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- <strong>MULTIPLE SCLEROSIS AND OTHER HORMONE-RELATED BRAIN SYNDROMES (1993)</strong>
-
- Since I am trying to discuss a complex matter in a single article, I have separately outlined the essential
- technical points of the argument in a section at the beginning, then I explain how my ideas on the subject
- developed, and finally there is a glossary. If you start with "Short-day brain stress," "Estrogen's
- effects," and "Symptoms and therapies," you will have the general picture, and can use the other sections to
- fill in the technical details.
- <strong> </strong>
- <strong>THE ARGUMENT: </strong> 1) The hormones pregnenolone, thyroid, and estrogen are
- involved in several ways with the changes that occur in multiple sclerosis, but no one talks about them. 2)
- The process of myelination is known to depend on the thyroid hormone. The myelinating cells are the
- oligodendroglia (oligodendrocytes) which appear to stop functioning in MS (and sometimes to a milder
- degree in Alzheimer's disease, and other conditions). The cells' absorption of thyroid hormone
- is influenced by dietary factors. 3) The oligodendrocytes are steroid-producing cells (1), and
- steroidogenesis is dependent on thyroid hormone, and on thyroid-dependent respiratory enzymes and on
- the heme-enzyme P-450scc, which are all sensitive (2) to poisoning by carbon monoxide and cyanide. The
- steroid produced by the oligodendrocytes is pregnenolone, which is known to have a profound
- anti-stress action (3), and which appears to be the main brain-protective steroid. 4) Lesions
- resembling those of MS can be produced experimentally by carbon monoxide or cyanide poisoning.(4) The
- lesions tend to be associated with individual small blood vessels, which are likely to contain
- clots. (Since all animals have enzymes to detoxify cyanide, this poison is apparently a
- universal problem, and can originate in the bowel. "Detoxified" cyanide is still toxic to the
- thyroid.) 5) Pregnenolone and progesterone protect against nerve damage (5) by the excitotoxic amino
- acids (glutamic acid, aspartic acid, monosodium glutamate, aspartame, etc.), while estrogen (6) and cortisol
- (7) are nerve-destroying, acting through the excitotoxic amino acids. Excitotoxins destroy certain
- types of nerve, especially the dopaminergic and cholinergic types, leaving the noradrenergic types (8),
- paralleling the changes that occur in aging. The clustering of oligodendrocytes around deteriorating
- nerve cells could represent an adaptive attempt to provide pregnenolone to injured nerve cells. 6) The
- involvement of hormones and environmental factors probably accounts for the intermittent progress of
- multiple sclerosis. To the extent that the environmental factors can be corrected, the disease can
- probably be controlled.
-
- <strong> SHORT-DAY BRAIN STRESS</strong>
- Shortly after I moved from Mexico to Montana, one of my students, a 32 year old woman, began having the same
- sensory symptoms her older sister had experienced at the same age, at the onset of multiple sclerosis.
- Vertigo and visual distortions of some sort made her consider withdrawing from the university. I'm not sure
- why she tried eating a whole can of tuna for lunch a couple of days after the onset of symptoms, but it
- seemed to alleviate the symptoms, and she stayed on a high protein diet and never had a recurrence.
- She told me some of the lore of MS: That it mostly affects young adults between the ages of 20 and 40, that
- it is common in high latitudes and essentially unknown in the tropics, and that it is sometimes exacerbated
- by pregnancy and stress. (Later, I learned that systemic lupus erythematosis and other "auto-immune"
- diseases also tend to occur mainly during the reproductive years. I discussed some of the implications
- of this in "Bean Syndrome.") Having enjoyed the mild climate of Mexico, I became very conscious of the harm
- done to us by northern winters, and began developing the idea of "winter sickness." In 1966-67,
- allergies, PMS, weight gain, colitis, and arthritis came to my attention as winter-related problems, and I
- assumed that the high-latitude incidence of MS related to what I was seeing and experiencing. Studies
- in Leningrad began revealing that mitochondria are injured during darkness, and repaired during
- daylight. I observed that hamsters' thymus glands shrank in the winter and regenerated in the summer;
- shrinkage of the thymus gland is a classical feature of stress, and usually reflects the dominance of
- cortisone, though estrogen and testosterone also cause it to shrink. Winter's darkness is stressful in
- a very fundamental way, and like any stress it tends to suppress thyroid function. In the hypothyroid
- state, any estrogen which is produced tends to accumulate in the body, because of liver sluggishness. I
- began to see that PMS could be controlled by certain things--extra light, supplements of sodium and
- magnesium, high quality protein, and correction of deficiencies of thyroid and progesterone. In
- working on my dissertation, I saw that tissue hypoxia (lower than optimal concentrations of oxygen in the
- blood) may result from estrogen excess, vitamin E deficiency, or aging. There is a close biological
- parallel between estrogen-dominance and the other hypoxic states, such as stress/shock, and aging.
