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- <html>
- <head><title>Gelatin, stress, longevity</title></head>
- <body>
- <h1>
- Gelatin, stress, longevity
- </h1>
-
- <p>
- <hr />
- <hr />
- </p>
- <p>
- <strong>The main bulk of an animal's body consists of water, protein, fat and bones. Fat tissue and bone are
- metabolically more quiescent than the protein-water systems. During stress or starvation, or even
- hibernation, animals lose lean mass faster than fat.</strong>
- </p>
- <p>
- <strong>The amino acids that constitute protein have many hormone-like functions in their free state. When
- our glucose (glycogen) stores have been depleted, we convert our own tissue into free amino acids, some
- of which are used to produce new glucose. The amino acids cysteine and tryptophan, released in large
- quantities during stress, have antimetabolic (thyroid-suppressing) and, eventually, toxic effects.
- Hypothyroidism itself increases the catabolic turnover of protein, even though general metabolism is
- slowed.</strong>
- </p>
- <p>
- <strong>Other amino acids act as nerve-modifiers ("transmitters"), causing, for example, excitation or
- inhibition.</strong>
- </p>
- <p>
- <strong>Some of these amino acids, such as glycine, have a very broad range of cell-protective
- actions.</strong>
- </p>
-
- <p>
- <strong>Their physical properties, rather than their use for production of energy or other metabolic
- function, are responsible for their important cytoprotective actions.</strong>
- </p>
- <p>
- <strong>Gelatin (the cooked form of collagen) makes up about 50% of the protein in an animal, but a much
- smaller percentage in the more active tissues, such as brain, muscle, and liver. 35% of the amino acids
- in gelatin are glycine, 11% alanine, and 21% proline and hydroxyproline.</strong>
- </p>
- <p>
- <strong>In the industrialized societies, the consumption of gelatin has decreased, relative to the foods
- that contain an inappropriately high proportion of the antimetabolic amino acids, especially tryptophan
- and cysteine.</strong>
- </p>
- <p>
- <strong>The degenerative and inflammatory diseases can often be corrected by the use of gelatin-rich foods.
- </strong>
- </p>
- <p>
- <hr />
- <hr />
- </p>
- <p>
- I usually think about something for a long time before I get around to integrating it into my life,
- sometimes because old habits have to be changed, but usually because our social organization is set up to do
- things in conventional ways. Our foods reflect our social organization, enforced by laws and rules. When I
- first went to Mexico to study, many traditional foods were still available even in the city--fried pig skin,
- served crisp or boiled with a sauce, blood tacos, cartilaginous parts of various animals, chicken-foot soup,
- crustaceans, insects, etc. Later, when I studied biochemistry, I realized that each part of an organism has
- a characteristic chemistry and special nutritional value. I knew of Weston Price's research on traditional
- diets, and his argument that the degenerative "diseases of civilization" were produced by the simplified
- diets that are characteristic of the highly industrialized societies.
- </p>
- <p>
- As I began to study endocrinology, I realized that there were some radical misconceptions behind the ideas
- of "scientific nutrition." I. P. Pavlov, who had studied nutritional physiology because it constituted the
- animal's closest interactions with its environment, was motivated by a desire to understand life in its
- totality, including consciousness. But western nutritionists were nearly all committed to an ideology that
- forced them to think in terms of "essential factors for growth," leading to ideas such as "minimum daily
- requirement" for each nutrient. Bodily bulk (especially body length) was the criterion, not the experienced
- quality of life. And there has been no scarcity of evidence showing that rapid bodily growth has its
- drawbacks (e.g., Miller, et al., 2002, "Big mice die young").
- </p>
- <p>
- One of the brightest of the genetically oriented nutritionists, Roger Williams, used the idea of genetic
- individuality to explain that the popular idea of a species-wide standard diet couldn't be applied to
- exceptional individuals, and that disease was often the result of the mismatch between special nutritional
- requirements and a "standard" diet. Linus Pauling's concept of orthomolecular medicine was a restatement of
- Williams' principle for the general scientific community.
- </p>
- <p>
- But still, the emphasis was on the match between a specific chemical and the <strong><em>genetic
- constitution</em></strong> of the organism. Pavlov's idea of the "trophic" actions of nerves was
- discarded, and the rest of his work was relegated to a crudely caricatured branch of psychology. His
- therapeutic recommendation of beef broth for many ailments was ignored as having nothing to do with the
- caricatured "Pavlovism."
- </p>
- <p>
- If nerves are intimately involved in the processes of nutrition and development, the effects of nutrients on
- the nerves and their development should have a central place in nutritional research. Our appetites reflect
- our biochemical needs, and our "unconditional reflexes" are likely to be wiser than the theories that are
- based simply on the amount of weight a young animal gains on a particular diet.
