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- <html>
- <head><title>Intelligence and metabolism</title></head>
- <body>
- <h1>
- Intelligence and metabolism
- </h1>
-
- <p>
- <hr />
- <hr />
- </p>
-
- <p>
- <strong>Appropriate stimulation is an essential part of the developmental process. Inappropriate stimulation
- is a stress that deforms the process of growth. Mediators of stress, such as serotonin, can cause
- persistent distortions of physiology and behavior.</strong>
- </p>
- <p>
- <strong>Education can either activate or suppress mental energy. If it is mainly obedience training, it
- suppresses energy. If it creates social dislocations, it disturbs mental and emotional energy.</strong>
- </p>
- <p>
- <strong>Stress early in life can impair learning, cause aggressive or compulsive behavior, learned
- helplessness, shyness, alcoholism, and other problems.</strong>
- </p>
- <p>
- <strong>Serotonin activates the glucocorticoid system, which can produce brain atrophy. Antiserotonin agents
- protect against brain atrophy and many other effects of stress. The brain-protecting neurosteroids,
- including pregnenolone and progesterone, which are increased by some kinds of stimulation, are decreased
- by isolation stress, and in their absence, serotonin and the glucocorticoids are relatively unopposed.
- </strong>
- </p>
- <p>
- <strong>Since excess serotonin can cause thrombosis and vasospasms, and the excess cortisol resulting from
- hyperserotonemia can weaken blood vessels and the immune system, a person's longevity is likely to be
- shortened if something doesn't intervene to alter the patterns induced by stress early in life.</strong>
- </p>
-
- <p>
- <hr />
- <hr />
- </p>
- <p>
- <strong>Baroness Blatch: "My Lords, the levels of achievement are well above the national average of our own
- state schools."
- </strong>
- </p>
- <p>
- <strong>"This is a school which attained 75 per cent A to C passes in 1998, and 63.9 per cent in 1999. Those
- figures are well above national averages. There is no truancy; and there is the highest possible level
- of parental satisfaction with the school. When those parents are paying their money and know what they
- are paying for, who are we to take a different view about the philosophy of education in a private
- school?"</strong>
- </p>
- <p>
- <strong>Comment during debate in House of Lords, June 30, 1999, on Chief Inspector of Schools Woodhead's
- threat to close Summerhill, a democratic school which had been started in 1921.
- </strong>
- </p>
- <p>
- <strong>In 1927, the government inspectors had recommended that 'all educationalists' should come to
- Summerhill to see its 'invaluable' research, which demonstrated that students' development is better
- when they regulate themselves and are not required to attend lessons.</strong>
- </p>
-
- <p>
- <hr />
- <hr />
- </p>
- <p>
- Having written about animal intelligence, and the ways in which it is similar to human intelligence, now I
- want those ideas to serve as a context for thinking about human intelligence without many of the usual
- preconceptions.
- </p>
- <p>
- Intelligence is an interface between physiology and the environment, so it's necessary to think about each
- aspect in relation to the other. Things, both biochemical and social, that enhance intelligence enhance life
- itself, and vice versa.
- </p>
- <p>
- Psychologists have tried to give their own definitions to words like idiot, imbecile, moron, and genius, but
- they have just been refining the clich"s of the culture, in which "dummy" is one of the first words that
- kids in the U.S. learn. Many psychologists have tried to create "culture-free" tests of intelligence, making
- it clear that they believe in something like innate animal intelligence, though they usually call it
- "genetic" intelligence. Other psychometrists have transcended not only biology but even rationality, and
- have catalogued the <strong><em>preferences</em></strong>
-
- of people that they define as intelligent, and designed "I.Q. tests" based on the selection of things that
- were preferred by "intelligent people." This behavior is remarkably similar to the "psychometry" of the
- general culture, in which "smart" people are those who do things the "right" way.
- </p>
- <p>
- About thirty years ago, someone found that the speed with which the iris contracts in response to a flash of
- light corresponds very closely to the I.Q. measured by a psychologist using a standard intelligence test.
- The devices used to measure reaction time in drivers' education courses also give a good indication of a
- person's intelligence, but so does measuring their heart rate, or taking their temperature. Colleges would
- probably be embarrassed to admit students on the basis of their temperature (though they commonly award
- scholarships on the basis of the ability to throw a ball). Colleges, to the extent that they are serious
- about the business of education, are interested in the student's ability to master the culture.
- </p>
- <p>
- The way a person has learned during childhood can shape that person's manner of grasping the culture. To
- simply accelerate the learning of a standard curriculum will increase that person's "I.Q." on a conventional
- test, but the important issue is whether it is really intelligent to learn and to value the things taught in
- those curricula. Some educators say that their purpose is to socialize and indoctrinate the students into
- their discipline, others believe their purpose is to help their students to develop their minds. Both of
- these approaches may operate within the idea that "the culture" is something like a museum, and that
- students should become curators of the collection, or of some part of it. If we see the culture
- metaphorically as a mixture of madhouse, prison, factory, and theater, the idea of "developing the student's
- mind" will suggest very different methods and different attitudes toward "the curriculum"
- </p>
- <p>
- Even sophisticated people can fall into stereotyped thinking when they write about issues of intelligence.
- For example, no one considers it a sign of genius when a slum kid is fluent in both Spanish and English, but
- when some of history's brightest people are discussed, the fact that they learned classical Greek at an
- early age is always mentioned. No one mentions whether they were competent in idiomatic Spanish.
- </p>
-
- <p>
- One of the old cultural stereotypes is that child prodigies always "burn out," as if they were consuming a
- fixed amount of mental energy at an accelerated rate. (This idea of burn-out is isomorphic with the other
- cultural stereotypes relating aging to the "rate of living," for example that people with slow heart beats
- will live longer.) Some of the men who have been considered as the world's brightest have, in fact, gone
- through a crisis of depression, and Terman's long-term study of bright people found that "maladjustment" did
- increase with I.Q., especially among women. But the facts don't support the concept of "burn-out" at all. I
- think the facts reveal instead a deep flaw in our ideas of education and professional knowledge.
