Friday, August 31, 2018

Cannabis may help people with psychosis

Brain scans show how cannabis extract may help people with psychosis

Cannabidiol reduces the brain activity linked to hallucinations, delusions and other forms of psychosis, research has found
Cannabis plants contains compounds which can both help and hinder mental health. In the plants the amount of beneficial cannabidiol or CBD is often overshadowed by other psychoactive compounds.
Brain scans have revealed for the first time how a substance found in cannabis plants may help people with psychotic disorders by dampening down abnormal brain activity that arises in the patients.
A single dose of cannabidiol, an non-intoxicating extract of the plant, reduced unusual patterns of neural behaviour linked to hallucinations, delusions, and other symptoms of psychosis, researchers found.
The impact of the substance has raised hopes that medical preparations of pure cannabidiol, or new drugs based on the compound, may be turned into effective treatments for young people who develop psychosis but do not respond to existing therapies.
The most common treatments for psychosis today work on a brain chemical called dopamine, but no new drugs have been developed for the condition since they were discovered in the 1950s. “These results will clearly pave the way for developing a novel class of antipsychotic treatments,” said Sagnik Bhattacharyya, who led the research at King’s College London
Cannabis plants produce more than 100 active compounds known as cannabinoids. The most potent, and the substance responsible for the cannabis “high”, is THC or tetrahydrocannabinol. In the past two decades, cannabis with high levels of THC – about 15% – has come to dominate the market in the UK and elsewhere.
While high strength cannabis is suspected of raising the risk of mental health problems in some frequent cannabis users, cannabidiol or CBD appears to have opposite, antipsychotic properties. In illicit cannabis, there is too little CBD to have much beneficial effect, but researchers have long wondered whether doses of pure CBD may help to protect against psychosis.
“We knew from previous studies that CBD had antipsychotic effects, but we didn’t know how it worked,” said Bhattacharyya.
To find out, the researchers recruited 33 people who had all sought help for mild or occasional psychotic symptoms, such as hearing voices or having paranoid delusions. A single dose of cannabidiol was given to 16 of them, while the remaining 17 received an identical-looking placebo.
The scientists then watched how the volunteers’ brains behaved as they performed simple tasks in a magnetic resonance imaging machine. While in the brain scanner, the participants were asked to say whether pairs of words, such as ‘baby’ and ‘cries’ were related or not, and later, to recall the word that completed a pair when prompted by the scientists.
When the researchers compared scans from the different patient groups, and with scans from age and sex-matched healthy people, they found that the patients with psychotic symptoms had abnormal patterns of activity in three distinct brain regions, all of which are involved in psychosis. But in patients who had a single dose of CBD, the unusual brain activity appeared to be dampened down, making their scans more similar to those of health individuals. Details of the work are published in JAMA Psychiatry.
“This was just a single dose of CBD and that is not going to treat or cure psychosis,” said Bhattacharyya. “But this shows us that CBD at least has an effect on abnormal brain activity that is consistent with it being an antipsychotic.”
The King’s College researchers are now launching the first large scale trial to investigate whether pure, medical grade CBD is an effective treatment for young people who are at high risk of developing psychosis. The trial, which is expected to start recruiting early next year, is backed by the Medical Research Council and the National Institute for Health Research.
“If the trial shows it has efficacy, then the next step will be to get through the regulatory hurdles os using CBD in the clinic to treat patients,” said Bhattacharyya. “One shouldn’t get the impression that it’s OK to start prescribing CBD tomorrow.”

Thursday, August 30, 2018

Me in My Shortened Gi- Before & After

                              Before judo

 After judo

Sunday, August 26, 2018

Room Spins

This started at Starbucks maybe an hour ago. Ears closing up. Internal restlessness. Anxiety? Part of depression? Its coming from nowhere it feels like. I guess I'll take a PRN Ativan 1.0 mg. I still don't understand where this is coming from. That depression stuff from yesterday maybe? When I move my head the room spins.

Saturday, August 25, 2018

No Commitment

I still feel yucky.  If I tell my psych dr she will throw me back on lithium.  Possibly not take me off seroquel and maybe raise my wellbutrin.  Im trying to get off meds not go on more.  She looked at me sideways like i might be depressed last time i saw her but i so rarely am...  I feel more down for more days than i have in a long time.  I cant get any guy friends to commit to sex. Most i got was mark said i could come over for dinner with his fiance. Lmao. 