- </p>
- <p>
- When I began teaching endocrinology, some of my students didn't want to hear about anything except "lock and
- key" endocrinology, in which "a hormone" signals certain cells that have a suitable receptor for that
- hormone. But the studies of Hans Selye and Albert Szent-Gyorgyi made it clear that Pavlov's global, holistic
- approach to the organism in its environment was the soundest scientific basis for physiology, including
- endocrinology. A cell's response to a hormone depended on the state of the cell. Nutrients and metabolites
- and hormones and neurotransmitters all modify the cell's sensitivity to its surroundings. The assumptions of
- "molecular biology," as generally understood, are fundamentally mistaken.
- </p>
- <p>
- The idea of fixed requirements for specific nutrients, and especially the idea that rapid physical growth
- was the way to determine the essentiality of a substance, led to a monstrous distortion of the official
- dietary recommendations. Business, industry, government, and the health professions collaborated in the
- propagation of an ideology about nutrition that misrepresented the nature of the living organism.
- </p>
-
- <p>
- Most studies of the nutritional requirements for protein have been done for the agricultural industries, and
- so have been designed to find the cheapest way to get the maximum growth in the shortest time. The industry
- isn't interested in the longevity, intelligence, or happiness of their pigs, chickens, and lambs. The
- industry has used chemical growth stimulants in combination with the foods that support rapid growth at
- least expense. Antibiotics and arsenic and polyunsaturated fatty acids have become part of our national food
- supply because they produce rapid weight gain in young animals.
- </p>
- <p>
- The amino acids in proteins have been defined as "essential" on the basis of their contribution to growth,
- ignoring their role in producing long life, good brain development, and good health. The amino acid and
- protein requirements during aging have hardly been studied, except in rats, whose short life-span makes such
- studies fairly easy. The few studies that have been done indicate that the requirements for tryptophan and
- cysteine become very low in adulthood.
- </p>
- <p>
- Although Clive McKay's studies of life extension through caloric restriction were done in the 1930s, only a
- few studies have been done to find out which nutrients' restriction contributes most to extending the life
- span. Restricting toxic heavy metals, without restricting calories, produces about the same life-extending
- effect as caloric restriction. <strong>
- Restricting only tryptophan, or only cysteine, produces a greater extension of the life span than
- achieved in most of the studies of caloric restriction.</strong>
- How great would be the life-span extension if both tryptophan and cysteine were restricted at the same time?
- </p>
-
- <p>
- Both tryptophan and cysteine inhibit thyroid function and mitochondrial energy production, and have other
- effects that decrease the ability to withstand stress. Tryptophan is the precursor to serotonin, which
- causes inflammation, immunodepression, and generally the same changes seen in aging. Histidine is another
- amino acid precursor to a mediator of inflammation, histamine<strong>; </strong>
- would the restriction of histidine in the diet have a longevity promoting effect, too?
- </p>
- <p>
- It happens that gelatin is a protein which contains no tryptophan, and only small amounts of cysteine,
- methionine, and histidine. Using gelatin as a major dietary protein is an easy way to restrict the amino
- acids that are associated with many of the problems of aging.
- </p>
- <p>
- The main amino acids in gelatin are glycine and proline<strong>; </strong>
- alanine is also present in significant quantity. Glycine and proline are responsible for the unusual fibrous
- property of collagen.
- </p>
- <p>
- An animal's body, apart from fat and water, is mostly protein, and about half of the protein in the body is
- collagen (which is the native, uncooked form of gelatin). Its name is derived from its traditional use as
- glue. It is responsible for the structural toughness of mature animal bodies.
- </p>
-
- <p>
- When cells are stressed, they form extra collagen, but they can also dissolve it, to allow for tissue
- remodeling and growth. Invasive cancers over-produce this kind of enzyme, destroying the extracellular
- matrix which is needed for normal cellular differentiation and function. When collagen is broken down, it
- releases factors that promote wound healing and suppress tumor invasiveness. (Pasco, et al., 2003) Glycine
- itself is one of the factors promoting wound healing and tumor inhibition.
- </p>
- <p>
- It has a wide range of antitumor actions, including the inhibition of new blood vessel formation
- (angiogenesis), and it has shown protective activity in liver cancer and melanoma. Since glycine is
- non-toxic (if the kidneys are working, since any amino acid will contribute to the production of ammonia),
- this kind of chemotherapy can be pleasant.