- </p>
- <p>
- In a world run by corporation executives, university presidents ("football is central to the university's
- mission"), congressmen, bankers, oilmen, and agency bureaucrats, people with the intelligence of an ant (a
- warm ant) might seem outlandishly intelligent. This is because the benighted self-interest of the
- self-appointed ruling class recognizes that objective reality is always a threat to their interests. If
- people, for example, realized that estrogen therapy and serotonin-active drugs and x-rays and nuclear power
- and atomic bomb tests were beneficial only to those whose wealth and power derive from them, the whole
- system would lose stability. Feigned stupidity becomes real stupidity.
- </p>
- <p>
- But apart from ideologically institutionalized stupidity, there are real variations in the ability to learn,
- to remember and to apply knowledge, and to solve problems. These variations are generally metabolic
- differences, and so will change according to circumstances that affect metabolism. Everyday social
- experiences affect metabolism, stimulating and supporting some kinds of brain activity, suppressing and
- punishing others. All of the activities in the child's environment are educational, in one way or another.
- </p>
- <p>
- Some of the famous prodigies of history illustrate the importance of ideology in the development of
- intellect. Family ideology, passing on the philosophical orientations of parents and their friends, shapes
- the way the children are educated.
- </p>
- <p>
- Some of these family traditions can be traced by considering who the child's godfather was. Jeremy Bentham
- was John Stuart Mill's godfather, Mill was Bertrand Russell's; Ralph Waldo Emerson was William James'
- godfather, James was W. J. Sidis's. Willy Sidis was educated by his parents to demonstrate their theory of
- education, which grew out of the philosophies of Emerson and James. His father, Boris Sidis, was a pioneer
- in the study of hypnosis, and he believed that suggestion could mobilize the mind's "reserve energy." Willy
- learned several languages and advanced mathematics at an early age. After he graduated from Harvard at the
- age of 16, he tried teaching math at Rice Institute, but he was displeased by the attitudes of his students
- and of the newspaper and magazine writers who made a profession of mocking him. He attended law school at
- Harvard, and would have been imprisoned as a conscientious objector if the war hadn't ended.
- </p>
- <p>
- Antisemitism probably played a role in his sense of isolation when he was at Harvard and Rice. In 1912 Henry
- Goddard, a pioneer in intelligence testing (and author of <strong><em>The Kallikak Family: A Study in the
- Heredity of Feeble- Mindedness</em>)</strong>, administered intelligence tests to immigrants and
- determined that 83 percent of Jews and 87 percent of Russians were "feeble-minded." By the standards of the
- time, it was highly inappropriate for the child of extremely poor Jewish immigrants from eastern Europe to
- be so bright.
- </p>
- <p>
- Sidis hid from the press, and worked as a bookkeeper and clerk, while he studied and wrote. During his years
- of obscurity, he wrote books on philosophy and American history. Eventually, the journalists discovered him
- again, and after prolonged lawsuits against the magazines for invasion of privacy and slander, he died of a
- stroke at the age of 46.
- </p>
- <p>
- Sidis is probably the culture's favorite example of the child prodigy who burns out, but people (Robert
- Persig, Buckminster Fuller) who have read his books have said favorable things about them. The journalists'
- emphasis on the fact that Sidis never held a prestigious job nicely illustrates their clich" mentality: "If
- you're so smart, why aren't you rich?" But throughout history, intelligent nonconformists have supported
- themselves as craft-workers or technicians--Socrates as a stone mason, Spinoza as a lens grinder, Blake as
- an engraver, Einstein as a patent examiner, for example.
- </p>
-
- <p>
- In conventional schools (as in conventional society) 10,000 questions go unanswered, not only because a
- teacher with many students has no time to answer them, but also because most teachers wouldn't know most of
- the answers.
- </p>
- <p>
- The parents of W. J. Sidis and J. S. Mill were remarkably well educated people who, because they dissented
- from society's ideology, chose to spend much of their time educating their children. Whenever a question
- about Euclidean geometry or Greek grammar occurred to the child, it could be answered immediately. It was
- only natural that progress would be fast, but there were more important differences.
- </p>
- <p>
- When questions are answered, curiosity is rewarded, and the person is enlivened. In school, when following
- instructions and conforming to a routine is the main business, many questions must go unanswered, and
- curiosity is punished by the dulling emptiness of the routine.
- </p>
- <p>
- Some schools are worse than others. For example, slum children were given I.Q. tests when they started
- school, and each subsequent year, and their I.Q.s dropped with each year of school. In a stimulating
- environment, the reverse can happen, the I.Q. can rise each year. Since the tests aren't "culture free,"
- their scores reflected the material that they were being taught, but they undoubtedly also reflected the
- increasing boredom and despair of the children in a bad school, or the increasing liveliness of the children
- in the stimulating environment.
- </p>
- <p>
- I have spoken with people in recent years who still held the idea of a fixed genetic mental potential, who
- believe that poor children fall behind because they are reaching their "genetic limit." For them, the I.Q.
- represents an index of intrinsic quality, and is as important as distinguishing between caviar and frogs'
- eggs. The rat research of Marion Diamond and others at the University of California, however, showed that
- the structure, weight, and biochemistry of a rat's brain changes, according to the amount of environmental
- stimulation and opportunity for exploration. This improvement of brain structure and function is passed on
- to the next generation, giving it a head-start. It isn't likely that rats are more disposed than humans to
- benefit from mental activity, and in the years since Diamond's research there have been many discoveries
- showing that brains of all sorts complexify structurally and functionally in response to stimulation.
- </p>
-
- <p>
- Rats isolated in little boxes, generation after generation--the normal laboratory rats--were the standard,
- but now it's known that isolation is a stress that alters brain chemistry and function.