I Put On a Fake Grin

I'm not feeling good. I mean, I went to my family gathering today and mostly went through the motions and when they said I looked great because I'd lost weight I put on a fake grin, but mostly I was inside when everyone else was on the screened-in porch- on my phone trying to text anybody and everybody about sex. I've spent too much money lately- I've got $30 to my name- not to mention that that tree was way too expensive no matter how cool it is. I've been doing this a lot. Then I turn around, buy handcuffs, he says no and its all I can do to not sob before I leave. I'm courteous with my family, saying only good things going on in my life like judo while inside I know that this is far from the truth. My nurse practitioner ALMOST caught this last Thursday when I saw her- the depressed yet hypo/manic states but she let it go. I'm left wondering if I should call her on Monday or if I should see if my new med arrangement will iron some of this out. Meanwhile, I'm afraid I will scare away each and every one of my friends one by one.

Friday, August 24, 2018

I Can't. I Just Can't....

Is this a stupid thing to be sad about or am I just getting down or what?
Possible trigger: 
I was at my "buddy's" place and we didn't seem to be clicking. Ok we did some.... I mean we ALWAYS do and its been 13 years. So I'd told him I'd brought him a present and after a while I showed him it was under his pillow. He picked it up and said "These are heavy!" Then he thought for a second and said "I can't. I just can't." No reasons why. It hit me hard. I wanted to cry right then and there. It was the anticipation and the fact that I never dreamed that he'd say no. They were authentic handcuffs. After that he just quit. Just lay there and couldn't continue.
After a while, he got up and got some gin and tonic and begin getting out his art supplies and commenting on how he could draw me and my tattoos. I still was holding back tears. In fact, I did until I got ready to leave when I walked out the door and one tear rolled down my cheek.
Edit: seems he probably lost his erection anf this upset him.  I didn't realize this at the .the time.

Thursday, August 23, 2018

Psych nurse appointment and DHS

I saw pnurse practitioner this morning. It didn't go exactly how I'd envisioned. Turns out we are keeping Seroquel as it is, stopping Lithium completely, and upping trileptal to 900 mg\day. That means a trip to the pharmacy. Next month, we are stopping Seroquel (or at least reducing it) and adding Haldol. She thinks I'm a difficult case med-wise. She also thinks Rexulti is wonderful and that 3 mg is my magic number so we're not changing that. 

Right after this I went to DHS to apply for Medicaid and foodstamps for my youngest. My older two will have to this on their own because of their ages. Now I just wait to see if I need to send any other proofs etc. This is bevause my lovely ex got fired and with it the health insurance for the kids.

A lady called from DHS. Talked for 45 mins about my application. Said I'll get paperwork in the mail telling me if I am accepted or rejected for me and the kids.

Oh yeah. As an afterthought, pnurse asked me if I were feeling depressed. I said I was feeling more sleepy. Lots of long naps. This was just as I was walking out. Wonder why she asked.

Wednesday, August 22, 2018

Bonsai Ficus

I've been into plants lately.  My most recent one is a bonsai ficus.  Its really fun!




Saturday, August 18, 2018

Judo Today

My judo class today.  The young man with the green belt kneeling down got promoted.  I am on the very right.  You can tell that my gi is too big.

Judo always gets the neurons firing and the endorphines flowing.  It's hard work!

Me throwing the judoka who got promoted (a tradition for the entire class and senseis):


Friday, August 17, 2018

Drs Uncover Cause of Antipsychotic Weight Gain

https://www.hopkinsmedicine.org/news/media/releases/Hopkins_Scientists_Uncover_Cause_Of_Antipsychotic_Drug_Weight_Gain

Hopkins Scientists Uncover Cause Of Antipsychotic Drug Weight Gain

Release Date: February 12, 2007
Johns Hopkins brain scientists have hit on how and why some powerful drugs used for treating mental illnesses cause patients to gain so much weight that they often develop life-threatening complications such as diabetes and heart disease.

“We’ve now connected a whole class of antipsychotics to natural brain chemicals that trigger appetite,” says Solomon H. Snyder, M.D.,professor of neuroscience at the Johns Hopkins School of Medicine. “Our identification of the molecular players that link such drugs to increased food intake means there’s now hope for finding a newer generation of drugs without the weight-gain side effects.”
The discovery will be published online next week at the Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences.
Previous research already had fingered increased levels and actions of one particular enzyme, AMPK, in brain cells as a control lever for appetite in mice and presumably humans.