- </p>
- <p>
- When we eat animal proteins in the traditional ways (for example, eating fish head soup, as well as the
- muscles, or "head-cheese" as well as pork chops, and chicken-foot soup as well as drumsticks), we assimilate
- a large amount of glycine and gelatin. This whole-animal balance of amino acids supports all sorts of
- biological process, including a balanced growth of children's tissues and organs.
- </p>
- <p>
- When only the muscle meats are eaten, the amino acid balance entering our blood stream is the same as that
- produced by extreme stress, when cortisol excess causes our muscles to be broken down to provide energy and
- material for repair. The formation of serotonin is increased by the excess tryptophan in muscle, and
- serotonin stimulates the formation of more cortisol, while the tryptophan itself, along with the excess
- muscle-derived cysteine, suppresses the thyroid function.
- </p>
- <p>
- A generous supply of glycine/gelatin, against a balanced background of amino acids, has a great variety of
- antistress actions. Glycine is recognized as an "inhibitory" neurotransmitter, and promotes natural sleep.
- Used as a supplement, it has helped to promote recovery from strokes and seizures, and to improve learning
- and memory. But in every type of cell, it apparently has the same kind of quieting, protective antistress
- action. The range of injuries produced by an excess of tryptophan and serotonin seems to be prevented or
- corrected by a generous supply of glycine. Fibrosis, free radical damage, inflammation, cell death from ATP
- depletion or calcium overload, mitochondrial damage, diabetes, etc., can be prevented or alleviated by
- glycine.
- </p>
- <p>
- Some types of cell damage are prevented almost as well by alanine and proline as by glycine, so the use of
- gelatin, rather than glycine, is preferable, especially when the gelatin is associated with its normal
- biochemicals. For example, skin is a rich source of steroid hormones, and cartilage contains "Mead acid,"
- which is itself antiinflammatory.
- </p>
-
- <p>
- The other well-studied inhibitory neurotransmitter is GABA, so it's significant that GABA (gamma amino
- butyric acid) is a close analog of glycine (alpha amino acetic acid). A synthetic molecule structurally
- similar to those natural inhibitory "transmitters," beta amino propanoic acid, has some of the protective
- effects of glycine and GABA. The other molecules in the series, at least up to epsilon amino caproic acid,
- have some of the same antiinvasive, antiinflammatory, anti-angiogenic, properties. Alanine and proline, with
- cell-protecting actions, have the same basic composition, carbon (CH2 or CH) atoms separating acid and amino
- groups. Even the amino acids in which the lipophilic carbon atoms extend out in a branched side-chain,
- valine, leucine, and isoleucine, have some of the antiseizure (inhibitory) action (Skeie, et al., 1992,
- 1994) of GABA and glycine. Tests done with one, or a few, of the relatively lipophilic (aliphatic) amino
- acids prevent seizures, while the "balanced" mixtures of amino acids permit seizures<strong>;</strong>
- unfortunately, results of this sort haven't led researchers to question the idea of "balance" that developed
- within the setting of agricultural research.
- </p>
- <p>
- The similarity between the structures and actions of glycine and GABA suggest that their "receptors" are
- similar, if not identical. For years, it has been known that progesterone and pregnenolone act on the GABA
- receptor, to reinforce the protective, inhibitory effects of GABA. Estrogen has the opposite effect,
- inhibiting GABA's action. Since GABA opposes estrogen and inhibits the growth of breast cancer, it wouldn't
- be surprising if glycine, alanine, etc., did the same.
- </p>
- <p>
- Recent research shows that progesterone and its metabolites also act on the "glycine receptor," increasing
- inhibition, and that the "phytoestrogen," genistein, antagonizes the inhibitory effect of glycine.
- </p>
- <p>
- The inhibitory systems are opposed by excitatory systems, especially by the excitatory amino acid system,
- activated by glutamic and aspartic acid. Progesterone and estrogen act on that system, too, decreasing and
- increasing excitation, respectively.
- </p>
-
- <p>
- I have previously discussed the arguments for viewing progesterone as a "cardinal adsorbent" (as in Ling and
- Fu, 1987, 1988, Ling, et al., 1984, a steroid alters glycine's influence on the cell's electrical behavior)
- which increases the lipophilic, fat-loving property of the cytoplasm, and estrogen as having the opposite
- action, increasing the water-loving hydrophilic quality of the cytoplasm. If we think of the proteins known
- as the GABA and glycine receptors as having some regions in which the basic amine of lysine associates with
- the acidic group of aspartic or glutamic acid, then the action of glycine, or other amino acids would be to
- introduce additional lipophilic carbon atoms into those regions (with the amino acids' polar ends pairing
- with their opposites on the protein), where the cardinal adsorbents exert their influence.