- <strong>ESTROGEN'S EFFECTS</strong>
- As a portrait painter, I had been very conscious of the blue aspect that can often be seen in the skin of
- young women. In pale areas, the color may actually be blue, and in areas with a rich supply of blood, such
- as the lips, the color is lavender during times of high estrogen influence--around ovulation and puberty,
- for example. During these times of estrogen dominance, the blood is not only poorly oxygenated, but it
- has other special properties, such as an increased tendency to clot. The Shutes' work in the 1930s
- began with the use of vitamin E to antagonize estrogen's clot-promoting tendency, and led them to the
- discovery that vitamin E can be very therapeutic in heart disease. More recently, it has been found
- that men with heart disease have abnormally high estrogen (9), that women using oral contraceptives have
- higher mortality from heart attacks (10), and that estrogen tends to promote spasm of blood vessels
- (11). (These reactions are probably related to the physiology of menstruation, in which
- progesterone withdrawal causes spasms in the spiral arteries of the uterus, producing endometrial
- anoxia and cell death.) In toxemia of late pregnancy, or eclampsia, the exaggerated clotting tendency caused
- by excess estrogen (or by inadequately opposed estrogen, i.e., progesterone deficiency), can cause
- convulsions and strokes. Vascular spasms could be involved here, too. The stasis caused by the
- vasospasm would facilitate clotting. (Vascular spasm has been observed in epilepsy, too. Epilepsy can
- be brought on by the premenstrual excess of estrogen, and in that situation there is no evidence that
- clotting is involved. Leakage of hemoglobin out of red cells can cause vasospasm, so bleeding,
- clotting, strokes, and seizures can interact complexly.) The brains of women who have
- died following eclampsia show massive clotting in the blood vessels, and their livers are
- characteristically injured, with clots (12). Tom Brewer and others have shown very clearly that
- malnutrition, especially protein deficiency, is the cause of toxemia of late pregnancy. (In Nutrition
- for Women, I discussed the importance of protein in allowing the liver to eliminate estrogen.) Various
- researchers have demonstrated that the plaques of MS usually occur in the area served by a single blood
- vessel (13, 14), and some have suggested that clotting is the cause. MS patients have been found to
- have an abnormal clotting time, and it has been suggested that an altered diet might be able to correct the
- clotting tendency. Studies in animals have shown clearly that a protein deficiency increases the fibrinogen
- content of blood. (Field and Dam, 1946.) Other factors that increase blood clotting are elevated
- adrenalin and cortisone. Protein deficiency causes an adaptive decrease in thyroid function, which
- leads to a compensatory increase in adrenaline and cortisone. The combination of high estrogen with
- high adrenaline increases the tendency for both clots and spasms of the blood vessels (11). In experimental
- poisoning of animals with carbon monoxide or cyanide, the brain lesions resembling MS include blood
- clots. The patchy distribution of these spots in the brain suggests that the clotting is secondary to
- metabolic damage in the brain. Presumably, the same would be true in ordinary MS, with clots and
- spasms being induced in certain areas by metabolic abnormalities in brain cells. The injured cells
- that are responsible for myelination of nerve fibers are steroid-forming cells. A failure to secrete
- their protective pregnenolone could cause a local spasm of a blood vessel. The circulatory problem
- would exacerbate the respiratory problem. Steroid production is dependent on NADH and NADPH, and so requires
- adequate energy supplies and energy metabolism. The phenomenon of blood-sludging, studied by M.
- Knisely at the University of Chicago in the l930s and l940s, is apparently a general result of decreased
- energy metabolism, and is likely to be a factor in energy-and-circulatory vicious circles.
- <strong> </strong>
- <strong>SYMPTOMS AND THERAPIES </strong>
- Around 1976 I met a woman in her mid-thirties who heard about my work with progesterone in animals.
- She had been disabled by a brain disease that resembled MS or Devic's disease, inflammation of the optic
- nerves. It would sometimes cause blindness and paralysis that persisted for weeks at a time.
