Parkinsons Disease beginings,gut implicated.
Brain-gut axis dysregulation
Novel brain-gut neurotransmitter imaging and functional brain imaging show dysregulation of the brain-gut axis at the peripheral, spinal, and cerebral levels, all of which contribute toward the symptoms of Gastro Intestinal Disorders. particularly IBS Irritable bowel syndrome
Neurotransmitters such as serotonin, norepinephrine(Drug information on norepinephrine), corticotropin-releasing factor, and opioids modify both motility and sensation in the gut. Therapies that target the CNS are commonly used because of their effect on the serotonin and norepinephrine pathways, which cause direct modulation on all levels of the brain-gut axis. Serotonin and norepinephrine have been traditionally used to manage psychological and psychiatric disturbances that are commonly associated with GI disorders.6
Treatment of IBSs with psychiatric agents has grown significantly in the past 2 decades. Close to 15% of patients with IBS are offered an antidepressant, and in many of these patients, a gastroenterologist initiates the treatment,still regaded by some schools as aquestionable action
Past and Present
Since the days of Descartes, there has been a clear delineation in Western medicine between functional and organic conditions in the biomedical model of medicine.Using traditional diagnostic techniques, such as endoscopy and imaging, IBS were often considered at the functional end of the functional-organic spectrum. This would necessarily imply an absence of detectable structural abnormalities.
In the past 2 decades, there has been a great surge of research on motility, brain imaging, and neurotransmitters, which has given us the brain-gut axis—a working formulation now used ubiquitously by all international research groups.The pathophysiological understanding of the organic aspects of IBS has increased to such a degree that there is some debate whether we can still strictly call it a functional disorder.11 The time of Descartes is being challenged, but unfortunately the negative stigma associated with functional conditions still lingers in the minds of many clinicians and patients.
One of the most clinically useful ways to conceptualize IBS is with the biopsychosocial model. In this model, the influences of the CNS (at the spinal and cerebral levels), autonomic nervous system, and hypothalamic-pituitary-adrenal axis result in sensory and motor dysfunctions of the GI tract in a bidirectional way.
The trigger can be peripheral (eg, GI infection, abdominal surgery) or central (eg, sexual abuse, personal losses, separation, deprivation). Psychosocial factors, such as alexithymia, catastrophization, ongoing work stress, and life events, often play an important role in the perpetuation and clinical manifestation of IBS through centrally mediated pathways.
Persons with IBS commonly have a history of major stressful life events; those at the severe end of the spectrum may also perpetuate their symptoms by means of maladaptive illness behavior–like catastrophizing This groups inability to incorporate and successfully deal with these psychosocial factors leads to more gastroenterology referrals and needless investigations at great cost, both financial and in quality of life.
Stress can enable IBS symptoms. Likewise, chronic IBS symptoms can lead to physiological effects. In addition, stress aggravates motility, lowers pain thresholds, and increases gut inflammation.
It is suggested that Patients with severe and symptoms of IBS may have central dysregulation of their pain regulatory pathways (central sensitization).16 Because many of these pathways are activated by the same neurotransmitters (eg, serotonin, norepinephrine, opiates)
Neuroplasticity
Perhaps the most striking rationale for the use of centrally acting treatments in recent years is the concept of neuroplasticity. Antidepressants, and possibly psychotherapy, can promote neurogenesis (ie, the regrowth of neurons) following the loss of cortical neurons in psychiatric trauma. Functional MRI studies have shown reduced neuron density in cortical brain regions involved in emotional and pain regulation in patients with pain disorders and with IBS. Pain and psychological trauma (and particularly the combination of both) can be neurodegenerative—much like Alzheimer disease and Parkinson disease are.
In these psychological and pain conditions, antidepressants and other CNS-targeted agents and methods might offer some remedy by stimulating an increase in the levels of brain-derived neurotrophic factor following treatment. Brain-derived neurotrophic factor is a precursor to neurogenesis, and with prolonged treatment, neural increases that correlate with the degree of recovery from depression are seen.
