Energy Healing Archives

Electric jolts for reseting stress

[ Energy Healing Archive ]
[ Main Archives Page ] [ Glossary/Index ]
[ FAQ ] [ Recommended Books ] [ Bulletin Board ]
   Search this site!
 
        

Electric jolts for reseting stress

Posted by Petrosh [3438.2694] on May 25, 2006 at 01:15:12:

Look what a quite recent study has to say:

----------------

People with depression have high concentrations of norepinephrine, a nervous system hormone that signals blood vessels to constrict and ratchets up blood pressure, researchers report. Treating these individuals with electroshock therapy lowers their norepinephrine concentrations-and their heart rate and blood pressure too, scientists find.

A fast pulse, vessel constriction, and high blood pressure are valuable tools in a person's fight-or-flight response. But if high norepinephrine concentrations chronically Keep a person in that state, it puts a strain on the heart, says Mitchel A. Kling, a psychiatrist at the National Institute of Mental Health in Bethesda, Md. Excess norepinephrine, he says, could partly explain the long-standing connection between depression and heart failure, which is a weakening of the heart. Depression doubles the risk of death in people with heart failure, as do high norepinephrine concentrations.

"Depression is not good for your heart, basically," says Kling.

He and his colleagues conducted standard clinical tests on 22 people with the most severe form of depression and 23 people free of depression. The groups were similar in age. Volunteers with depression had a higher average pulse rate and higher blood pressure than did people in the comparison group. Blood and spinal-fluid samples revealed higher concentrations of three stress hormones--norepinephrine, cortisol, and epinephrine-in study participants with depression than in the others. The stress-hormone differences showed up even during sleep.

Next in the study, eight of the depressed patients volunteered to receive a series of electroshock treatments, which are also called electroconvulsive therapy. Among psychiatrists, electroshock treatment remains controversial. Many depressed people show gains from it, but some complain of memory loss and other side effects. Its benefit sometimes lasts only a few days and other times endures for months or years, Kling says.

The eight patients in Kling's study averaged nine electroshock treatments apiece over roughly 3 weeks. Four weeks after the last treatment, the patients again provided blood and spinal-fluid samples. These showed a clear drop in the concentration of norepinephrine, but not cortisol or epinephrine, the researchers report in an upcoming Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences.

"To my knowledge, no one has ever looked at the effect of electroconvulsive therapy on the levels of norepinephrine," says cardiologist Inder S. Anand of the Veterans Affairs Medical Center and University of Minnesota in Minneapolis. Combined with other work, this research is "pretty convincing" that stress chemicals such as norepinephrine are being over-produced in the depressed brain, he says.

Even more interesting, he says, is that electroshock can change conditions in the brain to the point of reversing norepinephrine's oversupply.

Made by nerve cells, norepinephrine carries signals between the cells. Electroshock therapy might "reset" overzealous nerve cells in the brain and reduce their norepinephrine production, Kling hypothesizes. But the therapy's long-term benefits in this regard are unknown, he says.

Suppressing norepinephrine might nevertheless offer benefits for patients with heart failure, Kling says. Some of the many antidepression drugs on the market may reduce norepinephrine concentrations too, he says, "but there is surprisingly little data on that."

COPYRIGHT 2005 Science Service, Inc.

------

Well finaly some new facts about the ECT therapy. This Frankenstein theory now really doesn't look so crazy afterall. It would be very very nice if it was able to really reset the cells in the brain. But it's very risky (4.5 deaths per 100,000 treatments, known side-effects&uknwown side effects).
Since i have this mad scientist personality in myself somewhere i would really try it to see if it would show some benefits (since i have ALOT of bizzare hypothalamus gone bonkers symptoms)

It will never replace a proper SR but may help some people to get on the right tracks much faster.

See ya guys,

Petrosh



Re: Electric jolts for reseting stress

Posted by Ron [205.2318] on May 25, 2006 at 02:14:09:

In Reply to: Electric jolts for reseting stress posted by Petrosh [3438.2694] on May 25, 2006 at 01:15:12:

Hi Petrosh,

Thanks for the article.

I can see people going out and buying a stun gun for personal use. (Just think.. We can also be rebooted.)

My guess is that those who used it in this way would not only be less depressed, but also a lot smarter about using it again. :>(

Strange that scientists of the last century had this figured out and the practice was dropped due to
the advent of Mind Altering meds and the closing of
Sanitariums. Is that progress?

Follow Ups:


Re: Electric jolts for reseting stress

Posted by Rib [5515.2680] on May 25, 2006 at 04:38:35:

In Reply to: Electric jolts for reseting stress posted by Petrosh [3438.2694] on May 25, 2006 at 01:15:12:

Very risky! I've known someone who felt badly messed up by the process and have read quite a few press articles over the years, featuring the casualties. There have to be better, gentler ways...

Follow Ups:


Re: Electric jolts for reseting stress

Posted by kkd [5453.2318] on May 25, 2006 at 13:23:39:

In Reply to: Electric jolts for reseting stress posted by Petrosh [3438.2694] on May 25, 2006 at 01:15:12:

I'm not sure if SR alone would help depression but it would lower your pulse, BP, and slow down your nervous system ect.! I found out today while at the Health Food Store, that L-Tryptophan is on the market again! I guess some big company in England sued the FDA! This company said that L-Tryptophan is an amino acid and that they couldn't make it a prescription! Apparently they won their case because it is back on the shelves! L-Tryptophan helps depression! Along with other supplements and exercise!

Follow Ups:


Re: Electric jolts for reseting stress (Archive in EM medicine.

Posted by Walt Stoll [93.1889] on May 26, 2006 at 06:56:25:

In Reply to: Electric jolts for reseting stress posted by Petrosh [3438.2694] on May 25, 2006 at 01:15:12:

Thanks, Petrosh.

Just one more proof of the essential electromagnetic nature of humans!

Walt

Follow Ups:


[ Energy Healing Archive ]
[ Main Archives Page ] [ Glossary/Index ]
[ FAQ ] [ Recommended Books ] [ Bulletin Board ]
   Search this site!