Guest guest Posted July 14, 2004 Report Share Posted July 14, 2004 > JustSayNo > Tue, 13 Jul 2004 19:18:14 -0400 > [sSRI-Research] Reducing the Brain, > Ignoring the Soul > > Reducing the Brain, Ignoring the Soul > Grace E. Jackson, MD > December 5, 2002 > > http://psychrights.org/Articles/ReducingTheBrainIgnoringTheSoul.htm > > The TV commercial shows a bouncing ball, frowning > before the onset of therapy with the appropriate > pill. The announcer reminds viewers that they may be > suffering from a chemical imbalance, for which > medical help is readily available. They should ask > their doctors if they have symptoms of clinical > depression for which the specific remedy should be > swallowed. The ad closes with a picture of the > animated ball (post-medication), smiling broadly > before skipping out of view. > > A psychiatry residency program drills its junior > clinicians in the art of medical clearance. Before > any patient may be admitted to the inpatient > psychiatry ward, the admitting resident must > demonstrate that symptoms are not the result of an > undiagnosed or unstable " medical " condition. To this > end, vital signs are taken; EKGs and x-rays are > performed; and a variety of blood and urine tests > are obtained. Only if, and when, a patient's > neurobehavioral symptoms are determined to be > non-organic in origin (or if organically caused, > then the product of a stable underlying condition) > is the patient deemed appropriate for treatment on > the psychiatric ward of the hospital. > > " Non-organic in origin. " " Medically cleared. " Then > the same psychiatrist determines that the patient > must be treated for a medical condition, with > pharmaceutical agents. The doctrine of biological > psychiatry commands its adherents to medicate people > for speculative or presumptive chemical disorders, > despite the lack of evidence that such a disturbance > ever exists. > > There are at least five problems with the chemical > imbalance model of mental disease: > > 1) the model ignores the reality that there has > never been a consistently reproducible biological > marker, to substantiate the levels of normal or > abnormal neurotransmitters in the human nervous > system > > 2) the model fails to respect the enormous > complexity of neurotransmission in the human brain: > > a) there are over five kinds of dopamine receptors > which have been characterized to date, and even > the best researchers know nothing about the D5 > subtype > > b) there are five separate kinds of cholinergic > receptors > > c) there are fifteen different kinds of serotonin > receptors > > d) neuroscientists do not yet understand the > relationship between neuroreceptor density, > sensitivity, or neurotransmitter turnover > > 3) the model fails to consider the fact that many of > the neurochemicals which are presumed to be the > basis of " mental disease " are, in fact, broadly > distributed throughout the body. This fact casts > doubt about our conceptualization of " brain tissue " > (perhaps it is not limited to the cranial vault) and > also raises questions about the reliability of serum > or urine tests, as those assays may be capturing > levels which reflect non-brain locations of > neurotransmitter activity > > a) over 90% of the serotonin in the human body is > made by the enterochromaffin cells of the stomach > and small intestine, rather than the raphe nucleus > of the midbrain and pons > > b) a broad variety of cells in the human body > possess receptors for many of the neurotransmitters, > including white blood cells and platelets > > 4) the model fails to acknowledge the impossibility > of measuring discrete events in the human brain, due > to the speed of neurotransmission; and due to the > relative bulk of our measuring devices, relative to > the size and complexity of each synapse > > 5) the model fails to acknowledge the impossibility > of explaining the brain in reductionistic terms. > That is to say, the organic whole may so far exceed > the sum of the component parts, that science will > never be able to fully explain the workings of this > magnificent system. Part of the problem here is that > the brain is never capable of being studied in a > vacuum - the system is forever open, due to the > conscious, and unconscious, processes of the subject > who is being observed. Part of the problem, too, > arises from the phenomenon of diaschisis, or > non-local effects, through which changes in one part > of the brain reflect, and then precipitate, complex > cascades of events in multiple locations throughout > the nervous system. Thus, it is impossible to speak > of serotonin or dopamine without analyzing the > interactions of all complex chemicals, peptides, and > amino acids upon each other, but far too little > research has occurred to study the gestalt of these > intercommunications. > > The human brain consists of over 100 billion > neurons, an equal number of support cells (glia), > and dozens of neurotransmitters and neuromodulators, > all of which participate in the most intricate > network known to man. Superimposed upon this > incredible array of cognition, sensation, movement, > and imagination is the human will. Biological > psychiatry, and its TV commercials, seem to have > completely dismissed this essential element of the > species. While it has become fashionable to compare > the human brain to the elements of a computer - the > brain tissue, comprising the hardware; and the > neuronal circuits and chemical events, comprising > the software - it has become disturbingly acceptable > to reject the existence of a third component: the > operator, who sits at the keyboard. > > Humans are corporeal beings, who record the events > of life with electrical and chemical fluctuations of > a highly refined nervous system. Unfortunately, the > chemical model of mental illness has too often > confused association with causation. Worse, still, > it has failed the species more fundamentally , by > suggesting that fluctuations in brain activity occur > randomly, and are ultimately more important than the > processes through which the human operator comes to > work at the keyboard of such an amazing machine. > > > [Non-text portions of this message have been > removed] > > > Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
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