- </p>
- <p>
- Willy Sidis and John Stuart Mill were being stimulated and allowed to develop in one direction, but they
- were being isolated from interaction with their peers. When Mill was twenty he went into a depression, and
- later he wrote that it was because he discovered that he was unable to <strong><em>feel.</em></strong> He
- had developed only part of his personality.
- </p>
- <p>
- Bertrand Russell (1872-1970), orphaned at the age of four, went to live with his grandmother, who chose not
- to send him to school, but provided tutors. He didn't experience a sense of academic pressure, and was able
- to read whatever he wanted in his late grandfather's library. He didn't realize that he was unusually bright
- until he went to Cambridge. The unusual freedom of his childhood must have contributed to his willingness to
- hold unpopular opinions. In 1916 he was fined, and in 1918 imprisoned for 6 months, for opposing the war.
- </p>
-
- <p>
- In 1927, Russell and his wife, Dora Black, started a school. He later wrote that, although the average
- student at the school was very bright, an exceptionally bright student was likely to be ostracized by the
- less bright students. He commented on the harm done to the brightest students by their social isolation,
- probably thinking about his own education in relative isolation. A psychologist (Leta Hollingworth, 1942)
- has made similar observations about the isolation that can be produced by a large difference of I.Q. She did
- a series of studies of very bright children, beginning in 1916, including working with some of them in a
- program she designed in a New York public school. Her empathy allowed her to discover things that weren't
- apparent to her contemporaries.
- </p>
- <p>
- During this time Lewis Terman was studying bright children, and wanted to disprove some of the popular
- stereotypes about intelligent people, and to support his ideology of white racial superiority. In 1922 he
- got a large grant, and sorted out about 1500 of the brightest children from a group of 250,000 in
- California. He and his associates then monitored them for the rest of their lives (described in <strong><em
- >Genetic Studies of Genius</em></strong>). His work contradicted the stereotype of bright people as
- being sickly or frail, but, contrary to his expectation, there was an association between maladjustment and
- higher I.Q.; the incidence of neurotic fatigue, anxiety, and depression increased along with the I.Q. The
- least bright of his group were more successful in many ways than the most bright. He didn't really confront
- the implications of this, though it seriously challenged his belief in a simple genetic racial superiority
- of physique, intellect, and character.
- </p>
- <p>
- I.Q. testing originated in a historical setting in which its purpose was often to establish a claim of
- racial superiority, or to justify sterilization or "euthanasia," or to exclude immigrants. More recently,
- the tests have been used to assign students to certain career paths. Because of their use by people in power
- to control others, the I.Q. tests have helped to create misunderstanding of the nature of intelligence. A
- person's "I.Q." now has very strong associations with the ideology of schooling as a road to financial
- success, rather than to enrichment of a shared mental life.
- </p>
- <p>
- If a bad school resembles, on the intellectual level, a confining rat box, the educational isolation of
- Mill, Russell, and Sidis was emotionally limiting, almost like solitary confinement. Once when Willy Sidis
- was arrested for marching in a May Day parade, his father was able to keep him from going to prison, but
- Willy apparently would have preferred the real prison to life with his parents.
- </p>
-
- <p>
- None of these three famous intellects was known for youthful playfulness, though playfulness is a quality
- that's closely associated with intelligence in mammals and birds. (Russell, however, in middle age developed
- many new interests, such as writing short stories, and had many new loves even in old age.) Stress early in
- life, such as isolation, reduces the playfulness of experimental animals. Playfulness is contagious, but so
- is the inability to play.
- </p>
- <p>
- In schools like Summerhill, which was founded in 1921 by A. S. Neill, students aren't required to attend
- classes when they would rather do something else, but at graduation they usually do better on their
- standardized national examinations than students who have dutifully attended classes for years. For
- students, as for rats, freedom and variety are good for the brain, and tedious conformity is harmful. When a
- school is very good, it can spread a contagion of playfulness along with an interest in learning.
- </p>
- <p>
- An environment that fosters optimal intelligence will necessarily promote the development of emotional
- health, and will almost certainly foster good physical health and longevity, because no part of the
- physiological system can thrive at the expense of another part. And within the boundaries of life-enriching
- environments, there are infinite possibilities for variety.
- </p>
- <p>
- There is a common belief in the rigidity of the adult nervous system, in analogy with feral cats or dogs,
- that supposedly can't be tamed if they have grown up without knowing humans. But people who have had the
- inclination to understand wild animals have found that, even when the animals have been captured as adults,
- they can become as sociable as if they had grown up in domestication. The "horse whisperer" demonstrated
- this sort of empathetic approach to animals. Sometimes, these people have a similar ability to communicate
- with people who are retarded, or autistic, or demented, but the professionalization of society has made it
- increasingly unlikely that people with the need for intuitive help will encounter someone who is able to
- give it. The closest psychology has come to professionally recognizing the importance of empathy was in Carl
- Rogers' work, e.g., <em>
- Client-Centered Therapy.</em>
- </p>
- <p>
- Rogers showed that a sense of solidarity must exist between therapist and client for the therapy to be
- helpful. A similar solidarity has to exist between teacher and student, for education to be successful. If
- ordinary family and social contacts could occur within such an atmosphere of mutual respect, psychopathology
- (including learning difficulties) would be much less common.
- </p>
- <p>
- Although three individuals don't prove an argument, I think the lives and situations of Sidis, Mill, and
- Russell are usefully symbolic. Sidis, who grew up under intense pressure and social isolation and in extreme
- poverty, died at the age of 46. Mill, who was educated mainly by his father, in secure financial
- circumstances, experienced social isolation and moderate pressure, and lived about 20 years longer than
- Sidis did. Russell, who grew up in the highest circles of the ruling class, experienced no pressure, and
- only the mild kind of social isolation that wasn't exceptional for his class. He lived to be 97.
- </p>
- <p>
- The psychopathology of social isolation has been studied in a variety of animals, and many features are
- similar across species, including humans. Aggression, helplessness, and reduced ability to learn are
- typically produced in animals by social isolation, and it's clear that certain kinds of family environment
- produce the same conditions in children. Schools seldom help, and often hinder, recovery from such early
- experiences.