- </p>
- <p>
- Generally, biologists seem puzzled by such facts, because they don't fit into the "lock and key" model of
- molecular biology. But I think they make the organism easier to understand, since these constellations of
- facts illustrate simple and general physical principles. They suggest the idea that estrogen and
- progesterone and glycine, GABA, etc., will be active in any functioning cell, at a suitable concentration.
- It was this kind of thinking in terms of general physical principles that led Szent-Gyorgyi to investigate
- the effects of estrogen and progesterone on heart physiology. The old characterization of estrogen and
- progesterone as "sex" and "pregnancy" hormones acting on a few tissues through specific receptors never had
- a good basis in evidence, but the accumulated evidence has now made those ideas impossible for an informed
- person to accept. (Progesterone increases the heart's pumping efficiency, and estrogen is antagonistic, and
- can produce cardiac arrhythmia.)
- </p>
- <p>
- In the context of the excitatory actions of estrogen, and the inhibitory action of glycine, it would be
- reasonable to think of glycine as one of the antiestrogenic substances. Another type of amino acid, taurine,
- is structurally similar to glycine (and to beta amino propanoic acid, and to GABA), and it can be thought of
- as antiestrogenic in this context. The specific kinds of excitation produced by estrogen that relate to
- reproduction occur against a background of very generalized cellular excitation, that includes increased
- sensitivity of sensory nerves, increased activity of motor nerves, changes in the EEG, and, if the estrogen
- effect is very high, epilepsy, tetany, or psychosis.
- </p>
- <p>
- Glycine's inhibitory effects appear to oppose estrogen's actions generally, in sensory and motor nerves, in
- regulating angiogenesis, and in modulating the cytokines and "chemokines" that are involved in so many
- inflammatory and degenerative diseases, especially tumor necrosis factor (TNF), nitric oxide (NO), and
- prostaglandins. Exposure to estrogen early in life can affect the health in adulthood, and so can an early
- deficiency of glycine. The degenerative diseases can begin in the earliest years of life, but because aging,
- like growth, is a developmental process, it's never too late to start the corrective process.
- </p>
-
- <p>
- One of estrogen's "excitatory" effects is to cause lipolysis, the release of fatty acids from storage
- fat<strong>; </strong>
- it directs the conversion of glucose into fat in the liver, so that the free fatty acids in the circulation
- remain chronically high under its influence. The free fatty acids inhibit the oxidation of glucose for
- energy, creating insulin resistance, the condition that normally increases with aging, and that can lead to
- hyperglycemia and "diabetes."
- </p>
- <p>
- Gelatin and glycine have recently been reported to facilitate the action of insulin in lowering blood sugar
- and alleviating diabetes. Gelatin has been used successfully to treat diabetes for over 100 years (A.
- Guerard, Ann Hygiene 36, 5, 1871; H. Brat, Deut. Med. Wochenschrift 28 (No. 2), 21, 1902). Glycine inhibits
- lipolysis (another antiexcitatory, "antiestrogenic" effect), and this in itself will make insulin more
- effective, and help to prevent hyperglycemia. (A gelatin-rich diet can also lower the serum triglycerides.)
- Since persistent lipolysis and insulin resistance, along with a generalized inflammatory state, are involved
- in a great variety of diseases, especially in the degenerative diseases, it's reasonable to consider using
- glycine/gelatin for almost any chronic problem. (Chicken foot soup has been used in several cultures for a
- variety of ailments; chicken foot powder has been advocated as a stimulant for spinal cord
- regeneration--Harry Robertson's method was stopped by the FDA).
- </p>
- <p>
- Although Hans Selye observed as early as the 1930s that stress causes internal bleeding (in lungs, adrenals,
- thymus, intestine, salivary and tear glands, etc.), the medical establishment, which has the opportunity to
- see it after surgery, burns or other trauma, and following strokes and head injuries, prefers to explain it
- by "stomach hyperacidity," as if it were limited to the stomach and duodenum. And the spontaneous bruising,
- and easy bruising, that is experienced by millions of women, especially with the premenstrual syndrome, and
- nose bleeds, and scleral bleeding, purpura senilis, urinary bleeding, bleeding gums, and many other kinds of
- "spontaneous" or stress related bleeding, are treated by main-line medicine as if they had no particular
- physiological significance.
- </p>
-
- <p>
- Stress is an energy problem, that leads to the series of hormonal and metabolic reactions that I have often
- written about--lipolysis, glycolysis, increased serotonin, cortisol, estrogen, prolactin, leaky capillaries,
- protein catabolism, etc. The capillaries are among the first tissues to be damaged by stress.
