, and tingling that they will transiently experience.
These benign cutaneous reactions usually begin 15 minutes after taking niacin for the first time, and are first noticed around the forehead, then descend to the thorax, and sometimes to the feet. These reactions typically abate 1-2 hours following the ingestion of niacin. Niacin causes such cutaneous reactions by inducing the production of prostaglandin D2 in the skin, leading to vasodilation and a marked increase of its metabolite (9α, 11β-PGF2) in the plasma.10
Niacin is its own anti-flushing agent because taking it regularly depletes the skin of prostaglandin D2 and prevents subsequent cutaneous reactions. At 3,000 mg daily, the flush and other symptoms will cease to be an issue following the first 2-3 days of treatment, and will practically disappear thereafter. If patients are not consistently taking these optimal doses throughout the day, they will continually re-experience cutaneous reactions and possibly discontinue treatment.
The concern over liver toxicity is very minor if immediate-release niacin preparations are used.11,12 Timed-release preparations can cause liver toxicity and are not recommended for schizophrenic patients unless under very close supervision.13 In Prousky’s clinical experience, niacin is more effective and better tolerated than niacinamide for schizophrenia.
Some patients prefer niacinamide since it does not cause flushing or other cutaneous reactions. Nausea and dry mouth are much more common with the use of niacinamide than with niacin. The daily dosages of niacinamide should not exceed 6,000 mg since the likelihood of nausea accompanied with vomiting is much greater.14
As clinicians we need to offer restorative care to patients who suffer with schizophrenia,
a severe and usually chronic mental illness. The only reasonable conclusion to be made from this data is that all schizophrenic patients, including both acute and chronic patients, need to be treated with vitamin B3 as quickly as possible and for the duration of their lives.
Vitamin B3 treatment offers significant hope of a reasonable quality of life among patients who would otherwise remain incapacitated and in and out of hospitals for the remainder of their lives. Some might improve so much that they achieve clinical remission. Since not enough clinicians utilize optimal doses of vitamin B3 with their schizophrenic patients, we hope that the information presented here persuades other clinicians to adopt this very effective and safe treatment.
Respectfully,
Abram Hoffer, MD (retired), PhD Jonathan Prousky, ND
Abram Hoffer, PhD, MD, FRCP(C), ROHP – President, Orthomolecular Vitamins Information Centre; professor psychiatry, 1955-1967; Director Psychiatric Research, Department Health, Saskatchewan, 1950-1967; President Emeritus, International Schizophrenia Foundation; Editor, Journal Orthomolecular Medicine; 2007 winner of Dr Rogers Prize; pain in the neck to orthodox psychiatry. Correspondence address: 2727 Quadra Street, Suite 3A, Victoria BC, V8T 4E5
Jonathan E. Prousky, BPHE, BSc, MSc, ND – Chief Naturopathic Medical Officer and professor of clinical nutrition, Canadian College of Naturopathic Medicine.
References
- Hoffer A. Vitamin B-3 & Schizophrenia. Discovery, Recovery, Controversy. Kingston, ON: Quarry Press, Inc; 1998:28-76.
- Hoffer A. Adventures in Psychiatry. The Scientific Memoirs of Dr. Abram Hoffer. Caledon, ON: KOS Publishing Inc; 2005:50-99.
- Smythies J. Endogenous neurotoxins relevant to schizophrenia. J R Soc Med 1996;89:679-680.
- Smythies JR. Oxidative reactions and schizophrenia: a review-discussion. Schizophr Res 1997;24:357-364.
- Smythies J. The adrenochrome hypothesis of schizophrenia revisited. Neurotox Res 2002;4:147-150.
- Hoffer A. The adrenochrome hypothesis and psychiatry. J Orthomol Med 1999;14:49-62.
- Hoffer A, Osmond H, Callbeck MJ, Kahan I. Treatment of schizophrenia with nicotinic acid and nicotinamide. J
Clin Exp Psychopathol 1957;18:131-158. - Hoffer A. Niacin Therapy In Psychiatry. Springfield, IL: Charles C. Thomas; 1962;35-71.
- Hoffer A. Chronic schizophrenic patients treated ten years or more. J Orthomol Med 1994;9:7-37.
- Morrow JD, Parsons WG 3rd, Roberts LJ 2nd. Release of markedly increased quantities of prostaglandin D2 in vivo
in humans following the administration of nicotinic acid. Prostaglandins 1989;38:263-274. - Hoffer A. Vitamin B-3 and schizophrenia. Townsend Lett Doctors Patients 2001;213:20-23.
- Paterson ET. Vitamin B3 and liver toxicity. Townsend Lett Doctors Patients 2001;207:23.
- Mullin GE, Greenson JK, Mitchell MC. Fulminant hepatic failure after ingestion of sustained-release nicotinic acid.
Ann Intern Med 1989;111:253-255. - Hoffer A. Vitamin B-3: niacin and its amide. Townsend Lett Doctors Patients 1995;147:30-39.
- Hoffer A. Healing Schizophrenia. Toronto, ON: CCNM Press Inc; 2004:7-21.
- Horrobin D. The Madness of Adam and Eve. London, England: Corgi Books; 2001:149-151.
- Hoffer A. Treating chronic schizophrenic patients. J Orthomol Med 2002;17:25-41.
- Goeree R, Farahati F, Burke N, et al. The economic burden of schizophrenia in Canada in 2004. Curr Med Res Opin 2005;21:2017-2028.