- </p>
- <p>
- "Vital exhaustion," decreased slow wave sleep, and anger, which are associated with the "type A personality"
- and with circulatory and heart disease, appear to have their origin in childhood experiences. Low income and
- financial insecurity are strongly associated with anger, sleep disturbances, and circulatory disease. In
- animals stressed by social isolation, similar features emerge, under the influence of decreased
- neurosteroids, and increased serotonin and activity of the glucocorticoid system.
- </p>
- <p>
- The "smart drug" culture has generally been thinking pharmaceutically rather than biologically. Behind that
- pharmaceutical orientation there is sometimes the idea that the individual just isn't trying hard enough, or
- doesn't have quite the right genes to excel mentally.
- </p>
- <p>
- Many stimulants--amphetamine and estrogen, for example--can increase alertness temporarily, but at the
- expense of long range damage. The first principle of stimulation should be to avoid a harmful activation of
- the catabolic stress hormones. Light, play, environmental variety and exploratory conversations stimulate
- the whole organism in an integral way, stimulating repair processes and developmental processes.
- </p>
- <p>
- Any chemical support for intelligence should take into account the mind-damaging stresses that our culture
- can impose, and provide defense against those. In darkness and isolation, for example, the stress hormones
- increase, and the brain-protective steroids decrease. The memory improvement that results from taking
- pregnenolone or thyroid (which is needed for synthesizing pregnenolone from cholesterol) is the result of
- turning off the dulling and brain-dissolving stress hormones, allowing normal responsiveness to be restored.
- </p>
- <p>
- If we know that rats nurtured in freedom, in an interesting environment, grow more intelligent, then it
- would seem obvious that we should experiment with similar approaches for children--if we are really
- interested in fostering intelligence. And since violence and mental dullness are created by the same social
- stresses, even the desire to reduce school violence might force the society to make some improvements that
- will, as a side effect, foster intelligence.
- </p>
-
- <p><h3>REFERENCES</h3></p>
- <p>
- B. Russell: "If you wish to know what men will do, you must know not only or principally their material
- circumstances, but rather the whole system of their desires with their relative strengths."
- </p>
- <p>
- John Holt, from an interview in <em>Mother Earth News,</em> July/August, 1980<strong>:</strong>
- "I suggested that we simply provide young people with schools where there are a lot of interesting things to
- look at and work with . . . but that we let the chidlren learn in their own wqys. If they have questions,
- answer the questions. If they want to know where to look for something, show them where to look."
- </p>
- <p>
- John Holt, from the introduction to his book, <em>Teach Your Own,</em> (New York: Dell, 1981)<strong
- >:</strong> "The children in the classroom, despite their rich backgrounds and high I.Q.'s, were with few
- exceptions frightened, timid, evasive, and self-protecting. The infants at home were bold adventurers."
- </p>
-
- <p>
- "It soon became clear to me that children are by nature and from birth very curious about the world around
- them, and very energetic, resourceful, and competent in exploring it, finding out about it, and mastering.
- In short, much more eager to learn, and much better at learning, than most adults. Babies are not blobs, but
- true scientists. Why not then make schools into places in which children would be allowed, encouraged, and
- (if and when they asked) helped to explore and make sense of the world around them (in time and space) in
- ways that most interested them?"
- </p>
- <p>
- Psychosom Med 1984 Nov-Dec;46(6):546-8. <strong>Rapid communication: whole blood serotonin and the type A
- behavior pattern.</strong> Madsen D, McGuire MT.<strong>
- In 72 young males, whole blood serotonin is shown to have a pronounced relationship with the Type A
- behavior pattern.</strong> The relationship is explored with multivariate statistical techniques.
- </p>
- <p>
- J Neurochem. 2000 Aug;75(2):732-40. Serra M, Pisu MG, Littera M, Papi G, Sanna E, Tuveri F, Usala L, Purdy
- RH, Biggio G.<strong>
- Social isolation-induced decreases in both the abundance of neuroactive steroids and GABA(A) receptor
- function in rat brain.</strong>
- </p>
-
- <p>
- Ann Med 2000 Apr;32(3):210-21. <strong>Role of serotonin in memory impairment.</strong> Buhot MC, Martin S,
- Segu L.
- </p>
- <p>
- Ivan Illich and Etienne Verne, <strong><em>Imprisoned in the global classroom.</em></strong>
- London, Writers and Readers Publishing Cooperative, 1976.
- </p>
- <p>
- Ivan Illich, <strong><em>Deschooling society.</em></strong> Harmondsworth: Penguin, 1976 (1971).
- </p>
-
- <p>
- ----Tools for Conviviality<em> </em>(1973).
- </p>
- <p><strong><em>----Toward a history of needs.</em></strong> New York, Pantheon Books, c1978.</p>
- <p>
- ----Limits to medicine. medical nemesis : the expropriation of health. Harmondsworth New York, Penguin,
- 1977.
- </p>
- <p>
- <strong><em>----Celebration of awareness: a call for institutional revolution.</em></strong> Harmondsworth,
- Penguin Education, 1976. Pelican books Originally published: Garden City [N.Y.]: Doubleday, 1970; London:
- Calder and Boyars, 1971.
- </p>
-
- <p><strong><em>----Disabling professions.</em></strong> London, Boyars, 1977, Ideas in progress series.</p>
- <p>
- Eur J Pharmacol 1992 Feb 25;212(1):73-8. <strong>5-HT3 receptor antagonists reverse helpless behaviour in
- rats.</strong> Martin P, Gozlan H, Puech AJ Departement de Pharmacologie, Faculte de Medecine
- Pitie-Salpetriere, Paris, France. The effects of the 5-HT3 receptor antagonists, zacopride, ondansetron and
- ICS 205-930, were investigated in an animal model of depression, the learned helplessness test. Rats
- previously subjected to a session of 60 inescapable foot-shocks exhibited a deficit of escape performance in
- three subsequent shuttle-box sessions. The 5-HT3 receptor antagonists administered i.p. twice daily on a
- chronic schedule (zacopride 0.03-2 mg/kg per day; ondansetron and ICS 205-930: 0.125-2 mg/kg per day)
- reduced the number of escape failures at low to moderate daily doses. This effect was not observed with the
- highest dose(s) of zacopride, ondansetron and ICS 205-930 tested.. These results indicate that 5-HT3
- antagonists may have effects like those of conventional antidepressants in rats.