- </p>
- <p>
- Although Selye showed that estrogen treatment mimics shock and stress, and that progesterone prevents the
- stress reaction, the effects of these hormones on the circulatory system have never been treated
- systematically. Katherina Dalton observed that progesterone treatment prevented the spontaneous bruising of
- the premenstrual syndrome<strong>;</strong> Soderwall observed that estrogen caused enlargement of the
- adrenals, sometimes with hemorrhage and necrosis<strong>;</strong> old female animals often have bleeding in
- the adrenals (Dhom, et al., 1981). Strangely, estrogen's induction of uterine bleeding has been
- compartmentalized, as if the endometrial blood vessels didn't follow the same rules as vessels elsewhere in
- the body. Both estrogen and cortisol are known to cause clotting disorders and to increase capillary
- fragility, but these steroids have been elevated to the realm of billion dollar drug products, beyond the
- reach of ordinary physiological thinking. Other stress-released substances that are entangled in the drug
- market (tryptophan, serotonin, nitric oxide, and unsaturated fats, for example) are similarly exempt from
- consideration as factors in circulatory, neoplastic, and degenerative diseases.
- </p>
- <p>
- At the time Selye was observing stress-induced bleeding, standard medicine was putting gelatin to
- use--orally, subcutaneously, and intravenously--to control bleeding. Since ancient times, it had been used
- to stop bleeding by applying it to wounds, and this had finally been incorporated into medical practice.
- </p>
-
- <p>
- The 1936 Cyclopedia of Medicine (G.M. Piersol, editor, volume 6) mentions the use of gelatin solution to
- quickly control nosebleeds, excessive menstrual bleeding, bleeding ulcers (using three doses of 18 grams as
- a 10% solution during one day), and bleeding from hemorrhoids and the lower bowel, and hemorrhage from the
- bladder. But since Selye's work relating the thrombohemorrhagic syndromes to stress wasn't known at that
- time, gelatin was thought of as a useful drug, rather than as having potentially far-reaching physiological
- effects, antagonizing some of the agents of stress-induced tissue damage.
- </p>
- <p>
- Skin cells and nerve cells and many other cells are "electrically" stabilized by glycine, and this effect is
- currently being described in terms of a "chloride current." A variety of mechanisms have been proposed for
- the protective effects of some of the amino acids, based on their use as energy or for other metabolic
- purpose, but there is evidence that glycine and alanine act protectively without being metabolized, simply
- by their physical properties.
- </p>
- <p>
- A small dose of glycine taken shortly after suffering a stroke was found to accelerate recovery, preventing
- the spreading of injury through its inhibitory and antiinflammatory actions. Its nerve-stabilizing action,
- increasing the amount of stimulation required to activate nerves, is protective in epilepsy, too. This
- effect is important in the regulation of sleep, breathing, and heart rhythm.
- </p>
- <p>
- Glycine's antispastic activity has been used to alleviate the muscle spasms of multiple sclerosis. It is
- thought to moderate some of the symptoms of schizophrenia.
- </p>
- <p>
- A recent publication shows that glycine alleviates colitis; but the use of gelatin, especially in the form
- of a concentrated gelatinous beef broth, for colitis, dysentery, ulcers, celiac disease, and other diseases
- of the digestive system, goes far back in medical history. Pavlov's observation of its effectiveness in
- stimulating the secretion of digestive juices occurred because the stimulating value of broth was already
- recognized.
- </p>
-
- <p>
- Although I pointed out a long time ago the antithyroid effects of excessive cysteine and tryptophan from
- eating only the muscle meats, and have been recommending gelatinous broth at bedtime to stop nocturnal
- stress, it took me many years to begin to experiment with large amounts of gelatin in my diet. Focusing on
- the various toxic effects of tryptophan and cysteine, I decided that using commercial gelatin, instead of
- broth, would be helpful for the experiment. For years I hadn't slept through a whole night without waking,
- and I was in the habit of having some juice or a little thyroid to help me go back to sleep. The first time
- I had several grams of gelatin just before bedtime, I slept without interruption for about 9 hours. I
- mentioned this effect to some friends, and later they told me that friends and relatives of theirs had
- recovered from long-standing pain problems (arthritic and rheumatic and possibly neurological) in just a few
- days after taking 10 or 15 grams of gelatin each day.
- </p>
- <p>
- For a long time, gelatin's therapeutic effect in arthritis was assumed to result from its use in repairing
- the cartilage or other connective tissues around joints, simply because those tissues contain so much
- collagen. (Marketers suggest that eating cartilage or gelatin will build cartilage or other collagenous
- tissue.) Some of the consumed gelatin does get incorporated into the joint cartilage, but that is a slow
- process, and the relief of pain and inflammation is likely to be almost immediate, resembling the
- antiinflammatory effect of cortisol or aspirin.
