Oxygen to the brain

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Oxygen to the brain

Post by Ye Admin » Fri Jul 07, 2017 8:15 pm

There's definitely something wrong with me.

I believe this is all tied into my sleep issues and how I don't get enough oxygen while sleeping. My doctor said my brain cells are suffocating.

Insurance has approved a sleep study and I'll likely be prescribed a CPAP mask.

I'm sorry that I don't post very often. It seems all I have energy for is my daily chores and after that I just vegetate. I feel creative impulses but I can't act upon them. I can plan to do things but rarely get to doing them. I feel a strange sensation in my head when trying to go from planning to doing. I describe it like a rush of blood through the top of my skull. Everything gets overcomplicated in my mind. Suddenly there's a million excuses why I can't do something simple.

I hope it's not early dementia. I will know more once I schedule the sleep study. They've approved it a week ago and I still haven't been able to call them back. I don't know why I can't.

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Re: Oxygen to the brain

Post by aeon » Fri Jul 07, 2017 9:22 pm

My dad had a sleep study in 2003 and was put on a CPAP system. I think in some cases when a person wakes up repeatedly it is the brain saving your life because the arousal interrupts the sleep apnea increasing oxygen. As far as food goes avoiding dairy and bananas can reduce obstructive mucus.

Avoiding high fat meals especially liquid vegetable oils; including olive oil, margarine, or hydrogenated fats allows the blood stream to carry more oxygen.

"Sleep apnea: The key characteristics of this condition are when the muscles of the mouth and throat “collapse” during sleep and block off someone’s ability to breathe regularly. Sleep apnea is actually at its worst when a person sleeps on their back. While left-side sleeping is better than back-sleeping, studies have shown that right-side sleeping actually leads to the lowest number of symptomatic episodes overall — which means getting the max number of those precious Zzzs."

Hope you get answers and a good system. My understanding is left untreated you could eventually start having strokes. It really helps in just a couple weeks to drink that 8 to 10 glasses of water daily and to reduce fat especially trans fats and liquid oils.


http://www.mysleepapneamd.com/blog/slee ... pnea-worse

"If you have undiagnosed sleep apnea, any medication which relaxes the muscles can make the sleep apnea worse. Remember, sleep apnea is a condition in which tissue in the back of the throat relaxes, falls backwards, and obstructs the airway. This tissue includes muscles in the tongue and soft palate. When the individual sleeping is lying down usually on the back, the tongue and soft palate fall backwards with the assistance of gravity. During sleep, the muscles of the tongue and soft palate relax, and muscular tone is lost. It is in this relaxed state that we develop a narrowing of the airway because of the posterior (backwards) displacement and movement of the tongue base and palate."

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Re: Oxygen to the brain

Post by aeon » Sat Jul 08, 2017 10:36 am

The body readily absorbs hydrogen peroxide. I used to take 5 or 6 drops of pure 35% H2O2 in four ounces of water and within a minute it would pink up the nail bed, the tissue under your finger nails, showing there was an increase in oxygen. I no longer like keeping 35% around it is too dangerous.

Over the counter hydrogen peroxide has stabilizers in it and is not safe to ingest.
Last edited by aeon on Sun Dec 31, 2017 10:07 pm, edited 4 times in total.

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Re: Oxygen to the brain

Post by Ye Admin » Mon Jul 10, 2017 2:01 pm

That aloe drink looks interesting. I wonder if I can find it locally.

My blood pressure is on the low side. I have orthostatic hypotension and I think I need B1 every day. I'm really falling apart by now. I guess I should have taken better care of myself.

I'm never on top of things anymore. My wife doesn't want to make the appointment for me, says I need to overcome it and do it myself.

I didn't get my labs done for the same reason. I'm just drowning in irresponsibility here. So I'm back on folate as of two days ago (coinciding with your last post).

When I get the CPAP, it will have to be a full face mask.

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Re: Oxygen to the brain

Post by aeon » Mon Jul 10, 2017 5:37 pm

You will probably need your sleeping pills after you get your CPAP mask. They look rather uncomfortable until you get used to them. B-12 and B-3 are the only B's I've taken by themselves. I usually take a B-50 complex to prevent side effects from isolated B vits. The problem with having a million thoughts but no energy to carry them out is you get exhausted doing nothing. It is a focus problem with depression but in the end you have to force yourself to just get 1 or 2 new things done every couple days. Actually its easier to do something than sit but it does not feel that way.

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Re: Oxygen to the brain

Post by Ye Admin » Sat Jul 15, 2017 8:58 am

I also wonder what part, if any, my addiction to coffee plays.