- </p>
- <p>
- Neuropharmacology 1992 Apr;31(4):323-30. <strong>Presynaptic serotonin mechanisms in rats subjected to
- inescapable shock.</strong> Edwards E, Kornrich W, Houtten PV, Henn FA. "After exposure to
- uncontrollable shock training, two distinct groups of rats can be defined in terms of their performance in
- learning to escape from a controllable stress. Learned helpless rats do not learn to terminate the
- controllable stress, whereas non-learned helpless rats learn this response as readily as naive control rats
- do." "These results implicate presynaptic serotonin mechanisms in the behavioral deficit caused by
- uncontrollable shock. In addition, a limbic-hypothalamic pathway may serve as a control center for the
- behavioral response to stress."
- </p>
- <p>
- Neurochem Int 1992 Jul;21(1):29-35.<strong>
- In vitro neurotransmitter release in an animal model of depression</strong>. Edwards E, Kornrich W, van
- Houtten P, Henn FA. "Sprague-Dawley rats exposed to uncontrollable shock can be separated by a subsequent
- shock escape test into two groups: a "helpless" (LH) group which demonstrates a deficit in escape behavior,
- and a "nonlearned helpless" (NLH) group which shows no escape deficit and acquires the escape response as
- readily as naive control rats (NC) do." "The major finding concerned a significant increase in endogenous
- and K(+)-stimulated serotonin (5-HT) release in the hippocampal slices of LH rats. There were no apparent
- differences in acetylcholine, dopamine and noradrenaline release in the hippocampus of LH rats as compared
- to NLH and NC rats. These results add further support to previous studies in our laboratory which implicate
- presynaptic 5-HT mechanisms in the behavioral deficit caused by uncontrollable shock."
- </p>
- <p>
- Psychiatry Res 1994 Jun;52(3):285-93. <strong>In vivo serotonin release and learned helplessness.</strong>
- Petty F, Kramer G, Wilson L, Jordan S Mental Health Clinic, Dallas Veterans Affairs Medical Center, TX.
- Learned helplessness, a behavioral depression caused by exposure to inescapable stress, is considered to be
- an animal model of human depressive disorder. Like human depression, learned helplessness has been
- associated with a defect in serotonergic function, but the nature of this relationship is not entirely
- clear. We have used in vivo microdialysis brain perfusion to measure serotonin (5-hydroxytryptamine, 5HT) in
- extracellular space of medial frontal cortex in conscious, freely moving rats. Basal 5HT levels in rats
- perfused before exposure to tail-shock stress did not themselves correlate with subsequent learned
- helplessness behavior. However, 5HT release after stress showed a significant increase with helpless
- behavior. <strong>These data support the hypothesis that a cortical serotonergic excess is causally related
- to the development of learned helplessness.</strong>
- </p>
- <p>
- Pharmacol Biochem Behav 1994 Jul;48(3):671-6. <strong>Does learned helplessness induction by haloperidol
- involve serotonin mediation?</strong> Petty F, Kramer G, Moeller M Veterans Affairs Medical Center,
- Dallas 75216. Learned helplessness (LH) is a behavioral depression following inescapable stress. Helpless
- behavior was induced in naive rats by the dopamine D2 receptor blocker haloperidol (HDL) in a dose-dependent
- manner, with the greatest effects seen at 20 mg/kg (IP). Rats were tested 24 h after injection. Haloperidol
- (IP) increased release of serotonin (5-HT) in medial prefrontal cortex (MPC) as measured by in vivo
- microdialysis. Perfusion of HDL through the probe in MPC caused increased cortical 5-HT release, as did
- perfusion of both dopamine and the dopamine agonist apomorphine. Our previous work found that increased 5-HT
- release in MPC correlates with the development of LH. The present work suggests that increased DA release in
- MPC, known to occur with both inescapable stress and with HDL, may play a necessary but not sufficient role
- in the development of LH. Also, this suggests that increased DA activity in MPC leads to increased 5-HT
- release in MPC and to subsequent behavioral depression.
- </p>
- <p>
- Arzneimittelforschung 1975 Nov; 25(11):1737-44<strong>. [Central action of WA-335-BS, a substance with
- peripheral antiserotonin and antihistaminic activity].</strong> Kahling J, Ziegler H, Ballhause H. "In
- rats and mice the serotonin and histamine antagonistic drug <strong>. . .</strong> (WA 335-BS) caused
- stronger central sedative effects than did cyproheptadine. WA 335-BS also displayed stronger activity
- against reserpine- and central tremorine-induced effects than did cyproheptadine and it slightly enhanced
- d-amphetamine-induced<strong> </strong>
-
- effects:<strong>
- therefore it may have antidepressant properties. WA 335-BS proved to be</strong>
- <strong>very effective against isolation-induced aggression in male mice.</strong> The comparatively small
- anxiolytic effects may have been caused in part by the central antiserotonin properties." "The results of
- our animal studies suggest WA 335-BS to be an antidepressant with sedative properties."
- </p>
- <p>
- Neuroscience 2000;100(4):749-68<strong>. Behavioral, neurochemical and endocrinological characterization of
- the early social isolation syndrome.</strong> Heidbreder CA, Weiss IC, Domeney AM, Pryce C, Homberg J,
- Hedou G, Feldon J, Moran MC, Nelson P. "Rearing rats in isolation has been shown to be a relevant paradigm
- for studying early life stress and<strong>
- understanding the genesis of depression and related affective disorders.</strong> Recent studies from
- our laboratory point to the relevance of studying the social isolation syndrome as a function of home caging
- conditions."