- </p>
- <p>
- Inflammation produces fibrosis, because stress, hypoxia, and inadequate supply of glucose stimulate the
- fibroblasts to produce increased amounts of collagen. In lungs, kidneys, liver, and other tissues, glycine
- protects against fibrosis, the opposite of what the traditional view would suggest.
- </p>
- <p>
- Since excess tryptophan is known to produce muscle pain, myositis, even muscular dystrophy, gelatin is an
- appropriate food for helping to correct those problems, simply because of its lack of tryptophan. (Again,
- the popular nutritional idea of amino acids as simply building blocks for tissues is exactly wrong--muscle
- protein can exacerbate muscle disease.) All of the conditions involving excess prolactin, serotonin, and
- cortisol (autism, postpartum and premenstrual problems, Cushing's disease, "diabetes," impotence, etc.)
- should benefit from reduced consumption of tryptophan. But the specifically antiinflammatory amino acids in
- gelatin also antagonize the excitatory effects of the tryptophan-serotonin-estrogen- prolactin system.
- </p>
-
- <p>
- In some of the older studies, therapeutic results improved when the daily gelatin was increased. Since 30
- grams of glycine was commonly used for treating muscular dystrophy and myasthenia gravis, a daily intake of
- 100 grams of gelatin wouldn't seem unreasonable, and some people find that quantities in that range help to
- decrease fatigue. For a growing child, though, such a large amount of refined gelatin would tend to displace
- other important foods. The National Academy of Sciences recently reviewed the requirements for working
- adults (male and female soldiers, in particular), and suggested that 100 grams of balanced protein was
- needed for efficient work. For adults, a large part of that could be in the form of gelatin.
- </p>
- <p>
- If a person eats a large serving of meat, it's probably helpful to have 5 or 10 grams of gelatin at
- approximately the same time, so that the amino acids enter the blood stream in balance.
- </p>
- <p>
- Asian grocery stores are likely to sell some of the traditional gelatin-rich foods, such as prepared pig
- skin and ears and tails, and chicken feet.
- </p>
- <p>
- Although the prepared powdered gelatin doesn't require any cooking, dissolving it in hot water makes it
- digest a little more quickly. It can be incorporated into custards, mousses, ice cream, soups, sauces,
- cheese cake, pies, etc., or mixed with fruit juices to make desserts or (with juice concentrate) candies.
- </p>
- <p>
- Although pure glycine has its place as a useful and remarkably safe drug, it shouldn't be thought of as a
- food, because manufactured products are always likely to contain peculiar contaminants.
- </p>
-
- <p><strong> </strong></p>
- <p>
- <strong><h3>REFERENCES</h3></strong>
- </p>
- <p>
- Am J Physiol. 1990 Jul;259(1 Pt 2):F80-7. <strong>Mechanisms of perfused kidney cytoprotection by alanine
- and glycine.</strong> Baines AD, Shaikh N, Ho P.
- </p>
- <p>
- Neurol. 1974; 24:392. <strong>Preliminary study of glycine administration in patients with
- spasticity.</strong> Barbeau A.
- </p>
-
- <p>
- Virchows Arch B Cell Pathol Incl Mol Pathol. 1981;36(2-3):195-206. <strong>Peliosis of the female adrenal
- cortex of the aging rat.</strong> Dhom G, Hohbach C, Mausle E, Scherr O, Uebergerg H. Foci of apparent
- peliosis are regularly observed in the mid-zone of the adrenal cortex in female rats older than 600 days.
- The changes present range from ectasis of the sinusoids to extensive cystic change of the whole organ.
- <strong>This lesion occurs almost exclusively in female animals and was seen in only one of 50 male animals
- older than 600 days examined.</strong> Experimental stimulation or inhibition did not influence adrenal
- peliosis. Electron microscopically, there was marked pericapillary edema with collapse of the capillaries,
- and erythrocytes and thrombocytes were seen infiltrating the edema. Fibrin accumulated in the larger foci.
- Degenerative alterations were not observed either in the epithelial cells of the cortex or in mesenchymal
- cells. The pathogenesis is unknown, but the possible role of <strong>constant estrus in aging female rats
- will be discussed.</strong>
- </p>
- <p>
- Riv Neurol. 1976 Mar-Jun;46(3):254-61.<strong>
- [Antagonism between focal epilepsy and taurine administered by cortical Perfusion]</strong> Durelli L,
- Quattrocolo G, Buffa C, Valentini C, Mutani R. The therapeutic action of taurine cortical perfusion was
- tested in cats affected with Premarin and cobalt cortical epileptogenic foci. In all animals taurine
- provoked the disappearance of EEG epileptic abnormalities. In the case of Premarin focus the effect appeared
- more quickly than in the cobalt one. This different time-course, according to previous reports on the
- antiepileptic action of the parenteral administration of the amino acid, <strong>suggests the hypothesis of
- a taurine direct inhibitory action against Premarin focus</strong> and, on the contrary, a mediated
- action towards the cobalt's. The latter might be related to the metabolic production of some taurine
- derivative.