The duration of antidepressant treatment also correlates with decreased relapse frequencies and recurrence of depression. These findings provide insight into neuronal growth regulation in key areas of the central pain matrix and provide new and important opportunities for research and patient care using antidepressants for the treatment of IBS
Summary
As our understanding of the pathophysiology and psychopathology of IBS grows, it is becoming evident that the use of centrally acting psychopharmacological medications and concomitant psychotherapy should play an ever-increasing role in its treatment. Psychosocial factors play a key role in the etiology of IBS, especially at the more severe end of the spectrum Psychiatrists have an important role in understanding and treating patients.
The contradictory complexity of Parkinson’s disease
How you manage your condition when not under direct medical supervision makes a difference to your quality of life, your general health, and your usage health services.
Self-management takes time and demands interest in short you need to educate yourself in the many complexities related to your illness,
As I see it,youve got it. its not going to go away,your its manager.This was not somewere I suddenly arrived at, it was years after diagnoses and living with PD now it lives with me.
Our health care management colleauges GP Neuro,PDnurse.Physiotherapist,prescribe care by tradition but are increasingly the providers educating and enabling self-management. By definition this is the tasks that individuals must undertake to live well with 1 or more chronic conditions.
These tasks include having the confidence to deal with the medical and emotional management of your condition.This is the difficult bit,in life without an illness its not easy to achieve.In our present system its not really promoted,or financially supported,making people well isnt a good long term investment.Dont mistake what I am saying is not intending to undervalue medication or health professionals but it most certainly is easier and safer to prescibe care,than unleash you on yourself.
Accept we must not all want to choose this path and those who pursue it will graduate at different times,be it ten years or two .Patients are afraid to self manage,needing the reassurance of approval and the safety of direction from professionals.We forget a most important role,the patient as the educator,of professionals as well as fellow sufferers.There is some development in this direction.but in the main it is under-resourced and under researched.
Self-management programs are an effective complement to the work provided by health care teams..Programes location, staffing, and the extent of personal interaction between self-management educators and patients are fragmented and diverse
The overall objective of self-management programs should be to support and influence by educating the behaviors of all participants. While variation will always exists regarding the implementation of such programs ultimatley I feel you cant manage someones lfe but supporting choices is important empowering wellness,disempowers illness,live long live well,be happier.
Dont sit back and wait for the system TO DELIVER do a little DIY.
Manage illness
Take action,
Face problems,
Make choices.
Your on the way to Personal “Wellness ”.
Simple and easily grasped and accessible strategies,we know them ,but old habits die hard, so be it, choice made,I am not the mistress of self sacrifice.I know whats good for me whats not so I compromise.
Healthy diet,
Exercise,
Sleep,
Reset you goals, rebuild your dreams
It has been shown that’ Sharing responsibilities with patients and emphasizing the vital role patients play in improving health-related habits and self-managing their health conditions are key issues, regardless of diagnoses’.
One study found that 4 months after participating in patients with diabetes mellitus showed significant improvements in eating breakfast, mental stress, aerobic activities, shortness of breath, and pain.
The way forward with this one ,well its upto you,and whatever you choose be it right for you at this moment tommorow may be different,if its the only exersise you undertake choice is always your own.
I cant be evangelical, but I can still improve my health.Im never going to win the health olympics but then I wouldnt enter,Im not a competitor.I prefer a fun run,thats mylevel of participation,my choice today,but the path unkown.
-
Recent
- Arvid Carlsson,Nobel Lecture A Half -Century of Research
- Neuro Ted Top 10 Videos – The Brain and Learning – Brain Training – Dubai – UAE
- Travelling with PD
- Braaks Gut Theory
- The stomach is the gateway
- Poem
- The night I saved the hamster
- Be Aware-Generic Brands
- Parkinson’s disease and Acid reflux
- Volunteer join other people in research
- The Scientific Power of Naps – YouTube
- A balanced carbohydrate: protein diet in the management of Parkinson’s disease
-
Links
-
Archives
- February 2015 (2)
- October 2014 (2)
- August 2014 (2)
- July 2014 (10)
- June 2014 (6)
- January 2014 (1)
- November 2013 (1)
- February 2012 (1)
- January 2012 (3)
- November 2011 (2)
-
Categories
-
RSS
Entries RSS
Comments RSS