- </p>
-
- <p>
- Stroke 1991 Nov;22(11):1448-51. <strong>Platelet secretory products may contribute to neuronal
- injury.</strong> Joseph R, Tsering C, Grunfeld S, Welch KM. BACKGROUND: We do not fully understand the
- mechanisms for neuronal damage following cerebral arterial occlusion by a thrombus that consists mainly of
- platelets. The view that certain endogenous substances, such as glutamate, may also contribute to neuronal
- injury is now reasonably well established. Blood platelets are known to contain and secrete a number of
- substances that have been associated with neuronal dysfunction. Therefore, we hypothesize that a high
- concentration (approximately several thousand-fold higher than in plasma, in our estimation) of locally
- released platelet secretory products derived from the causative thrombus may contribute to neuronal injury
- and promote reactive gliosis. SUMMARY OF COMMENT: We have recently been able to report some direct support
- for this concept. When organotypic spinal cord cultures were exposed to platelet and platelet products, a
- significant reduction in the number and the size of the surviving neurons occurred in comparison with those
- in controls. We further observed that serotonin, a major platelet product, has neurotoxic properties. There
- may be other platelet components with similar effect.<strong>
- CONCLUSIONS: The hypothesis of platelet-mediated neurotoxicity gains some support from these recent in
- vitro findings. The concept could provide a new area of research in stroke, both at the clinical and
- basic levels.</strong>
- </p>
- <p>
- Am J Psychiatry 1981 Aug;138(8):1082-5.<strong>
- Tryptophan metabolism in children with attentional deficit disorder.</strong> Irwin M, Belendiuk K,
- McCloskey K, Freedman DX The authors present the first report, to their knowledge, of hyperserotonemia in
- children with attentional deficit disorder who had normal intelligence. Hyperserotonemic children had
- significantly lower levels of plasma total and protein-bound tryptophan and a higher percentage of free
- tryptophan than those with normal serotonin levels. Plasma kynurenine did not differ, suggesting that the
- hyperserotonemia is not due to a blockade of the kynurenine pathway but may reflect on increase in tissue
- tryptophan uptake and use.
- </p>
- <p>
- J Neuropsychiatry Clin Neurosci 1990 Summer;2(3):268-74.<strong>
- Autistic children and their first-degree relatives: relationships between serotonin and norepinephrine
- levels and intelligence.</strong> Cook EH, Leventhal BL, Heller W, Metz J, Wainwright M, Freedman DX
- "Whole-blood serotonin (5-HT) and plasma norepinephrine (NE) were studied in 16 autistic children, 21
- siblings of autistic children, and 53 parents of autistic children. <strong>Both plasma NE and whole-blood
- 5-HT were negatively correlated with vocabulary performance."
- </strong>
-
- "Eighteen subjects were hyperserotonemic (whole-blood 5-HT greater than 270 ng/ml). For these subjects,
- plasma NE was significantly higher than for subjects without hyperserotonemia."
- </p>
- <p>
- Biol Psychiatry 1998 Dec 15;44(12):1321-8. <strong>Cerebrospinal fluid monoamines in Prader-Willi
- syndrome.</strong> Akefeldt A, Ekman R, Gillberg C, Mansson JE "The behavioral phenotype of Prader-Willi
- syndrome (PWS) suggests hypothalamic dysfunction and altered neurotransmitter regulation. The purpose of
- this study was to examine whether there was any difference in the concentrations of monoamine metabolites in
- the cerebrospinal fluid (CSF) in PWS and non-PWS comparison cases." "The concentrations of<strong>
- dopamine and particularly serotonin metabolites were increased in the PWS group. The differences were
- most prominent for 5-hydroxyindoleacetic acid. The increased concentrations were found in all PWS cases
- independently of age, body mass index, and level of mental retardation." "The findings implicate
- dysfunction of the serotonergic system and possibly also of the dopamine system
- </strong>
- in PWS individuals . . . ."
- </p>
- <p>
- Pharmacol Biochem Behav 1976 Jul;5(1):55-61. <strong>The role of serotonergic pathways in isolation-induced
- aggression in mice.</strong> Malick JB, Barnett A Male mice that became aggressive following four weeks
- of social isolation were treated with seven known serotonin receptor antagonists. All of the<strong>
- antiserotonergic drugs selectively antagonized the fighting behavior of the isolated mice; the
- antiaggressive activity was selective since, at antifighting doses, none of the drugs either
- significantly altered spontaneous motor activity</strong>
-
- or impaired inclined-screen performance. <strong>Antagonism of 5-HTP-induced head-twitch was used as an in
- vivo measure of antiserotonergic activity and a statistically significant correlation existed between
- potency as an antiserotonergic and potency as an antiaggressive.</strong> PCPA, a serotonin depletor,
- also significantly <strong>antagonized isolation-induced aggression</strong> for at least 24 hr postdrug
- administration. The interrelationship between cholinergic and serotonergic mechanisms in the mediation of
- isolation aggression was investigated. The involvement of serotonergic systems in isolation-induced
- aggression is discussed.
- </p>
- <p>
- Probl Endokrinol (Mosk) 1979 May-Jun;25(3):49-52<strong>
- [Role of serotonin receptors of the medial-basal hypothalamus in the mechanisms of negative feedback of
- the hypophyseal-testicular complex].</strong> Naumenko EV, Shishkina GT. "Administration of serotonin
- into the lateral ventricle of the brain of male rats, against the background of complete isolation of the
- medial-basal hypothalamus was accompanied by the block of the compensatory elevation of the blood
- testosterone level following unilateral castration."
- </p>
- <p>
- Encephale 1994 Sep-Oct;20(5):521-5. <strong>[Can a serotonin uptake agonist be an authentic antidepressant?