- During remissions, sometimes using a wheelchair, she would go to the medical school library to try to
- understand her condition. She came across Katherina Dalton's work with progesterone, and convinced a
- physician to give her a trial injection. Although she had trouble finding people who were willing to
- give her progesterone, her recovery was so complete that she was able to climb stairs and drive her car, and
- she came to my endocrinology class and gave a very good (and long) lecture on progesterone
- therapy. Although her sensory and motor functions became normal, she remained very fat, and
- chronically suffered from sore areas on her arms and legs that seemed to be abnormal blood vessels, possibly
- with phlebitis. She appeared to need thyroid hormone as well as larger amounts of progesterone, but
- never found a physician who would cooperate, as far as I know. In the late 1970s I was seeing a lot of
- people who had puzzling health problems. In a period of two or three years, there were five people who
- had been diagnosed by neurologists as having multiple sclerosis. In talking to them, it seemed clear
- that they had multiple symptoms of hypothyroidism. They weren't severely disabled. Since they
- weren't fat or lethargic, their physicians hadn't thought they could be hypothyroid. When they tried
- taking a thyroid supplement, all of their symptoms disappeared, including those that had led to their MS
- diagnosis. One of the women went to her doctor to tell him that she felt perfectly healthy since
- taking thyroid, and he told her to stop taking it, because people who have MS need a lot of rest, and she
- wouldn't get enough rest if she was living in a normally active way. The assumption seemed to be that the
- diagnosis was more important than the person. (When I refer to a "thyroid supplement" I mean one that
- contains some T3. Many people experience "neurological symptoms" when they take thyroxine by
- itself. Experimentally, it has been found to suppress brain respiration, probably by diluting the T3
- that was already present in the brain tissue.)
- <strong> </strong>
- <strong>METABOLISM OF THE OLIGODENDROCYTES</strong>
- The rate-regulating step in steroid synthesis involves the entry of cholesterol into the mitochondria, where
- the heme-enzyme P-450scc then removes the side-chain of cholesterol (by introducing oxygen atoms), to
- produce pregnenolone. This enzyme can be poisoned by carbon monoxide or cyanide, and light can
- eliminate the poison (15); this could be one aspect of the winter-sickness problem. Peripheral nerves
- are myelinated by essentially the same sort of cell that is called an oligodendrocyte in the brain, but
- outside the brain it is called a Schwann cell. It is easier to study the myelin sheath in peripheral
- nerves, and the electrical activity of a nerve is the most easily studied aspect of its physiology.
- Certain experiments seemed to indicate a "jumping" (saltatory) kind of conduction along the nerve between
- Schwann cells, and it was argued that the insulating function of the myelin sheath made this kind of
- conduction possible. This idea has become a standard item in physiology textbooks, and its familiarity
- leads many people to assume that the presence of myelin sheaths in the brain serves the same "insulating"
- function. For a long time it has been known that heat production during nerve conduction reveals a more
- continuous mode of conduction, that doesn't conform to the idea of an electrical current jumping
- around an insulator. Even if the myelin functioned primarily to produce "saltatory conduction" in
- peripheral nerves, it isn't clear how this process could function in the brain. I think of the issue
- of "saltatory conduction at the nodes of Ranvier" as another of the fetish ideas that have served to
- obstruct progress in biology in the United States. A more realistic approach to nerve function can be
- found in Gilbert Ling's work. Ling has demonstrated in many ways that the ruling dogma of "cell
- membrane" function isn't coherently based on fact. He found that hormones such as progesterone
- regulate the energetic and structural stability of cells. Many people, unaware of his work, have felt
- that it was necessary to argue against the idea that there are anesthetic steroids with generalized
- protective functions, because of their commitment to a textbook dogma of "cell membrane" physiology. I think
- the myelinating cells do have relevance to nerve conduction, but I don't think they serve primarily as
- electrical insulators. If the adrenal cortex were inside the heart, it would be obvious to ask whether
- its hormones aren't important for the heart's function. Since the oligodendrocytes are
- steroid-synthesizers, it seems obvious to ask whether their production of pregnenolone in response to stress
- or fatigue isn't relevant to the conduction processes of the nerves they surround.
-
- <strong> </strong>
- <strong>OLD AGE</strong>
- A biologist friend of mine who was about 85 became very senile. His wife started giving him thyroid,
- progesterone, DHEA and pregnenolone, and within a few days his mental clarity had returned. He
- continued to be mentally active until he was 89, when his wife interfered with his access to the hormones.