- </p>
-
- <p>
- Ann Neurol. 1998; 44:261-265. <strong>Beneficial effects of L-serine and glycine in the management of
- seizures in 3-phosphoglycerate dehydrogenase deficiency.</strong> de Kooning JT, Duran M, Dorling L, et
- al.
- </p>
- <p>
- Arch Gen Psychiatry. 1999; 56:29-36.<strong>
- Efficacy of high-dose glycine in the treatment of enduring negative symptoms of schizophrenia.</strong>
- Heresco-Levy U, Javitt DC, Ermilov M, et al.
- </p>
- <p>
- Free Radic Biol Med. 2001 Nov 15;31(10):1236-44. <strong>Dietary glycine inhibits activation of nuclear
- factor kappa B and prevents liver injury in hemorrhagic shock in the rat.</strong> Mauriz JL, Matilla B,
- Culebras JM, Gonzalez P, Gonzalez-Gallego J. "Feeding the rats glycine significantly reduced mortality, the
- elevation of plasma<strong> </strong>
-
- transaminase levels and hepatic necrosis. <strong>The increase in plasma TNFalpha and nitric oxide (NO) was
- also blunted by glycine feeding."</strong>
- </p>
- <p>
- Am Fam Phys 1979 May;19(5):77-86. <strong>
- 'Not Cushing's syndrome'.</strong> Rincon J, Greenblatt RB, Schwartz RP Cushing's syndrome is
- characterized by protein wasting secondary to hypergluconeogenesis, which produces thin skin, poor muscle
- tone, osteoporosis and <strong>capillary fragility.</strong> These features distinguish patients with true
- Cushing's syndrome from those who have some of the clinical findings often associated with the syndrome,
- such as obesity, hypertension, striae and hirsutism. The dexamethasone suppression test helps identify
- patients with pseudo-Cushing's syndrome.
- </p>
-
- <p>
- Carcinogenesis. 1999; 20:2075-2081. <strong>Dietary glycine prevents the development of liver tumors caused
- by the peroxisome proliferator WY-14, 643</strong>. Rose ML, Cattley RC, Dunn C, et al.
- </p>
- <p>
- Carcinogenesis, Vol. 20, No. 5, 793-798, May 1999.<strong>
- Dietary glycine inhibits the growth of B16 melanoma tumors in mice.</strong>
- <hr />
- </p>
- <p>
- Carcinogenesis, Vol. 20, No. 11, 2075-2081, November 1999. <strong>Dietary glycine prevents the development
- of liver tumors caused by the peroxisome proliferator WY-14,643.</strong> M.L.Rose, R.C.Cattley1,
- C.Dunn, V.Wong, Xiang Li and R.G.Thurman. Simpson RK Jr, Gondo M, Robertson CS, Goodman JC. <strong>The
- influence of glycine and related compounds on spinal cord injury-related spasticity.</strong>
-
- Neurochem Res. 1995; 20:1203-1210.
- </p>
- <p>
- Neurochem Res. 1995 Oct;20(10):1203-10. <strong>
- The influence of glycine and related compounds on spinal cord injury-induced spasticity.</strong>
- Simpson RK Jr, Gondo M, Robertson CS, Goodman JC.
- </p>
- <p>
- Neurochem Res. 1996 Oct;21(10):1221-6. <strong>Reduction in the mechanonociceptive response by intrathecal
- administration of glycine and related compounds.</strong>
- Simpson RK Jr, Gondo M, Robertson CS, Goodman JC.
- </p>
- <p>
- Neurol Res. 1998 Mar;20(2):161-8. <strong>Glycine receptor reduction within segmental gray matter in a rat
- model in neuropathic pain.</strong> Simpson RK Jr, Huang W.
- </p>
-
- <p>
- Neurol Res. 2000 Mar;22(2):160-4. <strong>Long-term intrathecal administration of glycine prevents
- mechanical hyperalgesia in a rat model of neuropathic pain.
- </strong>Huang W, Simpson RK.
- </p>
- <p>
- Pharmacol Biochem Behav. 1992 Nov;43(3):669-71. <strong>Branched-chain amino acids increase the seizure
- threshold to picrotoxin in rats.</strong> Skeie B, Petersen AJ, Manner T, Askanazi J, Jellum E, Steen
- PA.