- Results of a multicenter, multinational therapeutic trial].</strong> Kamoun A, Delalleau B, Ozun M The
- classical biochemical hypothesis of depression posits a functional deficit in central neurotransmitter
- systems particularly serotonin (5-HT) and noradrenaline. The major role suggested for 5-HT in this theory
- led to the development of a large number of compounds which selectively inhibit 5-HT uptake. Numerous
- clinical trials have demonstrated the antidepressant efficacy of such types of serotoninergic agents,
- supporting 5-HT deficit as the main origin of depression. <strong>Therefore, everything seemed clear:
- depression was caused by 5-HT deficit. Tianeptine is clearly active in classical animal models
- predictive of antidepressant activity, and is also active in behavioral screening tests: it antagonizes
- isolation induced aggression in mice and behavioral despair in rats.</strong> Biochemical studies have
- revealed that in contrast to classical tricyclic antidepressant,<strong>
- tianeptine stimulates 5-HT uptake
- </strong>
- in vivo in the rat brain. This somewhat surprising property was observed in the cortex and the hippocampus
- following both acute and chronic administrations. This increase in 5-HT uptake has also been confirmed in
- rat platelets after acute and<strong>
- chronic administrations. Moreover, in humans, a study in depressed patients demonstrated that tianeptine
- significantly increased platelet 5-HT uptake after a single administration as well as after 10 and 28
- days of treatment. The antidepressant activity of tianeptine has been evaluated in controlled studies
- versus reference antidepressants. Another study aiming to compare the antidepressant efficacy of
- tianeptine versus placebo and versus imiporamine is</strong> presented. 186 depressed patients were
- included in this trial. They presented with either Major Depression, single episode (24.6%) or Major
- Depression recurrent (66.8%) or Bipolar Disorder (depressed) (8.6%).
- </p>
- <p>
- Psychopharmacology (Berl) 1998 Oct;139(3):255-60.<strong>
- Ca2+ dependency of serotonin and dopamine release from CNS slices of chronically isolated rats.</strong>
- Jaffe EH. "We have used chronic isolated housing as an animal model of depression." "The following questions
- were addressed: first, if there is a change in the depolarization dependent release of DA and 5-HT from
- these CNS structures, and second, if the release is through the classical exocytotic mechanism. <strong>A
- significant increase in KCl stimulated release of 5-HT was observed in chronically isolated animals when
- compared to controls.
- </strong>
- 5-HT release was completely abolished from controls or isolated animals, when slices were incubated with
- Krebs containing zero Ca2+/10 mM Mg2+, the inorganic Ca2+ channel blockers, Cd2+ or Ni2+ and the calmodulin
- inhibitor, trifluoperazine." <strong>"The basal release of DA and 5-HT was similar in control and isolated
- animals and was not affected by the Ca2+ channel antagonists. The results suggest that extracellular
- Ca2+-dependent release of 5-HT and, to a lesser degree, of DA, is increased in this chronic animal model
- of depression in</strong> several CNS structures."
- </p>
-
- <p>
- Gen Pharmacol 1994 Oct;25(6):1257-1262.<strong>
- Serotonin-induced decrease in brain ATP, stimulation of brain anaerobic glycolysis and elevation of
- plasma hemoglobin; the protective action of calmodulin antagonists.</strong> Koren-Schwartzer N,
- Chen-Zion M, Ben-Porat H, Beitner R Department of Life Sciences, Bar-Ilan University, Ramat Gan, Israel.
- <strong>1. Injection of serotonin (5-hydroxytryptamine) to rats, induced a dramatic fall in brain ATP level,
- accompanied by an increase in P(i). Concomitant to these changes, the activity of cytosolic
- phosphofructokinase, the rate-limiting enzyme of glycolysis, was significantly enhanced. Stimulation of
- anaerobic glycolysis was also reflected by a marked increase in lactate content in brain. 2. Brain
- glucose</strong> 1,6-bisphosphate level was decreased, whereas fructose 2,6-bisphosphate was unaffected
- by serotonin. 3. All these serotonin-induced changes in brain, which are characteristic for cerebral
- ischemia, were prevented by treatment with the calmodulin (CaM) antagonists, trifluoperazine or
- thioridazine. 4<strong>.. Injection of serotonin also induced a marked elevation of plasma hemoglobin,
- reflecting lysed erythrocytes,</strong> which was also prevented by treatment with the CaM antagonists.
- 5.<strong>
- The present results suggest that CaM antagonists may be effective drugs in treatment of many
- pathological conditions and diseases in which plasma serotonin levels are known to increase.</strong>
- </p>
- <p>
- Gen Pharmacol 1994 Oct;25(6):1257-1262.<strong>
- Serotonin-induced decrease in brain ATP, stimulation of brain anaerobic glycolysis and elevation of
- plasma hemoglobin; the protective action of calmodulin antagonists.</strong> Koren-Schwartzer N,
- Chen-Zion M, Ben-Porat H, Beitner R Department of Life Sciences, Bar-Ilan University, Ramat Gan, Israel.
- <strong>1. Injection of serotonin (5-hydroxytryptamine) to rats, induced a dramatic fall in brain ATP level,
- accompanied by an increase in P(i). Concomitant to these changes, the activity of cytosolic
- phosphofructokinase, the rate-limiting enzyme of glycolysis, was significantly enhanced. Stimulation of
- anaerobic glycolysis was also reflected by a marked increase in lactate content in brain. 2. Brain
- glucose</strong> 1,6-bisphosphate level was decreased, whereas fructose 2,6-bisphosphate was unaffected
- by serotonin. 3. All these serotonin-induced changes in brain, which are characteristic for cerebral
- ischemia, were prevented by treatment with the calmodulin (CaM) antagonists, trifluoperazine or
- thioridazine. 4. Injection of serotonin also induced a marked elevation of plasma hemoglobin, reflecting
- lysed erythrocytes, which was also prevented by treatment with the CaM antagonists. 5. The present results
- suggest that CaM antagonists may be effective drugs in treatment of many pathological conditions and
- diseases in which plasma serotonin levels are known to increase.
