The use of diet and dietary components in the study
of factors controlling
affect in humans: a review
by
Young SN
Department of Psychiatry,
McGill University,
Montreal, Quebec, Canada.
J Psychiatry Neurosci 1993 Nov; 18(5):235-44
ABSTRACT
Although one of the first biological treatments of a major psychiatric
disorder was the dietary treatment of pellagra, the use of diet and dietary
components in the study of psychopathology has not aroused much interest. This
article reviews three areas in which the dietary approach has provided
interesting information. The tryptophan depletion strategy uses a mixture of
amino acids devoid of tryptophan to lower brain tryptophan in order to study the
symptoms that can be elicited. One effect of tryptophan depletion is a lowering
of mood, the magnitude of which seems to depend on the baseline state of the
subject. Therefore, recovered depressed patients often undergo an acute relapse,
while normal subjects show more moderate changes of mood. Totally euthymic
subjects show no lowering of mood, but subjects with high normal depression
scale scores or subjects with a family history of depression show a moderate
lowering of mood. These data indicate that low serotonin levels alone cannot
cause depression. However, serotonin does have a direct effect on mood, and low
levels of serotonin contribute to the etiology of depression in some depressed
patients. Folic acid deficiency causes a lowering of brain serotonin in rats,
and of cerebrospinal fluid 5-hydroxyindoleacetic acid in humans. There is a high
incidence of folate deficiency in depression, and there are indications in the
literature that some depressed patients who are folate deficient respond to
folate administration. Folate deficiency is known to lower levels of
S-adenosylmethionine, and S-adenosylmethionine is an antidepressant that raises
brain serotonin levels. These data suggest that low levels of serotonin in some
depressed patients may be a secondary consequence of low levels of
S-adenosylmethionine. They also suggest that the dietary intake and
psychopharmacological action of methionine, the precursor of
S-adenosylmethionine, should be studied in patients with depression. Normal
meals have definite effects on mood and performance in humans. The composition
of the meal, in terms of protein and carbohydrate content, can influence these
behaviors. Because protein and carbohydrate meals can influence brain serotonin
in rats, these effects in humans have usually been interpreted in terms of
altered serotonin functioning. However, the current balance of evidence is
against the involvement of serotonin in the acute effects of protein and
carbohydrate meals in humans. The underlying mechanisms involved are unknown,
but there are a variety of possibilities.
Zinc
SAMe
NADH
Folate
Copper
Inositol
Vitamin E
Serotonin
Chromium
Cholesterol
Low-fat blues
Nutrigenomics
Slimming drugs
Neuroactive lipids
Vitamins and mood
Nutritional psychiatry
Docosahexaenoic acid
Catecholamine depletion
Mood, food and cognition
Bad moods and sick hearts
The antidepressant onion?
Antidepressant efficacy of folic acid supplementation
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