- In old age the brain steroids fall to about 5% of their level in youth. Pregnenolone and DHEA improve
- memory in old rats, and improve mood stability and mental clarity of old people. Pregnenolone's action
- in improving the sense of being able to cope with challenges probably reflects a quieting and coordinating
- of the "sequencing" apparatus of the forebrain, which is the area most sensitive to energy
- deprivation. This is the area that malfunctions in hyperactive and "dyslexic" children.
- Weakening of the sequencing and sorting processes probably explains the common old-age inability to extract
- important sounds from environmental noise, creating a kind of "confusion deafness." Insomnia, worry
- and "restless legs" at bedtime are problems for many old people, and I think they are variations of the
- basic energy-depletion problem. The oligodendrocytes were reported (Hiroisi and Lee, 1936) to be the source
- of the senile plaques or amyloid deposits of Alzheimer's disease.(16) Hiroisi and Lee showed the cells
- in different stages of degeneration, ending with translucent "mucoid" spots that stained the same as
- amyloid, the material in the senile plaques. This type of cell also appears to form a halo or crown
- around degenerating nerve cells--possibly in a protective reaction to provide the nerve cell with any
- pregnenolone the oligodendrocytes are able to make. The oligodendrocytes, the source of the
- brain steroids (that people previously believed came from the adrenals and gonads, and were just stored in
- the brain), myelinate nerve fibers under the influence of thyroid hormone (17). Thyroid is
- responsible for both myelination and hormone formation. In old age, glial cells become more numerous,
- and nerve cells become structurally and functionally abnormal, but usually there is no problem
- with the formation of myelin. In MS, the problem is just with myelination, and there are no
- senile plaques or defects in the nerve cells themselves. These differences
- suggest the possibility that Alzheimer's disease involves a specific premature loss of brain
- pregnen- olone production, but not of thyroid. Recent work suggests a central role for
- pregnenolone and progesterone in the regulation of consciousness (18), and possibly in the brain's
- detoxifying system. Elsewhere, I have suggested that vitamin A deficiency might cause the excessive
- production of the "amyloid" protein. A vitamin A deficiency severely inhibits steroid synthesis.
- (It is used so massively in steroid synthesis that a progesterone supplement can prevent the symptoms of
- vitamin A deficiency.) I suspect that vitamin A is necessary for the side-chain cleavage that converts
- cholesterol to pregnenolone. Iron-stimulated lipid peroxidation is known to block steroid formation,
- and vitamin A is very susceptible to destruction by iron and oxidation. Iron tends to
- accumulated in tissues with aging. Gajdusek has demonstrated that brain deterioration is
- associated with the retention of whatever metal happens to be abundant in the person's environment, not just
- with aluminum. (One type of glial cell is known for its metal-binding function, causing them to be
- called "metallophils."). According to Gajdusek, "calcium and other di- and trivalent elements" are
- "deposited as hydroxyapatites in brain cells" in brain degeneration of the Alzheimer's type.(19) Even early
- forms of Alzheimer's disease begin at an age when the youth-associated steroids have begun to decline.
- If MS involves a deficiency of thyroid (or of T3 within the oligodendrocytes, where T3 normally can be
- made from thyroxine; many things, including protein deficiency, can block the conversion of T4 to T3), those
- cells would necessarily be deficient in their ability to produce pregenolone, but in young people the
- brain would still be receiving a little pregnenolone, progesterone, and DHEA from the adrenals and
- gonads. This relatively abundant youthful supply of hormones would keep most of the body's organs in
- good condition, and could keep the bodies of the major brain cells from deteriorating. But if proper
- functioning of the nerve fibers requires that they be fed a relatively high concentration of pregnenolone
- from their immediately adjacent neighbors (with the amount increasing during stress and fatigue), then their
- function would be impaired when they had to depend on the hormones that arrived from the blood stream. For
- many years it has been recognized that the brain atrophy of "Alzheimer's disease" resembles the changes seen
- in the brain in many other situations: The traumatic dementia of boxers; toxic dementia; the
- slow-virus diseases; exposure of the brain to x-<span class="il">rays</span> (20); ordinary old age;
- and in people with Down's syndrome who die around the age of thirty.