- </p>
-
- <p>
- J Neural Transm 1998;105(8-9):975-86. <strong>Role of tryptophan in the elevated serotonin-turnover in
- hepatic encephalopathy.</strong> Herneth AM, Steindl P, Ferenci P, Roth E, Hortnagl H. "The increase of
- the brain levels of 5-hydroxyindoleacetic acid (5-HIAA) in hepatic encephalopathy (HE) suggests an increased
- turnover of serotonin (5-HT)." "These results provide further evidence for the role of tryptophan in the
- elevation of brain 5-HT metabolism and for a potential role of BCAA in the treatment of HE."
- </p>
- <p>
- Tugai VA; Kurs'kii MD; Fedoriv OM. <strong>[Effect of serotonin on Ca2+ transport in mitochondria conjugated
- with the respiratory chain].</strong> Ukrainskii Biokhimicheskii Zhurnal, 1973 Jul-Aug, 45(4):408-12.
- </p>
- <p>
- Kurskii MD; Tugai VA; Fedoriv AN.<strong>
- [Effect of serotonin and calcium on separate components of respiratory chain of mitochondria in some
- rabbit tissues].</strong>
- Ukrainskii Biokhimicheskii Zhurnal, 1970, 42(5):584-8.
- </p>
-
- <p>
- Watanabe Y; Shibata S; Kobayashi B. <strong>Serotonin-induced swelling of rat liver mitochondria.</strong>
- Endocrinologia Japonica, 1969 Feb, 16(1):133-47.
- </p>
- <p>
- Mahler DJ; Humoller FL. <strong>The influence of serotonin on oxidative metabolism of brain
- mitochondria.</strong> Proceedings of the Society for Experimental Biology and Medicine, 1968 Apr,
- 127(4):1074-9.
- </p>
- <p>
- Eur J Pharmacol 1994 Aug 11;261(1-2):25-32. <strong>The effect of alpha 2-adrenoceptor antagonists in
- isolated globally ischemic rat hearts.</strong> Sargent CA, Dzwonczyk S, Grover G.J. "The alpha
- 2-adrenoceptor antagonist, yohimbine, has been reported to protect hypoxic myocardium. Yohimbine has several
- other activities, including 5-HT receptor antagonism, at the concentrations at which protection was found."
- "Pretreatment with yohimbine (1-10 microM) caused a concentration-dependent increase in reperfusion left
- ventricular developed pressure and a reduction in end diastolic pressure and lactate dehydrogenase release.
- The structurally similar compound rauwolscine (10 microM) also protected the ischemic myocardium. In
- contrast, idozoxan (0.3-10 microM) or tolazoline (10 microM) had no protective effects. The<strong>
- cardioprotective effects of yohimbine were partially reversed by 30 microM 5-HT. These results indicate
- that the mechanism for the cardioprotective activity of yohimbine may involve 5-HT receptor antagonistic
- activity."
- </strong>
- </p>
-
- <p>
- Zubovskaia AM. <strong>[Effect of serotonin on some pathways of oxidative metabolism in the mitochondria of
- rabbit heart muscle].</strong> Voprosy Meditsinskoi Khimii, 1968 Mar-Apr, 14(2):152-7.
- </p>
- <p>
- Warashina Y. <strong>
- [On the effect of serotonin on phosphorylation of rat liver mitochondria</strong>]. Hoppe-Seylers
- Zeitschrift fur Physiologische Chemie, 1967 Feb, 348(2):139-48.
- </p>
- <p>
- Eur Neuropsychopharmacol 1997 Oct;7 Suppl 3:S323-S328. <strong>Prevention of stress-induced morphological
- and cognitive consequences</strong>.. McEwen BS, Conrad CD, Kuroda Y, Frankfurt M, Magarinos AM,
- McKittrick C. Atrophy and dysfunction of the human hippocampus is a feature of aging in some individuals,
- and this dysfunction predicts later dementia. There is reason to believe that adrenal glucocorticoids may
- contribute to these changes, since the elevations of glucocorticoids in Cushing's syndrome and during normal
- aging are associated with atrophy of the entire hippocampal formation in humans and are linked to deficits
- in short-term verbal memory. We have developed a model of stress-induced atrophy of the hippocampus of rats
- at the cellular level, and we have been investigating underlying mechanisms in search of agents that will
- block the atrophy. Repeated restraint stress in rats for 3 weeks causes changes in the hippocampal formation
- that include suppression of 5-HT1A receptor binding and atrophy of dendrites of CA3 pyramidal neurons, as
- well as impairment of initial learning of a radial arm maze task. <strong>
- Because serotonin is released by stressors and may play a role in the actions of stress on nerve cells,
- we investigated the actions of agents that facilitate or inhibit serotonin reuptake.</strong> Tianeptine
- is known to enhance serotonin uptake, and we compared it with fluoxetine, an inhibitor of 5-HT reuptake, as
- well as with desipramine. <strong>Tianeptine treatment (10 mg/kg/day) prevented the stress-induced atrophy
- of dendrites of CA3 pycamidal neurons,</strong> whereas neither fluoxetine (10 mg/kg/day) nor
- desipramine (10 mg/kg/day) had any effect. <strong>Tianeptine treatment also prevented the stress-induced
- impairment of radial maze learning.</strong>
-
- Because <strong>corticosterone- and stress-induced atrophy of CA3 dendrites is also blocked by phenytoin, an
- inhibitor of excitatory amino acid release and actions, these results suggest that serotonin released by
- stress or corticosterone may interact pre- or post-synaptically with glutamate released by stress or
- corticosterone, and that the final common path may involve interactive effects between serotonin and
- glutamate receptors on the dendrites of CA3 neurons innervated by mossy fibers from the dentate gyrus.
- We discuss the implications of these findings for treating cognitive impairments and the risk for
- dementia in the elderly.</strong>
- </p>
-
- © Ray Peat Ph.D. 2009. All Rights Reserved. www.RayPeat.com
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