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Re: Oxygen to the brain

Post by aeon » Sat Jul 15, 2017 10:49 am

Caffeine or 1,3,7 trimethylxanthine and allergy. Simply put: caffeine allergy. It is medical knowledge that the longer a person is exposed to a drug, the higher the chances are for developing a tolerance, and an allergy to the substance. Once this happens, caffeine allergic persons can't properly metabolize caffeine, which is rapidly absorbed by all organs, and distributed into intracellular compartments, and extracellular water.

Mentioned in a 1936 article by Drs. McManamy and Schube, a young woman, allergic to caffeine, presented with alternating states of delirium and mania, resembling schizophrenia. After the recorded case, allergy documentation becomes rare. And not surprisingly.

The drug's stimulating properties masks its allergic symptoms. Circulating adrenaline (epinephrine) increases in caffeine consuming persons. In its synthetic form, epinephrine is the drug of choice for anaphylactic reactions, halting allergic reactions. But added to a stimulant reaction, excess adrenaline may induce delusions. And the breakdown of some adrenaline byproducts mimics symptoms of schizophrenia.

Brain levels increase proportionately with dosage. In allergic persons, each cup of coffee, cola, tea, every piece of chocolate, and any ingested caffeine products, intensifies toxic psychosis. Half-life increases. Subsequent doses, including minute amounts, act as a bolus. Cells are poisoned, including neurons.

Symptoms of cerebral allergy can range from minimal reactions, such as lack of comprehension and inability to focus, to severe psychotic states, such as delusions, paranoia, and hallucinations. It's known that amphetamine psychosis can't be distinguished from schizophrenia. With a caffeine allergic person's inability to eliminate, continually ingesting caffeine, neurotransmitter levels, including dopamine and adrenaline, quickly increase. Cells rapidly absorb the drug.

Dopamine increases proportionately to the amount of stress. The higher the adrenaline level, the greater the increase in dopamine. Serotonin also increases. Dopamine and serotonin decrease during partial, toxic withdrawal states. But as long as caffeine remains in the toxic body, neurotransmitters never adjust to the victim's natural state.

Toxicity is known to cause excitement, agitation, restlessness, shifting states of consciousness, and toxic psychosis, mimicking amphetamine psychosis. Allergic individuals may be erroneously diagnosed, medicated, and lost in a dark disturbed world, until death.

Adenosine receptors are blocked by caffeine, maintaining neuronal firing. Persons remain excited and often euphoric.

Caffeine toxicity may be mistaken for bipolar disorder. Symptoms include: chattiness, repetitive thought and action (resembling obsessive compulsive disorder, OCD), restlessness, psychomotor agitation, alternating moods, anger, impulsiveness, aggression, omnipotence, delirium, buying sprees, lack of sexual inhibition, and loss of values.

Allergy can mimic Attention Deficit Disorder (ADD). As far back as 1902, T. D. Crothers noted that many caffeine consuming children "exhibit precocity" and "functional exaltation".

Caffeine poisoning may also resemble schizophrenia. One woman's conversational topics wandered from subject to subject. She screamed, and believed that she was in prison. Natural judgement was impaired. In 1931, a truck driver brought to the hospital in a confused and irritable condition, complained of being attacked by flies. Flies were never present. Examination revealed that he'd consumed large amounts of cola. One gentleman ended his political speech with predictions and threats, out of the ordinary for his personality, stunning the audience. Another case describes a man, who imagined himself very wealthy, and assumed that his mental state was normal.

Caffeine toxicity may also masquerade as depression, and anxiety. In 1925, Powers described nervousness, visual problems, and dizziness, in patients he discovered suffered from caffeine toxicity. In 1974, caffeine toxic patients, experiencing the same symptoms, were erroneously admitted to a psychiatric hospital, for treatment of anxiety. In other studies, depression and anxiety are also correlated with caffeine intake.

In several reports, patients diagnosed with anxiety disorder experienced panic attacks with ingestion of caffeine. One study reveals that six persons improved with caffeine cessation and remained improved for at least six months. Other reports reveal that some persons not afflicted with panic disorder, experienced panic attacks with intravenously administered caffeine.

Written materials on panic disorder symptoms and anaphylactic symptoms do not clearly differentiate between the two. Parasthesia (pins and needle sensations), a feeling of choking, hyperactive symptoms, chest pains, and hyperventilation, amongst other symptoms, are common in both conditions. They're also common in many caffeine consuming persons.

This suggests that caffeine allergy may be responsible for many cases of panic disorder. In which case, panic attacks in allergic individuals are suppressed anaphylactic reactions - mimicking ADHD, and panic disorder. They're "have to get up and run" and "I think I'm losing my mind" feelings, brought about by increased neurotransmitter levels, associated with the "fight or flight" syndrome.

Dr. William Walsh connected anxiety and severe allergic reactions. Dr.Walsh maintains that allergic anxiety stems from a choking sense, and loss of air; not a psychological deficit .