- </p>
- <p>
- Thromb Diath Haemorrh Suppl 1968;30:165-9<strong> [Purpura of the premenstrum and climacteric]. </strong>
- [Article in German]<strong> </strong>Stamm H.
- </p>
-
- <p>
- Toth E, Lajtha A. <strong>Glycine potentiates the action of some anticonvulsant drugs in some seizure
- models.</strong> Neurochem Res. 1984; 9:1711-1718.
- </p>
- <p>
- Sheng Li Ke Xue Jin Zhan. 2000 Jul;31(3):231-3. <strong>
- [The roles of estrogen and progestin in epileptogenesis and their mechanisms of action]</strong>
- [Article in Chinese] Wang Q.
- </p>
- <p>
- FASEB J. 2000; 14:476-484.<strong>
- Glycine-gated channels in neutrophils attenuate calcium influx and superoxide production.</strong>
- Wheeler M, Stachlewitz RT, Yamashina S, et al.
- </p>
-
- <p>
- Cell Mol Life Sci.1999; 56:843-856. <strong>Glycine: a new anti-inflammatory immunonutrient.</strong>
- Wheeler MD, Ikejema K, Mol Life Sci. Enomoto N, et al.
- </p>
- <p>
- Nutr Cancer. 2001;40(2):197-204. <strong>Endothelial cells contain a glycine-gated chloride channel.</strong
- > Yamashina S, Konno A, Wheeler MD, Rusyn I, Rusyn EV, Cox AD, Thurman RG. "<strong>Glycine inhibited growth
- of B16 melanoma tumors in vivo most likely because of the inhibition of angiogenesis. Here, the
- hypothesis that the anticancer effect of glycine in vivo is due to expression of a glycine-gated Cl-
- channel in endothelial cells was tested.</strong>
- </p>
- <p>
- Biull Eksp Biol Med. 1981 Nov;92(11):599-601. <strong>[Repair processes in wound tissues of experimental
- animals following administration of glycine]
- </strong>
- [Article in Russian] Zaidenberg MA, Pisarzhevskii SA, Nosova IM, Kerova AN, Dudnikova GN. A study was made
- of the effect of glycine given in doses approximating the physiological ones on the repair of processes in
- rat wound tissues. It was disclosed that in the early periods of wound healing, glycine administration leads
- to the increased content of cAMP and cAMP/cGMP ratio in the wound muscle and then in the granulation tissue,
- which appears to promote the intensification of the repair processes manifesting in the changes in tissue
- metabolism (DNA, collagen), in anti-inflammatory action, as well as in a more rapid maturation of the
- granulation tissue and wound reduction.. It was also found that the doses of glycine tested do not affect
- the content of insulin and hydrocortisone in the blood of experimental animals.
- </p>
-
- <p>
- <strong>"In recent years, evidence has mounted in favor of the antiinflammatory, immunomodulatory and
- cytoprotective effects of the simplest amino acid L-glycine." "Glycine protects against shock caused by
- hemorrhage, endotoxin and sepsis, prevents ischemia/reperfusion and cold storage/reperfusion injury to a
- variety of tissues and organs including liver, kidney, heart, intestine and skeletal muscle, and
- diminishes liver and renal injury caused by hepatic and renal toxicants and drugs. Glycine also protects
- against peptidoglycan polysaccharide-induced arthritis..." and inhibits gastric secretion "....and
- protects the gastric mucosa against chemically and stress-induced ulcers. Glycine appears to exert
- several protective effects, including antiinflammatory, immunomodulatory and direct cytoprotective
- actions. Glycine acts on inflammatory cells such as macrophages to suppress activation of transcription
- factors and the formation of free radicals and inflammatory cytokines. In the plasma membrane, glycine
- appears to activate a chloride channel that stabilizes or hyperpolarizes the plasma membrane potential.
- As a consequence, .... opening of ... calcium channels and the resulting increases in intracellular
- calcium ions are suppressed, which may account for the immunomodulatory and antiinflammatory effects of
- glycine. Lastly, glycine blocks the opening of relatively non-specific pores in the plasma membrane that
- occurs as the penultimate event leading to necrotic cell death."
- </strong>
- </p>
- <p>
- <strong> </strong>
- Zhong Z, Wheeler MD, Li X, Froh M, Schemmer P, Yin M, Bunzendaul H, Bradford B, Lemasters JJ.<strong>,
- </strong>"L-Glycine: a novel antiinflammatory, immunomodulatory, and cytoprotective agent." Curr Opin Clin
- Nutr Metab Care. 2003 Mar;6(2):229-40. © Ray Peat Ph.D. 2009. All Rights Reserved. www.RayPeat.com
- </p>
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