Suspecting that antipsychotic drugs might spike AMPK in the brain to overact, the Johns Hopkins team injected mice with clozapine (Clozaril), which, with olanzapine (Zyprexa) and risperidone (Risperdal), is commonly prescribed for schizophrenia and bipolar disorder in people who do poorly on conventional drugs.
Mice given clozapine showed quadrupled AMPK activity compared to activity measured pre-drug.
The researchers then gave the mice leptin, a hormone that suppresses appetite, and as suspected, saw lowered AMPK levels.
Drilling down further into what controls AMPK and its boost of hunger, Sangwon Kim, Ph.D., a research associate and lead author of the study, “rounded up the usual suspects, brain proteins known to relay communication from cell to cell.”

Systematically manipulating these cell-signaling proteins, Snyder’s team found that blocking one in particular, a receptor site for histamine, a well-known player in triggering classic allergy symptoms, activates AMPK to the same extent as clozapine. To confirm that the histamine receptor connects the drug, AMPK activity and appetite, the team gave clozapine to mice genetically engineered without a histamine receptor.
Results?  Peace. No heightened AMPK activity.
“Histamine also has a long history as a suspect in weight control, but no one ever could put a finger on the exact link,” says Snyder. “The connection we’ve made between its receptor and appetite control is incredibly intriguing and opens new avenues for research on weight control, possibly including drugs that suppress appetite safely.”

The research was funded by the U.S. Public Health Service, Canadian Institute of Health Research, National Institutes of Health and National Multiple Sclerosis Society.
Authors on the paper are Kim, Alex Huang, Adele Snowman and Snyder of Hopkins, and Cory Teuscher of the University of Vermont College of Medicine.

FOR THE MEDIA

Media Contacts:
Audrey Huang; 410-614-5105; audrey@jhmi.edu
Vanessa McMains; 410-502-9410; vmcmain1@jhmi.edu

Sleep Apnea Changes Your Brain

BiPap

I have sleep apnea and bipolar disorder.  According to articles I've read, the lack of oxygen to the brain during apnea spells can harm the brain and yes even cause bipolar disorder and major depression. 

My sleep apnea seemed to start after my bipolar disorder: I was diagnosed with bipolar disorder at age 33 and given Depakote to treat it whereupon I then gained sixty pounds.  Sleep apnea was the result. 

So it is that they can go hand-in-hand: bipolar happens and then sleep apnea or sleep apnea and then bipolar (or major depression).  Either way our brains are affected in a big way and changed foreveralong the way.

SSee the scientific  article before this post about this same subject.

Bipolar & Sleep Apnea

https://link.springer.com/article/10.1007/s11325-016-1389-x

Volume 21, Issue 2pp 243–253Cite as

Sleep apnea is associated with an increased risk of mood disorders: a population-based cohort study

  • Ming-Kun Lu
  • Hung-Pin Tan
  • I-Ning Tsai
  • Li-Chung Huang
  • Xin-Ming Liao
  • Sheng-Hsiang Lin
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Sleep Breathing Physiology and Disorders • Original Article

Abstract

Purpose

The symptoms of sleep apnea, such as sleep fragmentation and oxygen desaturation, might be risk factors for subsequent mood disorder (MD), but associations between sleep apnea and MD remain unclear. This nationwide population-based study thus aimed to identify the risk of MD in patients with vs. without sleep apnea.

Methods

This cohort study used data from the National Health Insurance database. In total, 5415 patients diagnosed with sleep apnea between 2000 and 2010 were evaluated, and 27,075 matched non-sleep apnea enrollees were included as a comparison cohort. All subjects were followed until 2011. The Cox proportional hazard ratio (HR) was used to investigate the relationship between MD and sleep apnea while controlling covariates and comorbidities of sleep apnea.

Results

Of 5415, 154 patients with sleep apnea (2.84 %) were diagnosed with MD during the follow-up period in comparison with 306 of 27,075 individuals (1.13 %) without antecedent sleep apnea. After adjusting for the selected factors and comorbidities, we found that patients with sleep apnea were from 1.82- to 2.07-fold greater risk of MD than the comparisons. Of the three subcategories of MD (major depressive disorder, bipolar disorder, and unspecified MD), sleep apnea had the highest predisposing risk with respect to major depressive disorder (adjusted HR from 1.82 to 2.07) and bipolar disorder (adjusted HR from 2.15 to 3.24).

Conclusions

There is a greater likelihood of MD manifesting in patients with a history of sleep apnea. Health professionals are thus advised to carefully monitor the psychological impacts of sleep apnea.

Keywords

Sleep apnea Mood disorder Nationwide population-based study Major depressive disorder Bipolar disorder