- In menopause, certain nerve cells have lost their ability to regulate the ovaries, because of
- prolonged exposure to estrogen (6). The cells that fail as a result of prolonged estrogen exposure
- aren't the same cells that fail from prolonged exposure to the glucocorticoids (7), but they have in common
- the factor of excitatory injury. Since people who experience premature menopause are known to be more likely
- than average to die prematurely, it is reasonable to view menopause as a model of the aging process. It is
- now well established that progesterone fails to be produced at the onset of menopause (the first missed
- period, increased loss of calcium, symptoms such as hot flashes, etc.), and that estrogen continues to be
- produced at monthly intervals for about four years. The essential question for aging, in the present
- context, is why the anesthetic steroids are no longer produced at a rate that allows them to protect
- tissues, including brain cells, from the excitotoxins. Using menopause as a model for aging, we can
- make the question more answerable by asking why progesterone stops being produced. During stress, we are
- designed not to get pregnant, and the simplest aspect of this is that ACTH, besides stimulating the adrenals
- to produce stress-related hormones, inhibits the production of progesterone by the ovary. Other
- stress-induced factors, such as increased prolactin and decreased thyroid, also inhibit progesterone
- production. Stress eventually makes us more susceptible to stress. Menopause and other landmarks
- of aging simply represent upward inflections in the rate-of-aging curve. Individual variations in type
- of stress, hormonal response and diet, etc., probably govern the nature of the aging process in an
- individual. The amphetamine-like action of estrogen, which undoubtedly contributes to the general
- level of stress and excitotoxic abuse of nerve cells, is probably the only "useful" facet of
- estrogen treatment, but a little cocaine might achieve the same effect with no more harm, possibly
- less. The toxicity of catecholamines has been known for over thirty years, and estrogen's stimulating
- effects are partly the result of its conversion to catechol-estrogens which increase the activity of brain
- catecholamines. Estrogen's powerful ability to nullify learning seems never to be mentioned by the
- people who promote its use. The importance of a good balance of brain steroids for mood, attention,
- memory, and reasoning is starting to be recognized, but powerful economic forces militate against its
- general acceptance. Since the brain is the organ that can allow us to adapt without undergoing stress in the
- hormonal sense, it is very important to protect its flexibility and to keep its energy level high, so it can
- work in a relaxed way. It is the low energy cellular state that leads to the retention of calcium and
- iron, and to the production of age pigment, and other changes that constitute the vicious circle of
- aging. And mental activity that challenges obsession and rigidity might be the most important brain
- energizer. Pseudo-optimism, humor-as-therapy, has a certain value, but a deeper optimism involves a
- willingness to assimilate new information and to change plans accordingly.
- <strong> </strong>
- <strong>SUPPLEMENTS</strong>
- Nutritional supplements that might help to prevent or correct these brain syndromes include: Vitamin E
- and coconut oil; vitamin A; magnesium, sodium; thyroid which includes T3; large amounts of
- animal protein, especially eggs; sulfur, such as magnesium sulfate or flowers of sulfur, but not
- to take continuously, because of sulfur's interference with copper absorption; pregnenolone; progesterone if
- needed. Bright light, weak in the blue end of the spectrum and with protection against ultraviolet,
- activates respiratory metabolism and quenches free radicals. Raw carrot fiber and/or laxatives if
- needed; charcoal occasionally for gas or bowel irritation. Coconut oil serves several
- purposes. Its butyric acid is known to increase T3 uptake by glial cells. It has a general
- pro-thyroid action, for example by diluting and displacing antithyroid unsaturated oils, its short- and
- medium-chain fatty acids sustain blood sugar and have antiallergic actions, and it protects mitochondria
- against stressinjury. P.S.: In 1979, a woman whose husband was suffering from advanced
- Amyotrophic Lateral Sclerosis (ALS) asked me if I had any ideas for slowing his decline. I described
- my suspicion that ALS involved defective metabolism or regulation of testosterone. In some tissues,
- testosterone is selectively concentrated to prevent atrophy, and ALS is a disease of middle-age, when
- hormone regulation often becomes a special problem. In the late 1970s, there was discussion of a
- higher incidence of ALS in males, and especially in athletes. I told her about progesterone's general
- protective effects, its antagonism to testosterone, and its prevention of atrophy in various tissues.
- She decided to ask her doctor to try progesterone for her husband. Later, I learned that her husband
- had gone into a very rapid decline immediately after the injection, and died within a week; the physician
- had given him testosterone, since, he said, "testosterone and progesterone are both male hormones."
- Besides making me more aware of the problems patients have in communicating with physicians, this tended to
- reinforce my feeling that a hormone imbalance is involved in ALS. Although I haven't written much
- about testosterone's toxicity, Marian Diamond's work showed that prenatal testosterone is similar to
- prenatal estrogen, in causing decreased thickness of the cortex of the brain; both of those hormones oppose
- progesterone's brain-protecting and brain-promoting actions.