Caffeine converts into many byproducts, including theophylline. Theophylline keeps the bronchial tubes open. Allergic individuals are less likely to suffer respiratory collapse, during an anaphylactic reaction.

A proficient Boston neurologist mentions that sixty-six percent of elevated CPK MM (creatine phosphokinase of muscle) levels are of an "unknown origin". Innumerable mid to late twentieth century studies reveal that a high number of persons diagnosed with mental disorders, including personality disorder, mania, BPD, depression, catatonia, and schizophrenia, exhibit elevated CPK MM levels.

The high majority of these studies, and others, attribute elevated CPK levels to a commonality between patients with mental disorders. Not one focuses on caffeine allergy as a contributing factor of mental disorders.

CPK MM, a muscle enzyme, increases with severe muscle trauma, burns, inflammatory states, and poisoning. This may stem from drugs, including cocaine, alcohol, amphetamines, heroin, and stimulants. Antihistamines, salicylates, cyclic antidepressants, theophylline, and others also cause this disorder.

This condition, called rhabdomyolysis, stresses and inflames tissues, including brain cells, breaking down muscle fibers, and discharging potentially toxic cellular matter into the bloodstream. Caffeine poisoning can cause rhabdomyolysis.

Myoglobinuria is a symptom of rhabdomyolysis, but often urine myoglobin disappears early in the course of the disorder, or is absent altogether. Generalized muscle cramping (associated with rhabdomyolysis) may also be absent, or subside early on. Accumulation of caffeine acts as morphine, alleviating pain and discomfort, often inducing muscle rigidity.

With toxins leaking into the bloodstream, the CPK increases. The higher the CPK, the higher the neurotransmitters, and the deeper into psychosis a person spirals.

In the late 1960's, Bengzon et al proposed that the leakage of CPK and aldolase might explain schizophrenia. Studies on patients with non-restrictive diets, concentrated on various factors, including medication, but failed to include caffeine as a possible factor . More recent studies have also overlooked caffeine allergy as a factor in any mental disorders, including schizophrenia.

A study theorized caffeine as a possible, psychosis inducing agent. Researchers eliminated patients' caffeine for a short duration. It was decided that caffeine aggravates symptoms of thought disorder and psychosis. Caffeine was reintroduced-never allowing for sufficient withdrawal times-and significant improvements.

Proportionate to toxicity, physical withdrawal may take up to 12 months, or longer. Recovery symptoms include memory loss, confusion, tremors, agitated states, insomnia or somnolence, and nightmares associated with amphetamine withdrawal. Following physical recovery, residual mental symptoms, primarily confusion and mood alterations, may exist for several months.

Evidence suggests that caffeine, and synthetic neurotransmitter altering medications, merely balance one another, and that upon cessation of caffeine, medication is no longer needed. Several reports indicate that upon caffeine cessation, tremors increased in lithium consuming individuals. In some patients, caffeine withdrawal increased lithium levels. After experiencing a 10-year course of seasonal BPD, a woman eliminated caffeine from her diet. She no longer needed BPD medication.

Caffeine may compete for benzodiazepine receptors. In which case, benzodiazepines reduce caffeine's effects and vice versa; balancing each other.

Chronic toxicity may affect functional aspects of every organ. Allergic persons may become sensitive to bright light, and resort to sunglasses. It's not uncommon to find dilated but reactive pupils on examination. Toxic persons usually present with a whitish, or grayish coated tongue. Other findings imply that caffeine inhibits anaphylaxis, by suppressing histamine release. Due to caffeine's antihistamine properties, a skin test for caffeine allergy may be negative.

Several laboratory tests may be used as markers for allergic toxicity. A detectable Theophylline level in a patient not receiving Theophylline therapy, and an elevated CPK level are indicative of caffeine toxicity. Along with these, an increased glucose level and an elevated white blood count may also be significant of toxicity, as many patients assumed afflicted with mental disorders present with elevation of these. An elevated sedimentation rate, indicative of inflammatory processes, might signify rhabdomyolysis.

It's highly probable, that millions of consumers developed an allergy to caffeine, especially since availability and production increased rapidly mid- twentieth century. In which case, natural insights, and physical and mental health, have been sacrificed to chronic toxicity, resulting in organic brain, silently posing as ADD, ADHD, anxiety, BPD, depression, OCD, panic, and schizophrenia. Physical ailments resemble amphetamine poisoning, and include drug eruptions, masquerading as "rosacea."

Back in 1936, McManamy and Schube maintained that in all probability, many people of that era might have already been erroneously diagnosed with some form of mental illness. The doctors further predicted, that in the future, with lack of time, and proper medical insight, many doctors would not be able to diagnose simple disorders such as caffeine allergy, and would label many patients as psychotic.

http://orthomolecular.org/library/jom/2 ... 1-p025.pdf

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