-
- <strong><h3>REFERENCES</h3></strong>
- 1) Z. Y. Hu, et al., P.N.A.S. (USA) 84, 8215-9, 1987. 2) P. F. Hall, Vitamins and Hormones 42,
- 315-370, 1985. 3) J. J. Lambert, et al., Trends in Pharmac. Sci. 8, 224-7, 1987. 4) W. A. D. A.
- Anderson, Pathology (second edition), C. V. Mosby, St. Louis, 1953. 5) S. S. Smith, et al., Brain Res.
- 422, 52-62, 1987. 6) P. M. Wise, Menopause, 1984; S. S. Smith, et al., Brain Res. 422, 40-51, 1987.
- 7) R. M. Sapolsky, et al., J. Neuroscience 5, 1222-1227, 1985; R. M. Sapolsky and W. Pulsinelli,
- Science 229, 1397-9, 1985. 8) C. B. Nemeroff, (Excitotoxins) 290-305, 1984. 9) G. B.
- Phillips, Lancet 2, 14-18, 1976; G. B. Phillips, et al., Am. J. Med. 74, 863-9, 1983; M. H. Luria, et al.,
- Arch Intern Med 142, 42-44, 1982; E. L. Klaiber, et al., Am J Med 73, 872-881, 1982. 10) J. I. Mann,
- et al., Br Med J 2, 241-5, 1975. 11) V. Gisclard and P. M. Vanhoutte, Physiologist 28, 324(48.1).
- 12) W. A. D. A. Anderson, Pathology, 1953; H. H. Reese, et al., editors, 1936 Yearbook of
- Neurology, Psychiatry, and Endocrinology, Yearbook Publishers, Chicago, 1937. 13)
- T. J. Putnam, Ann Int Med 9, 854-63, 1936; JAMA 108, 1477, 1937. 14) R. S. Dow and G. Berglund, Arch
- Neurol and Psychiatry 47, 1, 1992. 15) R. W. Estabrook, et al., Biochem Z. 338, 741-55, 1963.
- 16) S. Hiroisi and C. C. Lee, Arch Neurol and Psychiat 35, 827-38, 1936. 17) J. M. Matthieu, et
- al., Ann Endoc. 1974. 18) K. Iwaharhi, et al., J Ster Biochem and Mol Biol 44(2), 163-4, 1993.
- 19) D. C. Gajdusek, Chapter 63, page 1519 in Virology (B. N. Fields, et al., editors), Raven Press,
- N.Y., 1985. 20) K. Lowenberg-Scharenberg and R. C. Bassett, J Neuropath and Exper Neurol 9, 93, 1950.
- GLOSSARY 1. Amyloid is the old term for the "starchy" appearing (including the way it
- stains) proteins seen in various diseases, and in the brain in Alzheimer's disease. 2. Cytochrome
- P450scc. The cytochromes are "pigments," in the same sense that they contain the colored "heme" group
- that gives hemoglobin its color. P450 means "protein that absorbs light at a wavelength of 450.
- The scc means "side-chain cleaving," which refers to the removal of the 6 carbon atoms that distinguish
- cholesterol from pregnenolone. Other Cyt P450 enzymes are important for their detoxifying oxidizing action,
- and some of these are involved in brain metabolism. 3. Glial means "glue-like," and glial cells are
- mostly spidery-shaped cells that used to be thought of as just connective, supportive cells in the brain.
- 4. Mitochondria (the "thread-like bodies") are the structures in cells which produce most of our
- metabolic energy by respiration, in response to the thyroid hormones. 5. Mucoid--refers to a
- mucoprotein, a protein which contains some carbohydrate. A glycoprotein; usually not intended as a
- precise term. 6. Myelination. Myelin is a multilayered enclosure of the axons (the long
- processes) of nerve cells, composed of proteins and complex lipids, including cholesterol. The layered
- material is a flat, thin extension of the cytoplasm of the oligodendroglial cells. 7. Oligodendrocytes
- are one of the kinds of glial (or neuroglial) cells, and structurally they are unusual in having sheet-like,
- rather than just thread-like processes; they have a sensitivity ("receptors") to stress and valium, and
- produce pregnenolone when activated. Under the influence of thyroid hormone, they wrap themselves in
- thin layers around the conductive parts of nerve cells, leaving a multilayered "myelin" coating. Their
- absorption of thyroid hormone is promoted by butyrate, an anti-stress substance found in butter and coconut
- oil. 8. Steroidogenesis is the creation of steroids, usually referring to the conversion of
- cholesterol to hormones.
- </blockquote>
-
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